Cars at this level are entering the arena of fine art, but still on the low end price wise, hard as that may be to believe. The idea having an artifact that no else can have is a huge draw to those with essentially limitless funds. The provenance (history) becomes a major factor in appeal beyond the actual visuals.There are levels to everything in life. There are also levels to wealth. The real wealthy people like this don't just buy rare cars. Rare cars are not that rare if you have this kind of money. They buy cars that are rare and special. The first-of or last-of a particular model. They do this not only for the investment side of it, but if they own it - no one else can have it. They are truly one of a kind.
Who put the Chevrolet sign up above all the Mopars?
I was thinking the exact same thing.Am I the only one who wonders what the point is? I can see having 1 white convertible trans am but why 4? And its invitation only? Reminds me of a private zoo like Michael Jackson would have or something.
Let those horses run free!
coming from the guyIt's like anything else the haves and the have nots! They have and we have not! Atleast they are being preserved. Probably better than the collection being split up.
I'm not in their league,my friend has 60 cars and he's not in their league!coming from the guy
who has what 12+ (? guess) gen 2 & gen 3 Chargers/several Challengers old & new,
some Jeep/s, Truck/s, Durango & Van/s too
sort of like the pot calling the kettle black
sorry, I had to go there
I have 3 MoPars & a boat I wish I didn't have
(my 68 RR, my 99 Dakota SLT 4x4, & 2021 Gladiator Rubicon Launch edition, dad drives)
& sometimes that seems like too many
I still want more, maybe a 383 4bbl 4 speed A-body 67-69 cuda' or GTS
or a 68-71 D-100 Dude tribute/short bed with modern Hemi/6 speed drivetrain
but I'd have to sell one or more of what I have
I like what lil' I have
or I'd have to park something out in the weather
I'm not doing that anytime soon
but no extra room & no extra car $$$, to waste...
I'm born and raised in SW Washington and I had never heard of this museum. How do you get an invite? Through a car club or something?
I’m not sure where I read it but… The Shaker hood, that was standard with the Hemi, and optional with the other R/T engines was not buckling in front crashes but instead driving thru the windshield and decapitating the crash dummy. On my ‘Cuda with the factory hood it has a welded in structure for integrity. But the ‘Cuda has a header panel, whereas the Challenger hood extends all the way to the front. They pulled the Shaker hood early in production, so not many factory 1970 MY Shaker hood Challengers were made. They substituted the T/A hood on some Hemi cars.I've been there twice, and the first time I had to keep asking myself if I was still in the real world. You look at a car, and it's a hemi four speed, and then you start looking closer and it's also got leather, sunroof, power windows, AM/FM, etc. Most all of the cars are at level 10 rarity. The racks of T/A Challengers and AAR Cudas of every color are the ho-hum cars of the Mopar collection.
The one that blew my mind was the red 70 Hemi Challenger equipped from the factory with optional T/A fiberglass hood. I had no idea that was available.
Sweet! Thanks RC. Are you my uncle or brother (I'm 64)?Tell them that you’re related to me and they’ll roll out the red carpet for you.
Tell them that you’re related to me and they’ll roll out the red carpet for you.
Someone needs to start a thread titled 'Who, exactly is @Richard Cranium' for us newer members here. The aura is thick with this one!I would whip out my phone and call you........ that would really impress, like phoning the president
I would whip out my phone and call you........ that would really impress, like phoning the president
Sweet! Thanks RC. Are you my uncle or brother (I'm 64)?
All depends which President?