Re: Re: Revitalizing a car that has sat
  By: Kurt Weiske to Ken Nischan on Thu May 16 2024 07:43 am
Ken Nischan wrote to All <=-
It's kept in a garage thankfully.  Once I take possession, what do you think would be a good plan of action for getting it back on the road?
I figure drain and replace fuel tank, replace fuel lines, fuel pump, tires, disassemble and inspect all the brakes (probably four wheel drum...  sigh), new fluids/filters.
 What else might I be forgetting?
Sounds like you've got all the bases covered - check the distributor and points, make sure you're getting spark?
Ahh yea, I forgot the electrical system :)   Thanks.  I was just talking about BMW part pricing in the other message; I was doing some shopping for replacement stuff for the Mustang and I was tickled to see it's basically the opposite.  I can do the whole fuel system for under five hundred bucs from CJ's Pony Parts.  Can't wait to get my hands on the car.
Now the debate is do I restore it, or sell it?  I think Mustangs are cool and all, but I've never really yearned for one.  I'm more of a Chevy guy.  Last gen Nova is my favorite car from back in the day.  The "red headed stepchild" of Novas, lol.  I like the boxy design.  Had three of them over the years.  Also a 74 (prior gen) that I had to start with a screwdriver, lol.
I see similar optioned Mustangs going for anywhere from 18 to 30ish thousand.
I guess I should get it appraised when I get it.  If it's on the 30s end, I think I may just sell.  A B9 era Audi S5 would bring me a whole lot more joy, heh, at least...  until it breaks :D
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