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dibarlaw

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Posts posted by dibarlaw

  1. Not Mine.

    1941-41SE. Must sell. $7,500 OBO.Great running car shows low mileage. 23,700. Dual carbs.  Mostly original with new paint. Style #11440 SD, Body 2546, Serial # 1393347, Trim # 906, Paint # 573. Has small dent in drivers door edge.  Needs master cylinder rebuilt. Asking $7,500 OBO. Located in Allentown PA.

    William Fasching  484-506-6099

    20160820_104533.jpgBull Fasching 6.jpg

    Bill Fasching 7.jpgBill Fasching 5.jpg

    Bill Fasching 4.jpgBill Fasching 2.jpg

    Bill Fasching 1.jpgBill fasching 3.jpg

     

  2. Not Mine.

    1941-41SE. Must sell. $7,500. Great running car shows low mileage. 23,700. Dual carbs.  Mostly original with new paint. Style #11440 SD, Body 2546, Serial # 1393347, Trim # 906, Paint # 573. Has small dent in drivers door edge.  Needs master cylinder rebuilt. Asking $7,500 OBO. Located in Allentown PA.

    William Fasching  484-506-6099

    20160820_104533.jpgBull Fasching 6.jpg

    Bill Fasching 7.jpgBill Fasching 5.jpg

    Bill Fasching 4.jpgBill Fasching 2.jpg

    Bill Fasching 1.jpgBill fasching 3.jpg

     

  3. John:

     My wife and I are planning to attend the Old Car Festival so I will give an opinion then. I was at The Henry Ford Museum (Edison Institute) as it was called and Greenfield Village back in 1966. I thought I had died and gone to heaven with what was on display. What a wonderful clutter.  Wall to wall artifacts of all types and more brass era cars than I could ever imagine seeing. I remember in the 1970s-1980s the foundation had a series of auctions "to clean house". As I had thought, cleaning out the many warehouses old Henry had more stuff stashed. Fast forward to 1996 when I took our family to visit. I was very disappointed to see the place "cleaned up" in that now it was brought up to Museum industry standards. Much less volume of displays. What was there were interpretive displays engineered by museum curators to tell a story. I understand to keep the general public interested in coming to a museum that they had to adapt to a modern audience. I still miss all the stuff. I will see what has changed.

  4. Thanks for the help Larry! I had this information in my Favorites. When Windows 10 did the hostile takeover of my computer ....all gone....! So I have entered it on paper in my address book. Thanks for helping carmover. When I spoke with him about his 1925-25A it seems that he has had every bit as much frustration as I have in keeping these cars on the road.

     Wow with this response I have reached the 1000 mark!!! Time flies while you are having fun.

    • Like 1
  5. Sorry about the S/G issues. I know when we spoke several weeks ago you thought it was a wiring problem. If Terry Weigand or Larry Schramm sees this they will give you the correct go to guy contact. I have new brushes and have a new nylon roller to install in mine if need be.  I would undertake doing mine if that is all it would need  I would be afraid to do someone else's for fear of doing some damage.

  6. Cabler:

     Welcome to the wonderful world of the 1937 Buick. These are great, comfortable road cars. We have had our model 41 going on 30 years in February. We have only been able to tour with it since 2013. We had it at the Allentown meet. Only put on 375 miles this trip. The 36-38 club was indispensable in me getting this car on the road. Last September we did the 1936-38 Club tour in Nashville. That was a 1,700 mile trip all trouble free.   

  7. Midman:

     Good luck on that. It looks like a nice car. Looking around on e-bay there were a few more choices I found. Going with Larry Schramm's suggestion a great project I found was a 1913 Cadillac converted into a service truck. Of course it is a very ambitious project. Not for a project price. After my one response I had a personal massage about another 1913 Buick model 31 which would definitely be beyond my means. That now is 7 model 31s I have known about on the market in the last 6 years. So if we are patient something may come our way.

    Another very good choice are the 1914-1916 Dodge Brother's Touring cars. They are very sturdy, tour able cars. More room than a Model T. They have an excellent club support and some parts are reproduced. Of course the somewhat drab styling may put you off. Check on e-bay. There is a beautiful 1916 available in Meadville PA. AACA winner. The ad is a bit strange as it has been stored in a dealers show room. They want $32,000 (buy it now) on a beautiful older restoration of the car but say the engine is stuck??? If I were asking almost double for an older restoration I would make sure it ran great.

