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What old or unusual things have you found after getting old car?


JamesR

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On ‎3‎/‎25‎/‎2019 at 7:57 AM, Matt Harwood said:

A handful of these in the center console of a 1993 Cadillac Allante we sold a few years ago...

 

Viagra-300x227-500x500.png

 

These things are about thirty bucks each at the Pharmacy.

A hand full will get you several handfuls.

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On ‎3‎/‎24‎/‎2019 at 4:41 PM, GregLaR said:

3 vials of cocaine in one of my Corvettes.

3 hand guns in a '65 Chevrolet wagon.

 

I would have to make sure that it was indeed cocaine and make sure that there was no more evidence.

I opened up an old Harley tail light once at a swap meet that had a baggie full of (flower?) in it.

 

As for the guns.

I have a good friend and neighbor that is was a cop and later a detective. Now retired but still well connected.

I run all the questionable stuff thru him.

 

I recently picked up a hitch hiker that gave me a piece of jewelry that he claimed to have found on the side of the road before I came along.

I got to looking at it the next day and it is marked to be 14k gold. it also has what I hope are two rubies  and couple of small diamonds.

Not on any hot lists at this time so I may just have to get it appraised.

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12 hours ago, Grizz said:

What a great thread. I’ve never found anything cool but What about things you lost?! I once lost three vials of cocain in a corvette . 😂

LOL!

 

Another category would be "odd things put in an old vehicle," and I have a pretty good one:

 

My sister-in-law's brother -in-law (???) received a brand new Pontiac GTO as a college graduation present in 1969. He kept it for several years, but not being a car guy, he eventually gave it to his wife's elderly grandfather. As most of you know, the 1969 GTO's stylish front bumper was really more of a rubber-ish cushion than a bumper. As I was told the story, the grandfather said something like "that's no bumper" and mixed up a bunch of concrete and somehow jammed it into either the interior cavities of the front bumper or right behind it. I think it's safe to say he probably wasn't a member of the AACA. 😄 Imagine finding that in an old GTO.

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11 hours ago, JamesR said:

 As I was told the story, the grandfather said something like "that's no bumper" and mixed up a bunch of concrete and somehow jammed it into either the interior cavities of the front bumper or right behind it. I think it's safe to say he probably wasn't a member of the AACA. 😄 Imagine finding that in an old GTO.

 

That was actually pretty common practice in eastern bloc countries, but done not with bumpers, but with rocker panels. As all these cars - Fiat 126p, 125p, Ladas etc. rusted quickly, spare panels were on the scarce and waiting time for a new car was from eight to eighteen years, some people cuted small hole in top of the rusting rocker panel and filled it with concrete. Imagine tiny , 24 hp Fiat with extra 100 kg of concrete in it. Daemon of speed.

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About 15-20 years ago, I purchased a RUSTBUCKET Rampside pick up truck thru an ad in the Washington Post.  It was somewhere in Maryland...  When I went to look at it it was in pretty tough shape, but it yielded a few great parts - factory gas heater (relatively rare in an FC Corvair), straight as an arrow F&R bumpers, and an excellent windshield.  I offered $50 for it and said I would remove it from the property.  I think the "remove it from the property" was more important to the seller than the $50.  It was sad when I laid the two $20's and one $10 in the sellers hand.  The best part was the NOS FC-only gas heater exhaust pipe behind the seat!  That alone was worth more than the $50.  I sold the gas heater for $150!  Recently I paid $25/each to have the bumpers professionally blasted and I painted them with epoxy primer.  Another friend cut the DS panel out of the bed for a new skin for a ramp for another Rampside.  I still have the nose, which I will cut the DS corner to repair some accident damage on another RS I am making roadworthy...    

Edited by 63RedBrier
Correction! (see edit history)
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Before I retired, I was told by a fellow employee who restored military vehicles,  of his friend who had purchased a wrecked German SK251 half track in Europe in the early 2000’s. It was decrepit but restorable. When the guy got to stripping and disassembling it, he found a complete case  of German semi-automatc assault rifles, the mean ones issued at the end of WW2, in one of the tool crib compartments which was rusted and bent shut. I never was able to verify this, but likewise there was no reason to doubt the reality of this story either. If true, those rifles were possibly worth more than the half-track.

Ron Hausmann P.E.

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Did not buy this car but in the early 70s a friend repossessed a car and locked it in the compound. I went through it with him making sure everything was ok the next morning and opened a small box that was in the trunk. It was full of shall we say compromising polaroid pictures. We were looking at them in the office when a car came speeding in so we cleared the counter of the evidence fast. The man demanded to see his car and when he came back from going through it wanted the box that was stolen from the trunk. Charley asked him to describe what was missing and I can not print here what was said as I might get a warning. He was really upset so we put the box back in the trunk after he left with most of the pictures back in it that he was not in. He was back again a few hr. later found the box and when he was leaving my friend asked if everything was ok and if he found what he was looking for. He never said a word and he left spinning his tires. I would not have wanted to be in his shoes if his wife / girlfriend knew what happened. Sorry  I can not remember what kind of car it was.

Edited by Joe in Canada (see edit history)
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  • 2 years later...

I bought a 1929 Packard once and when I finally got around to looking under the front seat I found a complete tool kit. I called the gentleman I purchased the car from to thank him for the tools and he had no idea they were there. He didn't even know there was storage under the seat. 

