I have got to get serious about cleaning my barn out! I was hauling the convertible to the South Bend meet anyway so I loaded the back of the truck with 9 old doors. Not even half of what is in the barn. Big heavy doors, many with broken glass, all with dangerously sharp edges. Pressure washed the stupid things to increase their already significant appeal. (note: the ones with bad or no bottoms are a lot easier the clean out).
All were C or K. Some were solid, others real easy to clean. Bought a swap meet spot, put my phone number on them and waited for the calls as I sat by my Convertible.
No calls. Nothing. Not even a prank call. Loading them up my last day I sold a few pieces of trim to a nearby dealer. Wife asked me how much money I made. I had to tell her it was enough for lunch if I got a small drink.
So back to Kentucky, Convertible still in tow, Tundra rear hitch still almost dragging, and put everything back for another load of barn dust to accumulate.
My question dear members is this: does anyone buy doors with "issues" like rust holes, dents, creases anymore or are we a club of old guys with all our restorations behind us? Obviously I would prefer a straight solid used door and maybe we are to the point where the rough sheetmetal is just never going to be needed. These are Studebakers, not Stutzes. I'm thinking I'll strip out the glass, latches, trim, regulators, hinges and handles and start hauling since China needs the steel.
All were C or K. Some were solid, others real easy to clean. Bought a swap meet spot, put my phone number on them and waited for the calls as I sat by my Convertible.
No calls. Nothing. Not even a prank call. Loading them up my last day I sold a few pieces of trim to a nearby dealer. Wife asked me how much money I made. I had to tell her it was enough for lunch if I got a small drink.
So back to Kentucky, Convertible still in tow, Tundra rear hitch still almost dragging, and put everything back for another load of barn dust to accumulate.
My question dear members is this: does anyone buy doors with "issues" like rust holes, dents, creases anymore or are we a club of old guys with all our restorations behind us? Obviously I would prefer a straight solid used door and maybe we are to the point where the rough sheetmetal is just never going to be needed. These are Studebakers, not Stutzes. I'm thinking I'll strip out the glass, latches, trim, regulators, hinges and handles and start hauling since China needs the steel.
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