Fat Hack
12-12-2003, 09:24 AM
In an effort to get my shit built as cheaply as possible over the years, my most effective strategy has been to resort to using "donor cars" to save lotsa cash when screwing a ride together!
I've touched on this concept a few times in the past, but I figured I'd organize it into ONE thread for the end of Tech Week. (This has been the best five days on the HAMB in a LONG time, you guys all ROCK!!).
You can use a donor vehicle from any era to supply you with an engine, tranny, rear axle, battery, wiring, metal, bolts, bulbs, cables, hoses, belts, radiator, etc for whatever project you're working on, but I find that "forgotten" cars of the 70s make the best 'bang for the buck' values in this department!
70s cars, while smothered in smog equipment, still have familiar Chevy, Ford, Mopar, Pontiac, Olds, etc V8 engines in them with reliable three speed automatic trannys. You just have to rip off all the pollution control junk and add a few swap meet bolt-ons to your 'new' engine to make it more at home in your older rod or kustom kruiser!
Cars of the Disco Decade are also dirt cheap, or FREE most times. It's alot easier to find a rusty 77 Malibu or a smashed up old Maverick than it is to snag a whole 66 Chevelle or 67 Mustang...but you get essentially the same drivetrain from the newer stuff...just at a fraction of the cost!
To share some examples with you, let's start with a lowly four door 77 Malibu Classic. I bought this car for $200 from a friend's mother, and drove it for about a year while using it as a rolling dyno to measure the effects of various bolt-on speed parts...tweaking the 305 until it could pull honest high 14 second quarter mile ETs in this big old land barge! (See my 305 postin the Tech-O-Matic for the full scoop!).
After I'd had my fun, I used this poor rustbucket to supply everything needed to get my 70 LeMans on the road. The engine, radiator, power steering pump, headers, hoses, brackets, engine mounts, battery, and TONS of incidental parts were robbed from the Malibu to bring the project car to life!
After that, I managed to sell the front fenders, transmission, exhaust system, stereo, wheels and tires off of the gutted Chevy for a total of over $300! That's right...I not only got my drivetrain and various needed components from this old hulk...I also netted three hundred dollars cash to help me add a better shifter, gauges, and other items to the project car in question!
On top of THAT, the local scrap yard STILL paid me $25 when they hauled off the remains!
I've touched on this concept a few times in the past, but I figured I'd organize it into ONE thread for the end of Tech Week. (This has been the best five days on the HAMB in a LONG time, you guys all ROCK!!).
You can use a donor vehicle from any era to supply you with an engine, tranny, rear axle, battery, wiring, metal, bolts, bulbs, cables, hoses, belts, radiator, etc for whatever project you're working on, but I find that "forgotten" cars of the 70s make the best 'bang for the buck' values in this department!
70s cars, while smothered in smog equipment, still have familiar Chevy, Ford, Mopar, Pontiac, Olds, etc V8 engines in them with reliable three speed automatic trannys. You just have to rip off all the pollution control junk and add a few swap meet bolt-ons to your 'new' engine to make it more at home in your older rod or kustom kruiser!
Cars of the Disco Decade are also dirt cheap, or FREE most times. It's alot easier to find a rusty 77 Malibu or a smashed up old Maverick than it is to snag a whole 66 Chevelle or 67 Mustang...but you get essentially the same drivetrain from the newer stuff...just at a fraction of the cost!
To share some examples with you, let's start with a lowly four door 77 Malibu Classic. I bought this car for $200 from a friend's mother, and drove it for about a year while using it as a rolling dyno to measure the effects of various bolt-on speed parts...tweaking the 305 until it could pull honest high 14 second quarter mile ETs in this big old land barge! (See my 305 postin the Tech-O-Matic for the full scoop!).
After I'd had my fun, I used this poor rustbucket to supply everything needed to get my 70 LeMans on the road. The engine, radiator, power steering pump, headers, hoses, brackets, engine mounts, battery, and TONS of incidental parts were robbed from the Malibu to bring the project car to life!
After that, I managed to sell the front fenders, transmission, exhaust system, stereo, wheels and tires off of the gutted Chevy for a total of over $300! That's right...I not only got my drivetrain and various needed components from this old hulk...I also netted three hundred dollars cash to help me add a better shifter, gauges, and other items to the project car in question!
On top of THAT, the local scrap yard STILL paid me $25 when they hauled off the remains!