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  #501 (permalink)  
Old 10-09-2015, 01:48 PM
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Earlier this week I sent my Meisterstuck to Mont Blanc for repair. I dropped it in my kitchen and shattered the base. I've had the pen since graduation in 1989, grabbed the box (still have the box) to mail it back and it had the price sticker on it for $150. Replacement is $465....I think they'll charge me $100 to repair and polish

  #502 (permalink)  
Old 10-09-2015, 01:58 PM
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I see we're talking knives now too.

This is my daily


It's a Gerber 06 Auto Tando. perhaps the best knife I've ever used
  #503 (permalink)  
Old 10-09-2015, 03:53 PM
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"McQueen Takes Home 1964 Continuation Shelby Cobra from the Carroll Shelby Foundation;

Feb 5th 2013 11:06AM

"Steve McQueen, who was best known for driving a Ford Mustang during the action-packed car chase scene in Bullit, was a fan of the Shelby Cobra. He visited Carroll Shelby at his Venice, Calif. facility throughout the 1960s, though legend has it that studio contracts prohibited him from owning one of the fast roadsters. That did not keep him from sampling the Cobra as Shelby lent him the CSX2174 to cruise around Southern California. Ronald McQueen, however, will have the pleasure of owning the Shelby Cobra that Steve McQueen could never buy.

"The Shelby Cobra is one of the more sought after American collectible cars," added McQueen. "I have friends who own Shelby vehicles and just hearing the roar of the raw power these Cobra engines generate is so exhilarating. Now, I too finally own a piece of Shelby's automotive history."

As part of Shelby American's golden anniversary in 2012, the Carroll Shelby Foundation celebrated the tremendous milestone by offering the limited edition cars. Painted "Shelby black" and filled with a premium wine colored leather interior and special badges, only 50 of the limited-edition anniversary Cobras are being built. The new owner's small-block Cobra will be documented in the official Shelby registry."


Hey, thought you guys would enjoy this.
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  #504 (permalink)  
Old 10-09-2015, 03:56 PM
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I checked back into this thread after two weeks and can't believe this is still going on. Jamo has an unusual sense of humor - instead of closing this nonsense down he decided to throw it in the back room and let you all pummel each other senseless. Oh well - carry on.
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  #505 (permalink)  
Old 10-09-2015, 04:02 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by REAL 1 View Post
"McQueen Takes Home 1964 Continuation Shelby Cobra from the Carroll Shelby Foundation;

Feb 5th 2013 11:06AM

"Steve McQueen, who was best known for driving a Ford Mustang during the action-packed car chase scene in Bullit, was a fan of the Shelby Cobra. He visited Carroll Shelby at his Venice, Calif. facility throughout the 1960s, though legend has it that studio contracts prohibited him from owning one of the fast roadsters. That did not keep him from sampling the Cobra as Shelby lent him the CSX2174 to cruise around Southern California. Ronald McQueen, however, will have the pleasure of owning the Shelby Cobra that Steve McQueen could never buy.

"The Shelby Cobra is one of the more sought after American collectible cars," added McQueen. "I have friends who own Shelby vehicles and just hearing the roar of the raw power these Cobra engines generate is so exhilarating. Now, I too finally own a piece of Shelby's automotive history."

As part of Shelby American's golden anniversary in 2012, the Carroll Shelby Foundation celebrated the tremendous milestone by offering the limited edition cars. Painted "Shelby black" and filled with a premium wine colored leather interior and special badges, only 50 of the limited-edition anniversary Cobras are being built. The new owner's small-block Cobra will be documented in the official Shelby registry."


Hey, thought you guys would enjoy this.
Uh-huh. To me it sounds like standard press-release fodder.
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  #506 (permalink)  
Old 10-09-2015, 04:24 PM
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Originally Posted by DanEC View Post
I checked back into this thread after two weeks and can't believe this is still going on. Jamo has an unusual sense of humor - instead of closing this nonsense down he decided to throw it in the back room and let you all pummel each other senseless. Oh well - carry on.
Have you actually read any of the latest posts before you typed? Folks are talking about Cher and knives and pens now...
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  #507 (permalink)  
Old 10-09-2015, 04:28 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Nedsel View Post
Uh-huh. To me it sounds like standard press-release fodder.
His statement seems consistent with The Registry to me. Moreover, I would say its a factually accurate statement that can't be refuted.
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  #508 (permalink)  
Old 10-09-2015, 04:37 PM
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Thought you guys might like this too from Hemmings Buyer Guide. Hey, they said it not me.


