W31? on Minnesota craigslist
#1
W31? on Minnesota craigslist
not mine. thought i would share for someone else.
https://minneapolis.craigslist.org/h...372264122.html
https://minneapolis.craigslist.org/h...372264122.html
#5
No pictures of it, but if you look close it appears to be there.
Has some telltale things on it like the ram-air hose clips and holes in the fenderwells.
This air cleaner is for sale not to far away either.
https://cleveland.craigslist.org/pts/6401073144.html
Has some telltale things on it like the ram-air hose clips and holes in the fenderwells.
This air cleaner is for sale not to far away either.
https://cleveland.craigslist.org/pts/6401073144.html
#7
Who's "Randy" ?
#8
yes he has a car for sale
talked to him
never will be able to verify as this b w31
#9
My guess is that the "condition" of "whats left" of the car is probably overstated too. The $7,000 might even be a little high ? I'd hate to buy another "project" right now, and thats exactly what it would be.
Ralph
#12
It is my car and I am waiting for someone to prove to me it is NOT a W31 but most are tire kickers and would just rather say it is not! I guess all without broadcast cards are not legit ehh? (we know that very few have correct engine) I guess that is what I get for being honest description! It has cowl tag and has NOT been Polished by No Means! LOL
#17
Best wishes on the sale.
#18
Thank You, Just was tired of all the people with no money or no desire to purchase making negative comments. I know Craigslist is not he place for it but actually had less negative there than here. Just dont want to trade for Harleys jet skis and lawn mowers! LOL. Car is tucked away now for winter anyway so may swap in a 350 and 4 speed in it this winter if I get time, and yes price will go up.
#21
It is my car and I am waiting for someone to prove to me it is NOT a W31 but most are tire kickers and would just rather say it is not! I guess all without broadcast cards are not legit ehh? (we know that very few have correct engine) I guess that is what I get for being honest description! It has cowl tag and has NOT been Polished by No Means! LOL
#23
#24
well as mentioned it does have some telltale w-31 parts.but without documentation we will never know.just as some w-30 cars have no doc's .but he's not asking 30k for it either.i don't think thats a bad price.heck there was a 66 442 in a local central iowa craigslist"original california car" for 6k and if it was a cali car it lived on the beach that baby was rusted to the core and no eng/trans olds24 you probably saw that ad.
#25
If I follow your thinking to its conclusion, a W-31 that cracked its block, and got a service replacement 350 and moved heads, manifolds, carb, distributor, and rotating assembly over to the replacement block would indeed still "be a W-31" but one that got an entirely different carb to pan engine assembly sometime in its life would simply be a badged Cutlass with some other car's engine, correct?
#26
W-31
If I follow your thinking to its conclusion, a W-31 that cracked its block, and got a service replacement 350 and moved heads, manifolds, carb, distributor, and rotating assembly over to the replacement block would indeed still "be a W-31" but one that got an entirely different carb to pan engine assembly sometime in its life would simply be a badged Cutlass with some other car's engine, correct?
#27
If I follow your thinking to its conclusion, a W-31 that cracked its block, and got a service replacement 350 and moved heads, manifolds, carb, distributor, and rotating assembly over to the replacement block would indeed still "be a W-31" but one that got an entirely different carb to pan engine assembly sometime in its life would simply be a badged Cutlass with some other car's engine, correct?
there were only a very limited number of cars that left the factory in 1969 with the W31 option package. if this one of those cars then it would be a rare car indeed. simply because today it has another cars engine installed in place of the original engine would not negate the fact that this car may be one of the rare W31 optioned cars produced in 1969. the evidence, so far, is circumstantial, but looks more promising than not that this is a W31.
#28
No, sir. I am merely not agreeing with your reasoning. A bull without his nuts is no longer a bull, he is a steer.
#29
Non numbers matching
#31
#32
This has nothing to do with the original car for sale in this ad, but let's be serious here. A W-31 is just a Cutlass with an upgraded engine. If that upgraded engine is no longer in the car, you're left with... a Cutlass.
#33
be serious
Please define 'upgraded".
The argument here is about original engine not upgraded engine.
And your definition of a W-31 is incomplete by my standards.
#34
You seem to be very emotionally invested in this question, so I will tread lightly in my reply. I do not view the point in such a binary way as you have put it, but I do place a numbers matching vehicle, especially a performance model, ahead of a non-numbers matching vehicle. Many times, the engine is cited as provenance itself. If the engine is not original, and you have no documentation, then what can you show you actually have?
I would accept a documented car with original transmission, heads, carb, etc, with a service replacement block as being 90% as good as a numbers matching car.
#35
As for the rest of the car, pretty much anything other than the engine that came on a 1969 W-31 was an available option on a run-of-the-mill Cutlass. There is nothing in the VIN or cowl tag to prove the car is a W-31. The JO code TH350 would be the only other unique W-31 item (for 1969-70) that was not otherwise available in a Cutlass. Every other part of the W-31 package (or mandatory options with the W-31) was available as an RPO on any Cutlass.
