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914World.com _ 914World Garage _ 1970 Parts Car

Posted by: andrewvolsen Sep 16 2016, 10:34 PM

I bought this 1970 parts car today. Door jamb sticker says it was produced February 1970, VIN indicates it to be approximately car number 3,500. It's been repainted and the interior has been reupholstered at some point. I think it's complete other than the rocker trim (lots of parts in boxes and trunk). Still has the original 1.7 with D-jet and tail shifter. It's fairly rusty for a California car; hell hole looks pretty bad, rust in fenders and floor. It was on jack stands in a garage for about 25 years until this morning.

Anyone have any thoughts on it? Is there anything special on these early cars that I should be sure to save?


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Posted by: pgollender Sep 16 2016, 11:10 PM

Don't forget to list your parts car VIN, chassis, and paint codes under members' section.

Posted by: dlee6204 Sep 17 2016, 12:17 AM

I'm just curious what you west coasters call "rusty". popcorn[1].gif smile.gif

Posted by: andrewvolsen Sep 17 2016, 12:29 AM

I can see my driveway through the hellhole. Tomorrow I will open both doors, take the top off, and have a heavy guy stand on the sill to see how much it flexes.

Posted by: andrewvolsen Sep 17 2016, 12:25 PM

I opened both doors, took the top off, and had a heavy guy stand on the passenger sill close to the bulkhead this morning. I measured from a point on the top of the targa bar to a point on the windshield frame, and my measurement only changed by 0.1 mm between no weight in the car and heavy guy on the sill. Seems like it should have flexed more than that with how rusty the long is, what do you all think?


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Posted by: andrewvolsen Sep 17 2016, 12:26 PM

Hell hole


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Posted by: mlindner Sep 17 2016, 12:53 PM

Andrew, I'd take the rear hubs for $85.00. Mark

Posted by: Chris914n6 Sep 17 2016, 02:05 PM

So far that looks like an easy fix, relatively. Hell hole is minor and the huge hole in the rocker is the jack point not battery drainage, that's why it's not flexing much.

Post pics of the other places. I'm thinking this one is an East coast fixer.

Posted by: mepstein Sep 17 2016, 03:14 PM

My opinion - that's a car you save, not cut up. Early cars are great and make the best bases for GT conversions.

I wish I could have started with a car that solid.

Posted by: andrewvolsen Sep 17 2016, 05:22 PM

Passenger floor


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Posted by: andrewvolsen Sep 17 2016, 05:22 PM

Passenger front fender


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Posted by: andrewvolsen Sep 17 2016, 05:24 PM

Passenger fender


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Posted by: 396 Sep 17 2016, 05:33 PM

Fix....yes one can always fix any car. You need to ask yourself, do I have a Deep Pocket for the restoration.

Over the years, I've seen good intentions with some of these cars. Several years later , someone might ask. I want the garage to park my car in or one day you get tired of dumping your hard earned money into it. Evaluate what you really want. I would start with a car with out any structure work..but that's just me. Good luck

Posted by: Porschef Sep 17 2016, 05:35 PM

QUOTE(Chris914n6 @ Sep 17 2016, 04:05 PM) *


Post pics of the other places. I'm thinking this one is an East coast fixer.



Absolutely. I bought one a couple years back that's being restored that was not as nice as that. Plus, that seems to be a really early car... w00t.gif

Posted by: andrewvolsen Sep 17 2016, 05:51 PM

Well, how much do you guys think it would be worth to someone as a restoration project? I bought it to strip parts off of, but if someone really wants to restore it that would probably be a better use of it. I bought it from an estate with the understanding that I would use it as a parts car. I would need to speak with the man who sold it to me before pursuing a title with the DMV to make sure he is comfortable with it.

I cleaned up rodent nests from inside of it, and it still has some odor to it.


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Posted by: Chris914n6 Sep 17 2016, 07:30 PM

No trunk rust?

No accident damage?

Then that's a fixer upper.

Posted by: andrewvolsen Sep 17 2016, 09:00 PM

I guess I'll list it in the cars for sale forum and see if anybody wants it as a project. I don't need a big restoration project, so if nobody wants it to restore it's back to parts car status. Any thoughts on a fair asking price for it?

Posted by: andrewvolsen Sep 18 2016, 11:37 AM

Alright, I've listed it in the cars for sale section of the forum. I'll leave it up for a little while, but I don't want it sitting in my driveway for an extended period. Even if I cut it up the good parts of it can be used to patch up other cars in need of patch panels.

Posted by: RobW Sep 18 2016, 08:13 PM

Where are you located?

Posted by: andrewvolsen Sep 18 2016, 08:15 PM

Santa Barbara

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