[i]


Buyer's Guide from Hemmings Motor News.
May, 2012 - Mike McNessor:


"It sounds like the worst business plan ever.
Buy British roadsters built with old-world metal-shaping and fabrication techniques based on chassis technology last considered cutting edge when William the Conqueror invaded Mother England. Then, install Ford V-8 engines and Borg-Warner T-10 four-speed transmissions. For the finishing touch, screw some badges emblazoned with an aggressive sounding name on this contraption and sell it as a sports car--priced higher than legitimate store-bought sports cars, like the Jaguar E-type or the Chevrolet Corvette......

For most people, this idea would make the Hindenburg disaster look like a minor setback for the dirigible-based tourism industry......

This year marks the 50th anniversary of the opening act of Shelby's one-man American performance-car melodrama. Believe you us, the story behind his creation of the Cobra is far more complicated than what was outlined in the opening of this story. And it only got more complicated as time went on.....

It would be foolish to try and retell any of that here. For that we would need all 550-plus pages of Hemmings Motor News and then some.

We can tell you that in 1962, Shelby introduced the world to the Cobra, a car that would become one of the most sought-after and knocked-off collectible automobiles of all time. From there, it was straight into the history books riding a wave of legendary race wins, and enjoying a halo effect from modified Shelby Mustangs, modified Shelby Chryslers, some custom one-off performance cars as well as everything from chili to men's deodorant.

For all of its fame, the original Cobra was produced in surprisingly low quantities--just 998 were assembled from 1961 until 1968. (655 leaf-spring 289 Cobras and 343 coil-spring 427 Cobras. These numbers include street cars, competition cars, semi-competition roadsters, etc.) What followed in the ensuing decades, however, was an onslaught of clones, kits and look-alikes that turned this rare performance car into an overexposed American pop culture icon. Sort of like the Mona Lisa on a billboard advertisement for toothpaste or a guy in a Statue of Liberty costume handing out coupons in front of a hot dog stand on Fourth of July weekend.

Shelby stayed out of the Cobra building business until the late 1980s/early 1990s, watching as prices for the original 427 cars soared and companies building replicas (some of which were very good, some of which were not) turned substantial profits……

……As a workaround, Shelby rolled out his new CSX4000 series Cobras in 1996. These were sold by Shelby as rollers to be completed by an authorized dealer, allowing Shelby to skirt new-car emissions and crash-test requirements. When the 4000 series chassis numbers were used up, the identical CSX6000 series was rolled out. For enthusiasts of the traditional leaf-spring chassis, Shelby built the old-school CSX7000 289 FIA competition Cobra and a roadgoing counterpart, the CSX8000. All of the cars are available with either fiberglass or aluminum bodies (CSX1000 uses original bodies from AC in England), and there are even new 427 "side-oiler" engines being manufactured and sold by Shelby.....

………Today, if you're in the market for a genuine Shelby Cobra, you have some interesting options. Generally speaking, the most expensive will be an original 1965-1967 427 Cobra with a 427 engine.

……….The best place to start is with The World Registry of Cobras and GT40s--a 1,500-plus-page hardcover tome that documents the histories of individual Cobras and GT40s. The book is amazing in that you can look up a Cobra's chassis number and learn something about that particular car's origins--in some cases a great deal. It also contains a wealth of historical information, buying advice, production numbers, serial number locations, facts and figures, definitions for Cobra-specific terms and contact information to put you in touch with vendors and specialists.

Consulting with an expert like Scudder or Comer before buying a Cobra is also a wise idea. Both are intimately familiar with the Cobra market, as well as the histories of individual cars, and are willing to act as consultants for serious buyers.