#36
You seem to be very emotionally invested in this question, so I will tread lightly in my reply. I do not view the point in such a binary way as you have put it, but I do place a numbers matching vehicle, especially a performance model, ahead of a non-numbers matching vehicle. Many times, the engine is cited as provenance itself. If the engine is not original, and you have no documentation, then what can you show you actually have?
I would accept a documented car with original transmission, heads, carb, etc, with a service replacement block as being 90% as good as a numbers matching car.
I would accept a documented car with original transmission, heads, carb, etc, with a service replacement block as being 90% as good as a numbers matching car.
What you wrote previously is not what you are writing now. You likened a non numbers car to being castrated and that is unfair.
#37
"Upgraded" means that the factory installed motor in a W-31 is upgraded over the engine that is factory installed in a run-of-the-mill Cutlass. Big valves, cam, CR, ignition timing, and carb are "upgraded". I'm not talking about non-factory mods.
As for the rest of the car, pretty much anything other than the engine that came on a 1969 W-31 was an available option on a run-of-the-mill Cutlass. There is nothing in the VIN or cowl tag to prove the car is a W-31. The JO code TH350 would be the only other unique W-31 item (for 1969-70) that was not otherwise available in a Cutlass. Every other part of the W-31 package (or mandatory options with the W-31) was available as an RPO on any Cutlass.
As for the rest of the car, pretty much anything other than the engine that came on a 1969 W-31 was an available option on a run-of-the-mill Cutlass. There is nothing in the VIN or cowl tag to prove the car is a W-31. The JO code TH350 would be the only other unique W-31 item (for 1969-70) that was not otherwise available in a Cutlass. Every other part of the W-31 package (or mandatory options with the W-31) was available as an RPO on any Cutlass.
#38
The only differences between a W-31 and Cutlass that were unique to the W-31 are the pistons, select-fit block, cam, distributor timing, carb, and of course the O.A.I. hardware. I'm excepting the JO trans because that only applies to AT cars. EVERYTHING else was available on a Cutlass as a regular production option, including the rear gears, anti-spin, FE2 suspension, HD cooling, and manual trans.
If you have a W-31 and a Cutlass, both with the same equipment other than the engine and trans, and the original drivetrains are missing in both cases, what's the difference? A hole saw to make the holes in the inner fenders. Is that enough to justify a significantly increased value? And the O.A.I. hardware was readily available from the parts counter when these cars were new. Nearly every car magazine of the time printed an article with the P/Ns for that stuff. More than one Cutlass had this stuff added after delivery.
At the end of the day, these are just cars. We've done it to ourselves by letting the value get stupid, which has only lead to fakes.
#39
Final Thoughs
Oh please. You know exactly what I'm talking about and are parsing words to be argumentative. Since you clearly want me to spell it out exactly, here we go:
The only differences between a W-31 and Cutlass that were unique to the W-31 are the pistons, select-fit block, cam, distributor timing, carb, and of course the O.A.I. hardware. I'm excepting the JO trans because that only applies to AT cars. EVERYTHING else was available on a Cutlass as a regular production option, including the rear gears, anti-spin, FE2 suspension, HD cooling, and manual trans.
If you have a W-31 and a Cutlass, both with the same equipment other than the engine and trans, and the original drivetrains are missing in both cases, what's the difference? A hole saw to make the holes in the inner fenders. Is that enough to justify a significantly increased value? And the O.A.I. hardware was readily available from the parts counter when these cars were new. Nearly every car magazine of the time printed an article with the P/Ns for that stuff. More than one Cutlass had this stuff added after delivery.
At the end of the day, these are just cars. We've done it to ourselves by letting the value get stupid, which has only lead to fakes.
The only differences between a W-31 and Cutlass that were unique to the W-31 are the pistons, select-fit block, cam, distributor timing, carb, and of course the O.A.I. hardware. I'm excepting the JO trans because that only applies to AT cars. EVERYTHING else was available on a Cutlass as a regular production option, including the rear gears, anti-spin, FE2 suspension, HD cooling, and manual trans.
If you have a W-31 and a Cutlass, both with the same equipment other than the engine and trans, and the original drivetrains are missing in both cases, what's the difference? A hole saw to make the holes in the inner fenders. Is that enough to justify a significantly increased value? And the O.A.I. hardware was readily available from the parts counter when these cars were new. Nearly every car magazine of the time printed an article with the P/Ns for that stuff. More than one Cutlass had this stuff added after delivery.
At the end of the day, these are just cars. We've done it to ourselves by letting the value get stupid, which has only lead to fakes.
So now you have expanded your argument to include parts counter parts when were talking about factory built W machines. You think of them as nothing more than a Cutlass but I don't and I am not alone.
Further to the original argument, a W Machine without it's original engine is still a W machine regardless of the ridiculous statements to the contrary.
It's OK Joe....I'll let it go now and leave others to evaluate what we have written. I'm comfortable with my posts.
Merry Christmas Joe.