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#31
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Gary and his crew at Mongoose have done GM a great service by providing high quality cars at reasonable prices. Their cars are much more sophisticated than a direct copy of an original because they use modern suspension and brakes.
I should also mention that their customer service is also excellent. When I visited their shop last year (a few days after visiting Duntov), the choice of who to do business with was easy. My story to date is here: [Only registered and activated users can see links. Click Here To Register...] Larry |
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#32
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Quote:
"GM licensed only means a license fee was paid. It has nothing to do with anything regarding quality, accuracy or country of origin. GM resto license scam is merely a marketing badge. Pay the fee and get the tag" |
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#33
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This is Doc. Thompson's Vette that was run in 1962. I can kick myself for not being able to find all the photos I had of the '62 Sebring race. They were done with a simple box camera, but some were half decent color shots.
1962 Gulf Oil SCCA Champion Number 2, a 1962 model that was sponsored by Gulf Oil and driven by Dr. Dick Thompson. Stone guards. I remember when MG Mitten advertised these cages in Road and Track magazine. Another style flat stone guard. Red lamp in the passengers side eye brow. Blue lamp on the hardtop roof. Goodyear Blue Streaks with American Flag emblem. Early style locking gas cap. I love these hood louvers. Another view showing the supports. The supports from the inside. Uh oh. No overspray on the hood latches. Nice Fuelie. Jul 28, 2010 05:19:02 PM, [Only registered and activated users can see links. ] wrote: Larry, I hope you can see your way to add to some of the threads on this forum, with your experiences with Dr. Dick Thompson in Sebring?....back when.... and any comments from your memory..... this thread has many links, including one that also needs reading really well..... [Only registered and activated users can see links. Click Here To Register...] [Only registered and activated users can see links. Click Here To Register...] Well, guess his pix are non existent anymore....so he included some from Doc Rebuild...... funny, same shit with me...no pix of any much cars previous to 25 years ago... ![]()
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GENE When the .gov fears the people, there is LIBERTY, when the people fear the .gov there is tyranny ... "Sure, there are some bad Republicans, but there are no good Democrats." Liberalism - Childlike emotionalism applied to adult issues I have a little list, let ALL of them be MIST...... [Only registered and activated users can see links. Click Here To Register...] [Only registered and activated users can see links. Click Here To Register...] |
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#34
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I’ve always loved Grand Sports. In the 1960’s while in college, Road & Track and Car & Driver fulfilled my fantasy reading of these races and racers. Next to the stack of old 1963 vintage magazines, I have a stack just devoted to the GS’s. More print devoted to them than you would think. Somewhere I still have an old 1970’s R&T magazine where the amongst the small 1”x1 1/2” classified advertisements, Penske or Wintersteen (?) were selling a GS for less than $10K with or without a Traco. It’s in a jpeg on my website somewhere, but I cannot remember where.
To reiterate: a GM license is merely a contract to send them (EMI/GMSPO) a minimum X dollars amount preciously agreed upon, per quarter, regardless whether your sales cover the minimum. If they do meet the minimum and beyond the minimum, it’s a straight percentage of the gross sales. It’s just a guaranteed quarterly royalty for the term of the contract. PS: Gene you lost me on that last bit with lost pictures ? |
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#35
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Quote:
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#36
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I’ve met quite a few enthusiasts who passed up opportunities to buy one of the five original cars at one point or another. All of them are pretty sick about it today, but back then, the cars weren’t really worth anything because they weren’t competitive, and nobody had a clue that they would appreciate in value.
Hell, I remember (back in the late 60’s) the Ford dealer in Dallas was trying to give away 427 Cobra’s for $4500.00 each….and there weren’t any takers! “If we only knew then what we know today”……….famous last words. We’re stuck in the midst of a string of 100+ degree days here in Cowtown, so I’ll have get my Dad up early for our Sunday drive before the temps get too high. I’m sure the neighbors will appreciate the exhaust note as we’re leaving! I’m still impressed with the lope the engine has with the GM “hot” cam that’s in the 480HP engine, but I suppose I should have expected it from a cam that adds a full 50HP to the stock LS3 Corvette engine. No other news to report, other than the fact that we still have way too much work to do at the business. I’m ready for a break in the near future so I can being the car back in for some updates. Stay cool, Larry |
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#37
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the last picture on this page shows the GS for sale in 1967
[Only registered and activated users can see links. Click Here To Register...] Ever heard of the Mongoose? It was a 289 Cobra raced with a 327 Vette motor. Only ran 1? 2? seasons. It was beat and "Mom" wouldn't buy into the idea i.e. co sign the loan for purchase. |
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#38
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Those are some great clips.
I do recall the Mongoose as a matter of fact. Speaking of hybrids....I have a very old friend who's brother bought a '58 Ferrari Testa Rossa from AJ Foyt back in 1962. AJ had at some point had blown the engine and decided he wasn't going to pay Enzo's price for a new one, so he installed a small-block Chevy with three deuces for carburetion! The car rarely sees daylight these days and selling it has never been a consideration. I don't have any idea what it's worth, but it's certainly an interesting piece. I think I have a picture of it sitting on the false grid with Delmo's GS next to it. I'll see if I can find it and post it anong with a few other related pics. |
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