Cobras masquerading as the genuine article are less of a problem today, thanks to SAAC and the World Registry. In fact, there is an excellent chapter in the World Registry about made-up cars and how they come into being.
"The fakes have been sorted out," Comer said. "That's the great thing about the club. Cobra owners police these things pretty heavily and everyone knows who owns which serial number. You can't really get around it. The fakes get found out really quickly." ……

WHAT TO PAY
Low Average High
1963 $399,700 $460,900 $540,600
1964 $472,800 $494,900 $663,100
Competition $487,500 $646,900 $1,691,500
1965 Continuation
CSX 1000 AC aluminum body $142,975 $151,550 $185,500
CSX 4000/6000 aluminum body $114,380 $121,240 $148,400
CSX 4000/6000 fiberglass body $89,870 $95,260 $116,600
289 Cobra $472,800 $494,900 $663,100
Comp $487,500 $646,900 $1,691,500
427 Cobra $579,600 $684,800 $1,131,500
S/C and Comp $763,700 $989,800 $1,421,300
1966 427 Cobra $579,600 $684,800 $1,131,500
1967 427 Cobra $579,600 $684,800 $1,131,500[/I
]

Enjoy. I'll check back next week.
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  #509 (permalink)  
Old 10-09-2015, 04:41 PM
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Damn, apparently Bojangles landed a new job in SAI sales.



My only critique, the seerssucker suit looks a little big.

Last edited by Joe's Garage; 10-09-2015 at 05:38 PM..
  #510 (permalink)  
Old 10-09-2015, 06:37 PM
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deleted, wrong thread
  #511 (permalink)  
Old 10-09-2015, 07:30 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by REAL 1 View Post
"McQueen Takes Home 1964 Continuation Shelby Cobra from the Carroll Shelby Foundation;

Feb 5th 2013 11:06AM

"Steve McQueen, who was best known for driving a Ford Mustang during the action-packed car chase scene in Bullit, was a fan of the Shelby Cobra. He visited Carroll Shelby at his Venice, Calif. facility throughout the 1960s, though legend has it that studio contracts prohibited him from owning one of the fast roadsters. That did not keep him from sampling the Cobra as Shelby lent him the CSX2174 to cruise around Southern California. Ronald McQueen, however, will have the pleasure of owning the Shelby Cobra that Steve McQueen could never buy.

"The Shelby Cobra is one of the more sought after American collectible cars," added McQueen. "I have friends who own Shelby vehicles and just hearing the roar of the raw power these Cobra engines generate is so exhilarating. Now, I too finally own a piece of Shelby's automotive history."

As part of Shelby American's golden anniversary in 2012, the Carroll Shelby Foundation celebrated the tremendous milestone by offering the limited edition cars. Painted "Shelby black" and filled with a premium wine colored leather interior and special badges, only 50 of the limited-edition anniversary Cobras are being built. The new owner's small-block Cobra will be documented in the official Shelby registry."


Hey, thought you guys would enjoy this.
A "1964 Continuation Shelby Cobra"? Bahahaha.

No such car can exist, certainly not factually correct unless they had Doc Brown's Delorean Time Machine, punched 1964 into the computer, and changed history. Shelby clearly didn't build a "continuation Cobra" in 1964.

More garbage spewed forth. Still a replica Evan, nothing has changed. And if it's a replica, then it can't be real, genuine, authenticate or otherwise.
  #512 (permalink)  
Old 10-10-2015, 07:01 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by DanEC
I checked back into this thread after two weeks and can't believe this is still going on. Jamo has an unusual sense of humor - instead of closing this nonsense down he decided to throw it in the back room and let you all pummel each other senseless. Oh well - carry on.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Buzz View Post
Have you actually read any of the latest posts before you typed? Folks are talking about Cher and knives and pens now...
Ok - you're right - I take that back.
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  #513 (permalink)  
Old 10-10-2015, 10:41 AM
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Oh, just found this for you guys too. Enjoy.

