he is going to school which means studying and working a job. there are only so many hours inn a day to do the things that mean the most to you. plus it takes money to buy the parts which can be difficult to find. p.s. we had a 1964 Chevy Bel-air.
way back in 1962 I started working on my car project. A ’52 Merc. altogether it took me until 1966 to finish putting it together. A total of 4 years. I worked(for free) at my local body shop. Where I learned how to weld and how to chop and channel along with lowering the body. Found a wrecked Chevy with a small block V8 and managed to put it into my car, after lots of work before I put it in the car. Discovered an excellent rebuilt 4 speed transmission, and had other jobs where I was getting paid actual wages. The car was ready when I took my drivers test. Now here we are 55 years later, I still have the car now with 187,000 miles on the odometer and have 2 grandkids wanting me to give them the car. Its parked, under a cover, in a garage in Texas, been there for 4 years. I am pretty sure I am going to give it to a cousin now 50yo who is a decent mechanic. She kept my grandmothers 64 Dodge dart running for several years after it should have died. And she needs a reliable car. And she currently lives in NM, only about 500 miles from where its currently stored
I was just listening to the Charlie Ryan song Hot Rod Lincoln on You-Tube (a 1955 tune, by the way). Gary Cate, who posted a version of that tune, included images of a shiny red Model A with a Lincoln Zephyr flat head 12 cylinder engine, which corresponds to the vehicle in the song. Beautiful. If I could afford it, that would be my personal equivalent of the 64 Chevy Impala that Baldo aspires to.
Dad worked for around a decade trying to resurrect his ’57 Olds Super 88 coupe..finally gave it to the non-working car buyer. He admitted it was the most relaxing, and to a certain extent fun, period passing weekends working on her.
Baldo works at an auto parts store. At least get all 4 wheels and tires! If not running, at least presentable. Then, a convertible top. It will look decent standing still.
Templo S.U.D. over 3 years ago
bravo
chireef over 3 years ago
i understand the metaphor of the car, but still … it would be nice to see it get a little further along
lxiv64 Premium Member over 3 years ago
Too bad Baldo has a ‘62 Impala, not a ‘64. I once owned a white ‘64 Impala SS sport coupe, quite different from a ‘62.
Lawrence.S over 3 years ago
If someone pays you to do it to their car, it’s work. If you do it for your own car, without pay, it’s pleasure.
sykerocker over 3 years ago
That’s a 1962 portrayed.
Michael G. over 3 years ago
And it may be close to finished by 2060 or so!
j.l.farmer over 3 years ago
he is going to school which means studying and working a job. there are only so many hours inn a day to do the things that mean the most to you. plus it takes money to buy the parts which can be difficult to find. p.s. we had a 1964 Chevy Bel-air.
vacman over 3 years ago
My first two cars were 65 Impalas.
kenharkins over 3 years ago
That’s a 62, not a 64 .
Brent Rosenthal Premium Member over 3 years ago
And on weekdays it takes an explosion to get him out of bed
alexius23 over 3 years ago
Everyone makes valid points about the progress but seeing something getting done would be nice as well…..
mpearl over 3 years ago
he is working after all. Maybe at least buy a tire every couple of months?
timbob2313 Premium Member over 3 years ago
way back in 1962 I started working on my car project. A ’52 Merc. altogether it took me until 1966 to finish putting it together. A total of 4 years. I worked(for free) at my local body shop. Where I learned how to weld and how to chop and channel along with lowering the body. Found a wrecked Chevy with a small block V8 and managed to put it into my car, after lots of work before I put it in the car. Discovered an excellent rebuilt 4 speed transmission, and had other jobs where I was getting paid actual wages. The car was ready when I took my drivers test. Now here we are 55 years later, I still have the car now with 187,000 miles on the odometer and have 2 grandkids wanting me to give them the car. Its parked, under a cover, in a garage in Texas, been there for 4 years. I am pretty sure I am going to give it to a cousin now 50yo who is a decent mechanic. She kept my grandmothers 64 Dodge dart running for several years after it should have died. And she needs a reliable car. And she currently lives in NM, only about 500 miles from where its currently stored
Charlie Fogwhistle over 3 years ago
I was just listening to the Charlie Ryan song Hot Rod Lincoln on You-Tube (a 1955 tune, by the way). Gary Cate, who posted a version of that tune, included images of a shiny red Model A with a Lincoln Zephyr flat head 12 cylinder engine, which corresponds to the vehicle in the song. Beautiful. If I could afford it, that would be my personal equivalent of the 64 Chevy Impala that Baldo aspires to.
tg464 over 3 years ago
It’s a ’63
Rob Larson over 3 years ago
A 1964 Impala ragtop as seen on American Pickers:https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=1075503092916774
Cactus-Pete over 3 years ago
Why the sudden enthusiasm? He didn’t have much else to do the past couple of weeks.
ansilatoms Premium Member over 3 years ago
These strips always make me nostalgic for my old 1960 Chevy Impala. Wish I still had that green thing.
antidancer over 3 years ago
sorry, i owned a 64 impala SS convertible and that’s the same car Baldo has. End of story.
Ace 66 over 3 years ago
Let’s ask Hector D. Cantú and Carlos Castellanos to clarify the year. As you can see there are a lot of car enthusiast who want to know.
cosman over 3 years ago
Dad worked for around a decade trying to resurrect his ’57 Olds Super 88 coupe..finally gave it to the non-working car buyer. He admitted it was the most relaxing, and to a certain extent fun, period passing weekends working on her.
Sailor46 USN 65-95 over 3 years ago
I understand, I built two cars in High School, a 53 Ford 1/2 ton and a 55 Chevy Belaire.
PaulLeckner over 3 years ago
Baldo works at an auto parts store. At least get all 4 wheels and tires! If not running, at least presentable. Then, a convertible top. It will look decent standing still.