[DeTomaso] Fw: Pantera collector cars?
michaelsavga at gmail.com
michaelsavga at gmail.com
Wed Nov 19 21:10:29 EST 2008
Sent from my BlackBerry® wireless handheld
-----Original Message-----
From: michaelsavga at gmail.com
Date: Thu, 20 Nov 2008 02:09:30
To: <partsman912 at aol.com>
Subject: Re: [DeTomaso] Pantera collector cars?
All vendors carry original style parts. All carry performance and upgrade parts too. I don't think we are as segmented as you think, a few may be more vocal but they are in the minority with their activities which do generate a higher profile for them
Sent from my BlackBerry® wireless handheld
-----Original Message-----
From: partsman912 at aol.com
Date: Wed, 19 Nov 2008 21:01:52
To: <detomaso at realbig.com>
Subject: Re: [DeTomaso] Pantera collector cars?
I totally agree . I'll leave the anal retentive "must match factory" stuff to the Ferrari and Bloomington Gold Vette guys.? That was not my point for bringing this subject up. Let me put it this way , in most car clubs , the purists and the normal guys coexist with mutual respect but clearly have different ideas as to what their cars should be. Some clubs even have sub-chapters or groups that divide them within the club. You know what I mean , there are the club racers , the concours participants, the Sunday rally drivers ,etc. all within the same club whose membership then chooses which events to attend. This question?comes to mind?, who is the person or website that is the go to place for original Pantera's ?
-----Original Message-----
From: JDeRyke at aol.com
To: Partsman912 at aol.com; detomaso at realbig.com
Sent: Wed, 19 Nov 2008 2:25 pm
Subject: Re: [DeTomaso] Pantera collector cars?
In a message dated 11/18/08 11:08:59 AM, partsman912 at aol.com writes:
> My observation is that there are so many modified Pantera's that it appears
> fragmented with no continuity. Now first let me defend anyone who wants to
> modify their car , I've done it numerous times? thats the owners choice. But
> is it fair to say that there as more modified Panteras than original ones ?
>
Yes, but.....This is the same argument as between owners of stock 4-cylinder
flathead '32 Ford roadsters vs owners of chopped & channeled engine-swapped
'32 Fords: what do you plan to do with the thing? ANY older Italian sportscar
was built by old-world craftsmen, with the tacit understanding that the machine
will be 95% as-represented and you will finish it to your own tastes. Not
doing this will leave you with a car that often does not fulfil the promises the
salesmen make.
In the case of the Pantera, because Ford was trying to beat AMC and GM to
market with the first economical mid-engine supercar (both AMC & Gm's turned out
to be pure hype), Ford skipped their own excellent project evaluation system
that would have caught the minor problems which soured its initial reputation.
Then for various reasons, Ford abandoned the project only 3 years into it.
This left the problem-solving inherent in any new mechanism to the distributors
and ultimately, to creative early owners like Gary Hall who not only solved a
number of its annoying problems, but then sold the parts necessary for others
to correct them in their cars.
But looked at realistically, any 39-year-old car that still moves under its
own power is not badly flawed. Several are known to have covered over 250,000
miles. As far as 'buying for investment', anyone that buys a car to make money
gets exactly what he deserves..... These are affordable contrivances to
transport people about the planet in fine style at higher-than-usual velocities
with
some but not perfect safety. They were not intended to be full-sized static
display models to be oooh-ed and a
hh-ed at, and are also not home appliances.
They take some amount of understanding and care-&-feeding. My wife's 1972
Pantera has been modified to provide much better handling than when new and more
performance while still appearing very close to the designer's dreams. We are
approaching 30 years of driving pleasure with it, not just ownership.
If you are a car fancier that get pleasure from actually driving your
machines and tinkering with them, I recommend a well-sorted Pantera. If on the
other
hand you are the sort that considers any deviation from the factory's efforts
a mistake and don't consider hands-on work theraputic, avoid it and get
something thats impossible to work on- such as almost any later model
electronically
controlled performance car. Good luck- J DeRyke
**************
One site has it all. Your email accounts, your social networks,
and the things you love. Try the new AOL.com
today!(http://pr.atwola.com/promoclk/100000075x1212962939x1200825291/aol?redir=http://www.aol.com/?optin=new-dp
%26icid=aolcom40vanity%26ncid=emlcntaolcom00000001)
_______________________________________________
Detomaso Forum Managed by POCA
Archive Search Engine Now Available at http://www.realbig.com/detomaso/
DeTomaso mailing list
DeTomaso at list.realbig.com
http://list.realbig.com/mailman/listinfo/detomaso
_______________________________________________
Detomaso Forum Managed by POCA
Archive Search Engine Now Available at http://www.realbig.com/detomaso/
DeTomaso mailing list
DeTomaso at list.realbig.com
http://list.realbig.com/mailman/listinfo/detomaso
More information about the DeTomaso
mailing list