SAAC
SAAC was founded in 1975. It has approximately 5,000 members in the U.S. and another 500 around the world. When it comes to Cobras and Shelbys, if we don’t know it, it’s probably not worth knowing, While SAAC has continually evolved over the past 32 years, its basic reason for existence has not changed. The club is dedicated to the preservation, care, history and enjoyment of the World Championship Cars built by Carroll Shelby. The difference is that some of the definitions we originally operated under have changed. These changes happened very gradually, and that’s where evolution enters the picture.
"Preservation" is our first goal. When we came up with that some 32 years ago, the cars were in danger of becoming just so many used cars. We realized that they needed to be preserved, first by finding sources for replacement parts so they could continue to be driven. Don’t forget that in 1975, a ’65 GT350 was only 10 years old and ’70 Shelbys were only five years old. Almost all of these cars were daily drivers back then; a "classic car" was a Duesenberg, a Packard or a Cord. Things on our cars were beginning to wear out and most replacement parts were still available from any Ford dealer’s parts department. But we knew this wouldn’t last forever. Manufacturers are required by law to offer replacement parts for ten years; after that things that don’t sell go obsolete. As the years went by, "preservation" acquired a different meaning. Cars were now being restored and there was a keen interest in accuracy. You can see the evolution of the concept of preservation right there.
"Care" originally referred to the proper maintenance that would enable the cars to be used in the manner they were intended. In 1975 relatively few cars were show cars or garage queens, and seeing a fully enclosed trailer at a national convention was a rare sight. Most members found technical articles, part numbers and tips on the best car care products useful. As time passed, more and more cars were restored and as a result, they saw less and less actual use. This change has continued to the point where, today, it is exactly the opposite - a daily driver is the exception to the rule and most cars are only taken out on nice days and driven to meets or shows. In the late 1970s a lot of owners worked on their own cars. Today most cars are taken to professionals. This has eliminated the need for detailed technical articles in the Shelby American. If you don’t rebuild your own transmission, you don’t need to read an article about how to do that. And the guy you’re paying to do it doesn’t need to read the article either.
"History" as a concept does not change; but the perspective from which it is viewed does. The more time that passes, the more difficult it can be to determine the real facts. Those who were there when the cars were being built or raced eventually pass away. Or forget. Owners with axes to grind or investments to protect sometimes attempt to reshape their cars’ history to suit their own needs. Early on we did not always know the right questions to ask. There was a learning curve, and we started recording everything we knew and putting it into registries. These books established a body of knowledge that could be added to and corrected for accuracy. The continual compiling of information on cars - both general and specific - was given a very high priority within the club because we realized how important this was. It was also valuable on a personal level to owners because a registry which is recognized as being accurate becomes a tool for determining the relative worth of cars as well as establishing their histories. A second goal is to recognize the work done by those who built and raced the cars. This is why we try to include an interview in most issues of the Shelby American, and why we make such a big deal of inviting former drivers, fabricators, crew members and employees to national conventions. They are the people who gave life to these inanimate objects. They make the history of these cars come to life.
"Enjoyment" of these cars is the final reason for SAAC to exist and this needs little explanation. Think about the level of enjoyment you have when you are driving your car, all alone. Then think how much that enjoyment increases when you are part of a group of a half dozen cars driving down the road. Or sitting in a parking lot together. Or at a car show. Almost everyone joins the club because of the cars but after a couple of years they discover that the real enjoyment comes from the company of other members. The cars become only so much Muzak in the background. They provide the reason why everyone gets together but it is the personalities and friendships growing out of this that is really the cement that holds the club together. At some point, having a car really isn’t necessary.
When SAAC was started, the cars it catered to were the ones that Carroll Shelby built: Cobras, GT350s and GT500s. We didn’t know much about the Trans-Am notchbacks built by Shelby American back then. Ford GTs were also included because of the role Shelby American played in making them into race winners for Ford, but their small numbers would not be likely to account for a large increase in membership or a shift in the club’s focus. There was also originally a strong Tiger contingent in the club who always took the opportunity to tell anyone who would listen that Shelby and Ken Miles built the first two Tigers.
When we were laying SAAC out on paper we decided at the outset not to limit club membership to only those who owned these cars. "Ownership not Essential - Enthusiasm Is" was our slogan and that has not changed. We knew there were a lot more people interested in these cars than there were cars to go around, and each non-owner was likely to become an owner. Well, we hoped he or she would. It did not make sense to make them wait until after they had purchased a car to join the club. One of the services the club provided to members was information. Those looking for cars would be the very ones most in need of this information.
