Some old cars have managed to maintain a steady trickle of fresh examples into self-serve wrecking yards since I began crawling around in such yards, back in 1981 or so. The kings of this phenomenon are, of course, the Fiat 124 Sport Spider (in a few years of this series we've seen this '71, this '73, this '75, this '78, and this '80), and the MGB (so far, this '67, this '71, this '75, this '79, and this '79 with Toyota 20R power). The MGB's British Leyland cousin, the Triumph Spitfire, has been a rarer but just-as-steady find for me; first this '65 and then this '75, and the prehistory of this series gives us this Spitfire-sibling '67 GT6 as well. What these cars have in common is near-scrap value when in rough shape, respectable price tags when in nice condition, and a tendency to be hoarded by guys who plan— someday— to turn the former condition into the latter condition. Eventually, reality sets in and a car that sat in a driveway from the time of the Chowchilla Kidnapping until a few months ago takes its final trip. Here's a rust-free, fairly complete, restorable early-ish Spitfire that I saw last month in a Northern California yard.
Every time I write about a junked car like this, readers proclaim that the chrome pre-5MPH-crash-rule bumpers must be worth tremendous sums. However, these yards are prowled seven days a week by guys who make their livings buying parts that are worth much more than the flat-rate price charged by big junkyard chains (e.g., BMW E30 limited-slip differentials, Lexus Nakamichi amplifiers), and they never buy these bumpers. An overdrive transmission from an MGB or Spitfire is another story; that will be gone within two days of the car hitting the yard.
Likewise, Jaeger and Smiths gauges aren't worth a whole bunch (though some VDO gauges— and I ain't saying which ones— are always worth grabbing).
The Mark III got the new-for-1967 1296cc pushrod four, making an optimistically rated 75 horsepower. A junkyard shopper wanted the SU carbs, but the engine is doomed to the shredder and subsequent trip to China via the Port of Oakland.
These cars are fun to drive, they look cool, and they make fine projects thanks to the abundance of cheap used parts. Someday, though, the flow of those parts will dry up… and then we'll all be sorry that we didn't buy pre-Malaise Spitfires when they were cheap.
from The Truth About Cars http://ift.tt/Jh8LjA
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