I know time's been getting away from me for quite awhile, but this is ridiculous. This year 1990 cars are now eligible as collector cars. Help!
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1990's old?
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This year 1990 cars are now eligible as collector cars.
As for the computer controls... Being a EE and knowing a bit about this stuff... Most of it is pretty durable but some parts age badly and will need to be rebuild or replaced. I do wonder about the newer controllers that can be field reprogrammed (reflashed). The early ones were what are called "mask ROM" but later stuff can be reprogrammed. The problem is that the reprogrammable memory is more likely to "leak" and lose its program data over time where the old stuff not so much. If the program is still there it can be read out and copied but if gone its gone. Hope someone is saving the data files....
Jeff in ND
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In Pennsylvania it's fifteen years for a Classic and twenty-five for an Antique ! My newest vehicle, an S-10, qualified last year. And when I first bought my '53 it did not yet qualify.Brad Johnson,
SDC since 1975, ASC since 1990
Pine Grove Mills, Pa.
'33 Rockne 10, '51 Commander Starlight. '53 Commander Starlight
'56 Sky Hawk in process
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Originally posted by plee4139 View PostI know time's been getting away from me for quite awhile, but this is ridiculous. This year 1990 cars are now eligible as collector cars. Help!
Craig
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Originally posted by StanwoodBothered greatly by the "new" cars that display and compete at events labeled "Antique Car Shows". That said, I would never call a 1990 Buick Reatta "boring".
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I wouldn't mind having my old Taurus SHO. That was a fun car. Mustangs, Thunderbird Supercoupes, Beretta GTZ's, Achieva SCX, etc were far from boring cars. The hard part would be finding replacement parts.Tom - Bradenton, FL
1964 Studebaker Daytona - 289 4V, 4-Speed (Cost To Date: $2514.10)
1964 Studebaker Commander - 170 1V, 3-Speed w/OD
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Originally posted by qsanford View PostGee, would my 1990 Chrysler Town & Country be considered boring?<G>
Anyone here remember when White Post Restorations wouldn't consider touching anything built after 1941?Brad Johnson,
SDC since 1975, ASC since 1990
Pine Grove Mills, Pa.
'33 Rockne 10, '51 Commander Starlight. '53 Commander Starlight
'56 Sky Hawk in process
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There are plenty of cars from the 80s and 90s I loved. GM try to get a little outside of the box in 1990. Think of the Lumina, especially the Dustbuster van (!) and the Beretta with the beer tap door handles, etc.
I have said all along, the cars that people think nothing of today will be desired in 30 or 40 years by today's kids. That's the way it's always been; when I was a kid you couldn't beg anybody around here to take a Studebaker even for free. My father died in 1984. He would get a good laugh to see my love for Studebakers today And I have no fear of where parts and skills to fix computerized cars will come from. The determined enthusiast always finds a way.
I will once again renew my prediction: In another 25 years or so, first and second generation Chrysler minivans will be red-hot collector's items. Hear me now, believe me laterProud NON-CASO
I do not prize the word "cheap." It is not a badge of honor...it is a symbol of despair. ~ William McKinley
If it is decreed that I should go down, then let me go down linked with the truth - let me die in the advocacy of what is just and right.- Lincoln
GOD BLESS AMERICA
Ephesians 6:10-17
Romans 15:13
Deuteronomy 31:6
Proverbs 28:1
Illegitimi non carborundum
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Originally posted by qsanford View PostGee, would my 1990 Chrysler Town & Country be considered boring?
if I was FORCED to accept a 1990's vehicle for collectability, my choice would be a BMW 8-series (E31); either an 850i or 840i. The build quality is good, and it is a true two door hardtop.
Craig
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The first year that I went to the annual AACA Fall meet was 1974. At the time I had a '55 DeSoto as a hobby car. Very few people there had anything for it or even wanted to talk about it. It was too "new" at the time. I saw another one there that a couple had driven to the meet from somewhere in the midwest. They were vendors and had driven the car to the meet as transportation, not as a collectible. I think that the Carlisle meets began a couple years later simply because a lot of people wanted a large swap meet for the 50s and 60s cars. So yes, I agree that the cars no one seems to care much about today will someday develop a following among collectors.
To keep this on the "Studebaker" subject matter, I do remember seeing a Dark Red '53 Commander C-body at that Hershey meet. It was the only one there that I could find to look at. I had gone to the show in part to look for one, as I always liked them. It was in good condition but not for sale.
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