Many of the people who joined SAAC already owned cars other than Cobras and Shelbys. Most were Ford performance cars: Panteras, early Mustangs, Bosses and a handful of Falcons, Galaxies, Comets and the like. Keep in mind, this was before the proliferation of Cobra replicas and Shelby look-alikes. As the years passed, new members came into the club with the latest Mustang performance models. As those cars became faster and more sophisticated, many Shelby and Cobra owners purchased them to use as daily drivers.
We expanded the convention’s car show classes to accommodate these "enthusiast" cars and we welcomed them into the open track events. Let’s be honest - their entry fees help pay for the track. But we stopped short of putting them on an equal plane with Cobras and Shelbys. Rare were the articles in the Shelby American about Cobra replicas, Panteras or Mustangs because we have a strong feeling about what SAAC stands for. An attempt to widen the scope of the club to include all of these cars would be to dilute and change it. We discussed this when Carroll Shelby began building Dodge-based cars in the mid-1980s. In fact, it was Shelby himself who asked us what effect the production of these cars, carrying his name, was likely to have on SAAC. Would their owners be welcome?
It was a thorny question. We did not want to alter SAAC’s basic make up, so we established the Shelby Dodge Automobile Club as a parallel organization to SAAC which would cater to these cars. We received some help from Dodge (after prodding from Shelby) but after three years of working hard to keep this club afloat and at the same time looking for someone to take it over so we could direct all of our energies towards SAAC, we were unable to find anyone who was willing to make the commitment necessary. So we turned the club over to its strongest region and walked away from it. They immediately downscaled it. SDAC is still active today but it remains small, mostly because those cars just do not inspire the same level of enthusiasm and interest that Cobras and Shelbys do.
We now find that as the value of Cobras and Shelbys continues to appreciate, the cars have been priced beyond the means of some people who still want to be SAAC members. These people have opted to own Cobra replicas, Shelby look-alikes and other Ford performance cars of which there is presently no shortage. The national club is happy to have these people as participating members, and they add a lot to the club. We like to think of them as potential Cobra or Shelby owners. However, they should not expect that we will suddenly change the club’s policy to include cars outside of our purview as equal partners to Cobras and Shelbys. We also understand the symbiotic relationship between local regions and non-Cobra and non-Shelby owning members. In order for regions to do what they would like to do, they need a large membership base. This will, of necessity, include replica, look-alike and late model owners. Most regions operate under a much looser charter than SAAC national, and we have no problem with that. In fact between 33% and 66% of all regional members are not SAAC national members. We have a very clear picture of who we are and what we need to do and we have no plans to deviate from this. We will not try to be all things to all people because when you do that, nobody knows who or what you are. On a national level, when you stand for everything, you really stand for nothing.
As far as CSX4000 and CSX7000 cars are concerned, SAAC accepts these cars as genuine Shelby American Cobras (as opposed to "original" Shelby American Cobras). The definition we use to identify an original Cobra is one which was, 1) built between 1961 and 1968, 2) at the direction of and under contract from Carroll Shelby/Shelby American Inc., and 3) sold by Shelby American or one of its franchised dealers. The only difference between original Cobras and CSX4000 and CSX7000 cars is the time frame in which they were built (1). However, all three factors separate Shelby’s current cars from all the rest of the Cobra replicas, AC MK IVs, COB/COX continuation cars, etc. So, to our way of thinking, the current crop of Cobras are genuine but are not original.In 2005 a new generation of Shelby Mustangs was unveiled. Carroll Shelby was back at work with the Ford Motor Company, and his hand prints were all over the 2007 Shelby GT500 model. The excitement these cars created was amazing... even before the first one was completed. With cars promised for summer 2006 delivery, a veritable feeding frenzy took place and Ford dealers found themselves besieged with potential buyers. Before long they were accepting orders, but only with surcharges of $10,000 to $25,000 over MSRP. Many of these buyers were already SAAC members, but those who weren't were invited to join the club and participate in its activities with this newest generation of Shelbys. Before the first car was completed SAAC was already setting up a registry so the histories of these cars could be recorded from Day One. The same thing was going on with Ford's new Ford GTs.
Carroll Shelby is not a one act play. No sooner were the details finalized on the new GT500s then Shelby and Ford announced they would be teaming up with Hertz to provide that company with a black-and-gold rental version of the Shelby Mustang, called the Shelby GT-H. The 500 examples produced proved so popular that Shelby and Ford followed that up with another model, the Shelby GT - another Shelby Mustang positioned between the standard Mustang GT and the Shelby GT500. Before anyone could catch their breath, Carroll Shelby had pulled three rabbits out of his black cowboy hat and a new generation of Shelby owners was created. Each of these new models will have its own registry and its own following.
For most of us, SAAC is more than just a loose organization of owners and enthusiasts who enjoy cars produced and sold by the same manufacturer. The club is part family, part hobby, part historical archive and part refuge from the pressures of the day to day world. These cars provide the opportunity to lose yourself in the past, when high performance, horsepower and speed were unquestioned virtues. They came from a time before the suffocating blanket of government over-regulation, when bragging about zero-to-sixty times and top speeds were the coin of the realm. They start out as simple automotive diversions but quickly become a part of your life. Join us and find out what makes these cars so special.
click here to go directly to a membership application