Edited by Brass is Best (see edit history)
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A friend was restoring his Dad's Model A Tudor, he had pulled out the rear upholstery and found copper tanks inside the panels, they were joined together with plumbing and there was an outlet but no inlet.  He asked around and finally got a plausible answer, the area where they lived was 'The Plains' in Virginia a bit outside of DC, it was notorious back in the days of prohibition for the number of stills.  People would smuggle the hootch into DC for much needed cash and the tanks were a 'dealer installed' option.  He thinks just as his Dad bought his from the dealer the law was repealed and the tanks were never completed and just left in the car. 

They are still in it, covered but still there for the next restoration guy to puzzle over.

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Mouse skeleton behind the panel that was above the windshield in my 1931 Plymouth on either side of the wiper motor.

Under the drivers  seat cushion of my 1931 Franklin Derham bodied victoria , was a steel plate that was part of the front seat structure. I unscrewed that and upon lifting it up found a huge pile of very small round yellow and black striped circle shaped things. I used a screw driver to poke at it and then realized it was the deceased inhabitants of a bees nest!  I jumped out and ran like hexx away but looked back and didn't see a swarm following me so went back and they were still there. the wings had fallen off decades ago and dissolved but the "bodies" remained. The car had been stored for many years in a garage with no door , so my guess was that in warm weather the bees decided it would make a good hotel.

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I was crawling around under my car and noticed on top of my frame rail toward the back where a lot of dirt,mud and small rocks have gotten lodged.I thought I had cleaned it before but I must have missed it.That got me wondering what else might be hidden.I guess I been watching Oak Island too much.I'm sure there's no money pit in there.

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I bought a 1936 Dodge parts car and found a 1936 penny. Sold the car still have the penny.

 

A hi school friend found a 38 Special under the back seat of a 56 Plymouth once.

 

I was buying a Chrysler convertible from a guy that couldn't get it started.

A couple of runs to his FLAPS and I had it running and was readying to make the 200 miles from Seattle to Oregon.

I was stupid enough to open the trunk to see if it had a spare when the seller was standing there.

I lifted the spare and he instantly remembered that he had stashed a coffee can (actually I recall it being a large cookie can) full of quarters there so his wife wouldn't know.

It probably contained about what I paid for the car. But I kept his old jumper cables.

 

Edited by JACK M (see edit history)
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I pulled out the back seat and found the remains of a parking ticket from 1968. Looks like someone didn't pay the meter! Unfortunately it was torn so I couldn't see what city it was from. Wonder if it was ever paid.

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Bumblebees and wasps...alive and ANGRY!  😲

 

I did find a 38 Special (the band, not the gun) tape in one car - a hot rod with a cassette deck.  And a handwritten bill of sale in another for what the guy I bought it from paid the year before - less than I did.  😒

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Ok, this is my old thread resurrected. Hopefully it'll attain the glory it never achieved in it's first life.

 

Incidentally, Jack and CHuDwah, I wonder what the legal requirements are when finding a gun in an old car. Suppose it's a function of state law...😄

 

Edited by JamesR (see edit history)
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On 3/24/2019 at 6:46 PM, JamesR said:

Whoa! I hate to say this, Greg, but there's a disturbing pattern developing there! 😄

 

Sometimes the old-car pickin's can be pretty good in the "bad" end of town!  And sometimes you get a few freebies with your purchase!!

 

Craig

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I was cleaning out the gas tank in my '31 Model-A roadster and fund an old soda or beer bottle cap in it.  The cap was so old that it had a type of felt as a sealer instead of cork.  Gas had eaten all the writing (if there was any) off the cap, but the felt was still in pretty good shape.  Funny thing is Model-A Ford gas tanks have metal screens or spark arresters located inside the filler necks.  Many "A" owners over the ears will remove these screens, but my car still had its one in it!😊

 

Years ago a buddy told me about a friend of his who manged an auto wrecking yard.  The friend opened the trunk of a junk car once and found a box with two severed human heads in it.😬

 

Capt. Harley😉

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I didnt find anything spectacular, a couple of pull tabs, a matchbox of the same model as my car, an old turn signal switch and some misc. sockets.  My car is a 1977 Trans Am and there was a similar thread to this on a Trans Am forum I belong to. Not surprisingly with this model of car, a lot of guys found roach clips, pot residue, condoms, etc.

 

 

 

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19 hours ago, JamesR said:

I wonder what the legal requirements are when finding a gun in an old car.

 

Interesting enough, my friends dad was the local Chief of Police.

The S/N raised no flags.

But, I don't know what ever happened to the pistol, I doubt the Chief would let his teenage son pack it around.

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19 hours ago, rocketraider said:

 

*edit* ??? What happened to the bottle opener???😶

 

Sorry, Rocketraider. After I'd posted my recent comment, I realized that this was my old thread in which I'd already made a reference to the bottle opener (in the first post of the thread.) I changed my recent post so I wouldn't be redundant.

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On 3/24/2019 at 4:41 PM, GregLaR said:

3 vials of cocaine in one of my Corvettes.

3 hand guns in a '65 Chevrolet wagon.

 

Many years ago, I was on a jury for a M1 case.  The perps had rented a car for their hit job, drove it several hundred miles to the scene of the crime, did the deed, drove several hundred miles back, and turned the car back in to the rental agency.  Along the way home, they were hiding the murder weapon in the trunk of the car - and it fell into a gap between the seat and the fender well.  Not being the brightest guys in the world, they actually turned the rental car in with the gun still lost in the back!  Then they spent the next few weeks trying to rent the same car again so they could fish the gun out...  They weren't successful.  When the Law eventually caught up with them, the rental car was searched and the gun was recovered for evidence.

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