Guys,
I need to
clear up something. We are discussing 2 separate cars.
The Golden
Lancer from Barrett Jackson was an original D500 Golden Lancer from California
that was restored in Phoenix. The dual quads were added and the whole thing
advertised as a legitimate D500-1 option, even though it had not a single dash
one part on it. Other than that, the body, chrome, and interior are excellent. It
was built for resale and profit.
The car
restored by Mopar Mel was also a legitimate D500 and all Mel did was restore
the bare body, paint and bodywork only, to his customer’s specifications (White
and Coral). Mel did a solid job on a good body. I saw it before, during, and
after the work was done. Bill Allen, the owner, wanted to create a replica of
Lee Petty’s 56 Dodge NASCAR, one of the most famous 56 Dodges ever. He has done
an excellent job, with extensive research, with correct parts, as possible. He
has NEVER tried to pass it off as the original or falsely advertise it! As far
as I know, he built it for himself and has no plans to sell it. In my opinion,
he has done a good thing that helps promote the recollection of the famous and
winning Mopars of the 50s among the ignorant unwashed mobs of brand X owners
who think the SBC was the greatest engine ever built.
It should
also be known that Lee Petty got his car for free, about Christmas 1955. It was
a dash one chassis (HD brakes and suspension) and a standard D500 260 hp single
4 bbl engine. The “double 4 bbl group” of parts was not defined until January
56 and the intake parts were not available until mid/late Feb 56, just in time
for Daytona. The exhaust parts may have come along shortly thereafter. So even
Petty’s original car was an evolving thing with upgrade parts as they became
available. It did not roll out of the factory in the final D500-1 form. After all
the parts were available, as Tim says, I am sure the later dash ones rolled out
complete.
Dave
Homstad
56 Dodge
D500
-----Original
Message-----
From: Forward Look Mopar
Discussion List [mailto:L-FORWARDLOOK@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]On Behalf Of Brent Burger
Sent: Saturday, November 24, 2007
2:56 PM
To: L-FORWARDLOOK@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [FWDLK] D 500 air
cleaners
--------------
Original message --------------
From: DupontTim@xxxxxxx
This Barrett Jackson car is ranking in the very
top reaches of unethical restoring practices that has plagued rare
cars of the 50's. Built by someone (a total @$$ # */?) who disregards
research and basically pumps the system full of misinformation. Yes, the
Barrett Jackson car is at the pinnacle of deception and if the restorer doesn't
know it he is still guilty of gross ignorance, I don't care how nice the
car looks it is a huge fabrication of monumental forgery. The only grey
area here is wether the restorer is lazy and didn't care to get the facts or
is knowingly exploiting the uneducated public. I have nothing but disgust
for this cars of this ilk and it is easy prey for anyone who turns a critical
eye, Neil Vedder could and has ripped it to shreds in less than a minute, mere
child's play for him. Is Neil the only other person who gets it? collectors
must understand what's at stake here or perhaps apathy is now regarded as a v!
ertue. To me it boils down to the fact that if you are building a car for
yourself take all the liberties you want, and please if you sell it disclose
the facts..... if you are a person or company that wants to restore rare and
complicated vehicles for sale as investments to the public DO YOUR
HOMEWORK!!!!! A car hobby or Auction House that awards such total
crap are nothing more than parasites that exploit unsuspecting hosts and
there activities have no foundation in value, I don't know how it isn't
considered criminal. I am trying to be restrained but if you want to
know how I really feel.............Tim in Golden
******************************************************************************
OK, ...... I'll go out on a limb here since no one else likes
talking in real terms. Feel free to hit me backchannel if so inclined.
Earlier
it was stated this 56 Golden Lancer had the body "restored" by Mopar
Mel. The work being done for a Bill Harris (?) in Atlanta, Ga.
It wa also stated by that poster that an impeccable job was done in the
restoration, to which our own Mr. Vedder quickly shredded as being far from the
case.
In my limited exposure to cars handled by Mopar Mel, all have been
screaming examples of cobbed-together cars, using parts from the most random of
sources. A 60 Dodge might have an Imperial motor, or whatever it took to
slap it together and get it up for sale. The interiors were
atrocious. A recent thread over on the other side had a long line of members
raving about this man and his ethics.
I do not know the guy. Never dealt with him. Only seen a few cars
that the owners claimed they bought from him. I see him posting here
regularly looking for impossible parts and wonder how this duality exists
within the "community".
*********************************************************************************
Tim, I am with you on your points above. Build a car as you please.
Just don't lie about it when it comes time to sell. That is fraud.
As evidenced by recent B-J showings, a well done clone or Day Two
restoration does not suffer for bidders because it is not a flawless factory
numbers matching original or restoration. A person does not need to be
fraudulent to reap the big bucks.
I have really enjoyed the banter regarding these 56 D-500 and 500-1 cars.
We have a messy, one owner original D-500 ourselves. Keep up the study
and sharing. Education is the only way to stop fraud.
B.