P.O. Box 788
Sharon, CT 06069
fax: 860-364-0769
saac@saac.com

^back to top^




Guy...have a great weekend.
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  #514 (permalink)  
Old 10-10-2015, 01:02 PM
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There's that word "genuine." Right there in black and white.
  #515 (permalink)  
Old 10-10-2015, 01:57 PM
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Al: Oops. Didn't notice that.

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  #516 (permalink)  
Old 10-10-2015, 02:16 PM
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For the love of everything that's good, can we please leave Evan alone. The poor guy clearly doesn't have much to hold onto in his life. Let's let him have this. Let's end this please.... PLEASE..... PLEASE!

[ame]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1sONfxPCTU0[/ame]

Last edited by Paul F; 10-10-2015 at 02:23 PM.. Reason: added video
  #517 (permalink)  
Old 10-10-2015, 02:24 PM
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[quote=REAL 1;1366268]Thought you guys...
WHAT TO PAY
Low Average High
1963 $399,700 $460,900 $540,600
1964 $472,800 $494,900 $663,100
Competition $487,500 $646,900 $1,691,500
1965 Continuation
CSX 1000 AC aluminum body $142,975 $151,550 $185,500
CSX 4000/6000 aluminum body $114,380 $121,240 $148,400
CSX 4000/6000 fiberglass body $89,870 $95,260 $116,600
QUOTE]

hey Real1
curious, how did you come up with a $240K value of your CSX when high end used CSX 4000s sell at $148K?

nyg
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  #518 (permalink)  
Old 10-10-2015, 06:23 PM
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Cobra Make, Engine: KMP 539, a Ton of Aluminum
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Quote:
Originally Posted by NewYorkGuy View Post
hey Real1
curious, how did you come up with a $240K value of your CSX when high end used CSX 4000s sell at $148K?

nyg
Because instead of buying a completed used CSX and modifying it to his specs, he asked HRE in NY what it would cost to build out a brand new roller to his specs. And somehow, from the CSX alloy roller price of $160,000, the final number got to $240,000.
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Old 10-10-2015, 06:28 PM
RodKnock's Avatar
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Originally Posted by Al G View Post
There's that word "genuine." Right there in black and white.
Hold on to your dream. If you can't dream, then life becomes dreary.

I have a "genuine" Cobra too. Right there in black and white too.
  #520 (permalink)  
Old 10-10-2015, 07:59 PM
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Originally Posted by RodKnock View Post
Because instead of buying a completed used CSX and modifying it to his specs, he asked HRE in NY what it would cost to build out a brand new roller to his specs. And somehow, from the CSX alloy roller price of $160,000, the final number got to $240,000.
If one wishes to feed one's ego and get the most inflated appraisal possible, this is how one would go about doing it.
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