| In 1980, Chrysler was headed into the financial whitewater rapids of a 2-year recession, paddling a leaky canoe full of weak sales. Their products weren't moving, and the survival life raft full of government loans was a year away. Sound familiar? They needed customers in the worst way, and in early spring 1981, 18-year-old Don Sutherland saw a brand new black T-top 1980 Plymouth Roadrunner sitting in the corner of a local Chrysler-Plymouth dealership. This was his first brand new car. In theory.
In real life, this salesman took one look at Don, wrote him off as a young punk, and gave him a terse 2 word answer to the possibility of a test drive, "Absolutely not". Don was determined to own the 'runner so he went to the owner and cut a deal himself. He paid $8,700 plus another $300 for a cassette stereo. No word on whether the half-assed salesman got a cut.
Darcy inflicted the first major war wound on the brand new Plymouth. Cousin Darcy discovered that he had a pathological hatred of pheasants. He aimed Don's black beauty at a particularly cocky one. The final score was Plymouth 1 and pheasant 0. But the victory came at a price. The 95 mph impact ripped half the front grill off the car, and Darcy's trip suddenly became a lot pricier. Don's new ride was scarred, but that was the 1st of many great road trips in the faithful Roadrunner. Don and the Roadrunner became life partners, and in 2012,they celebrated 31 years together. Since then he married Michelle, and they have 2 sons, plus he started a business, but the Roadrunner is still there. That's a feat because in the early stages of his new marriage he ran into the struggle between the eternal enemies called old car vs. new bride. He solved that by moving the car out of the coveted carport in the winter to neutral storage. They took the last big trip in the car to Spokane when Michelle was expecting their oldest son Stu in the early 90s, and since then the beeper is in semi-retirement mode. The car is still completely rust free because it only saw one real Canadian winter, so the game plan is surprisingly easy. Don pulled the 85,000 original mile 318 to replace the seals and allow access to the engine compartment for a thorough detailing. The power train is solid, because Don has always respected the concept of regular maintenance and the same mechanic for 30 years. This car should easily be back from cosmetic enhancement in time for the 2013 car show season, because it's so close to mint condition in 2012. Don wants to exercise patience because he wants to copy the showroom look of the T-roof beeper back in 1981. He summed it up this way: "how many guys can get behind the wheel of a significant car from their past and be 18 again?' For more of J Sutherland's work go to mystarcollectorcar.com from The Truth About Cars http://www.thetruthaboutcars.com | |||
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