I have owned, drag raced, street driven, repaired, modified and even restored Corvettes since 1973. I am NOT bragging just wondering what happened? By this I mean every part of every project was enjoyable. Then some where along the way the greed for money ruined it all. Pricing went through the roof. Dishonest people did whatever they could to make as much money as possible from those who didn't know a car was faked or the part was truly not original but a repo. I joined NCRS the first time to gain more knowledge I think in the mid 80's mainly because of my love for these cars.
Of course the more I learned the more I saw the dishonesty. Not with the NCRS but with the classic car industry as a whole. I think most people "BANK" on NCRS flight awards as validating that a corvette is as it is advertised to be. NCRS can not and should not ever get themselves into the validation business. Providing PERIOD CORRECT data via every form possible YES, but to validate a car or its documentation will lead to a disaster for the classic Corvette industries. With all the faked cars out there can you imagine the number of law suites!
So this brings me to my question should we as a group not hold any car (original or not) differently? We as a group are permitting the value of "an original car" (whether it truly is original or not) to far exceed that of a NOM, fender flared, candy apple red corvette. To me they are the same and their value is what the market will bring.
I would love to see all of these classics back on the road VS being pushed across an auction block on TV. The only way this is going to happen is to stop the greed for money.
I am sure this post will start a fire storm, but I'm tired of seeing faked cars bringing top dollar, other totally originals without documentation bring low bucks because that owner couldn't find it or know how to fake it. It's time for us to level the financial playing field so ALL classic cars can be enjoyed on the road being driven as was the original intent of all the muscle car manufacturers.
Of course the more I learned the more I saw the dishonesty. Not with the NCRS but with the classic car industry as a whole. I think most people "BANK" on NCRS flight awards as validating that a corvette is as it is advertised to be. NCRS can not and should not ever get themselves into the validation business. Providing PERIOD CORRECT data via every form possible YES, but to validate a car or its documentation will lead to a disaster for the classic Corvette industries. With all the faked cars out there can you imagine the number of law suites!
So this brings me to my question should we as a group not hold any car (original or not) differently? We as a group are permitting the value of "an original car" (whether it truly is original or not) to far exceed that of a NOM, fender flared, candy apple red corvette. To me they are the same and their value is what the market will bring.
I would love to see all of these classics back on the road VS being pushed across an auction block on TV. The only way this is going to happen is to stop the greed for money.
I am sure this post will start a fire storm, but I'm tired of seeing faked cars bringing top dollar, other totally originals without documentation bring low bucks because that owner couldn't find it or know how to fake it. It's time for us to level the financial playing field so ALL classic cars can be enjoyed on the road being driven as was the original intent of all the muscle car manufacturers.
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