Neil, are there any statistics on the two-tone combinations on '57 Dodges?Back in the day, most every one around here was two-toned like the one in Bill's pix. In the Aug, '93 Collectable Automobile article, "1957-59 Dodge: The Sexy Swept-Wings," 9 out of 11 cars pictured had the roof/fins/lower-bodyside two-toning. That same article says that a little over 5% of all '57 Dodges were D-500's, 17,762 cars. That doesn't seem to hit the "rare" category. There were, according to the same source, 13,619 Coronet Lancer hardtop sedans in '57, 8,824 Royals and 12,068 Custom Royals. --Roger van Hoy, Washougal, WA, '55 DeSoto, '58 DeSoto, '56 Plymouth, '66 Plymouth, '41 Dodge ----- Original Message ----- From: "eastern sierra Adj Services" <esierraadj@xxxxxxxxx> To: <L-FORWARDLOOK@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Tuesday, May 27, 2008 9:22 AM Subject: Re: [FWDLK] WHATZIT WORTH? It's a Custom Coro in a very unusual (surviving) paint scheme, in a very rare (surviving) body style, and a D500 (originally), and is structurally sound, and relatively complete.. That's the good news. No engine/trans; needs everything, to some extent, to be done to it. Is the headliner, (and visors) intact? Without the original engine (D500's do show up on occasion): no more than $1,250.00 , as-is. Good/interesting project, but it'll take years to complete, if you can maintain the motivation and financing to complete it. At about a grand, you could protect the remains from further degradation and probably turn a profit on it, a couple years from now. If you are not equiped to restore the car diligently, or to dry-store it, then the seller probably wants your money more than you need that car. PowerFlites were rarely offered with D500's, but, as the D500 was an engine option, only, a customer could have ordered a P/F with a D500----never seen one, though.Neil Vedder ************************************************************* To unsubscribe or set your subscription options, please go to http://lists.psu.edu/cgi-bin/wa?SUBED1=l-forwardlook&A=1
|