  8. This car, a 1928 model 48 Coupe, was almost to a point of completion on a good amateur restoration several years ago. Running/driving with new paint, plating, upholstery, new tires etc. The owner then decided to street rod it.

    He wishes to sell the following. The running gear complete, axles, refinished wood wheels, new WW tires(2002), springs. Also has extra parts, radiator shell, also a 1929 radiator. Fenders, hood, misc. engine parts. He said the engine ran well and did not smoke??. He did not know of the accurate mileage when they bought the car in unrestored original condition. I am just forwarding his information. I believe they are looking for $5,000 OBO. Things were covered up in tight quarters and I was only able to get these photos.

    DSCF5397.JPGDSCF5398.JPGDSCF5399.JPG

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     If interested contact: John Neville    Welles Tannery PA.

                                      814-932-0781

                                      814-685-3646

     

        

  9. On our VMCCA tour I crank started several of the cars we rode in. Including Larry's truck. I think both times with one or 2 pulls.DSCF5213.JPG I was told years ago to crank left handed so that if there were a kick back the hand and arm are out of the way. If anything the fingers may get a bad rap. Most important was to avoid spinning over the crank (unless you are charging the cylinders). At the 50th anniversary celebration at Allentown I watched a frustrated fellow spinning the crank over and over on a reluctant 2 cylinder 1910 model 14 Buick. DSCF5336.JPG DSCF5341.JPG

    It was about 15 minutes before they got it started. All the other Brass, hand cranked cars, were started in short order with minimal effort.

  10. Midman:

     You are my Hero! I do not know if we discussed my attempts in finding a car as you are speaking of. Marty offered me his 1914 B-37 Buick several years ago. That was after I attempted to buy a similar B-37 in New York. Hershey-buick[1].jpgIt needed a lot. But it was quite roomy for what I wanted.

    I also tried to buy a 1915 C-36 roadster.DSCF4061.JPG Also very roomy. That fell through and I did document that on the forum.  Also the 1913-31 near Pittsburgh.DSCF4707.JPG

    Also the same model in Michigan. Which may still be available. IMG_4271.JPG

     I have still been trying to shake loose a 1910 Model 10 roadster from a family in Va. (You can tell I love these earlier Buicks.)

    DSCF3524.JPG They are concerned that any one who wants it  will "Hot Rod it"! Smaller car but what I had always wanted. We need more of these cars in the Mason-Dixon chapter.

     Good Luck:

     Larry

  11. Thanks Brian:

     We need a few photos for the 36-38 club newsletter.

     It appears that the center section is of one thickness of the Burbank type cloth (same as what the top would have been). The outer perimeter sections have the hard black rubber pieces which reinforce the same material which covers it. That is probably why the outer sections are in better shape. If I had to use this on a car I would probably just have the deteriorated center material replaced.

    DSCF4715.JPGDSCF4723.JPGDSCF4745.JPG

      I picked this up from the estate sale of a former member Jack Frank who Had a 1937 Special Phaeton restored in 1990. It achieved all the AACA and BCA awards Grand National etc. I missed getting this car at the sale. It sold for $40,000. I had tried to give the new local owner the BCA sales pitch. He was not interested. He said he will probably not drive it. Just wax it and look at it.. Before the sale they had offered it to me for $30,000. Which I told them if they had let me know last November I could have tried to sell both of my cars. (I still would have been short of their asking price). Jack had a new boot made for the car and had a Burbank cloth bag made for it as well as one for the side supports. His son said that the top had never been folded. The Mason-Dixon Chapter has a photo collection of the car and its awards.

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    • Like 1
  12. Brian& Marty:

    I do have an original boot in its oilcloth bag for a 1937 Special. Looks pretty good. I could lend it out to you. Other than size you could ay least use it for a structural pattern. The reason I would like to hold on to it is that there is still a chance of a 37 Special Phaeton coming available near me.

    DSCF4902.JPG

    • Like 1
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