1968 442 w30 convertible, not mine
1968 442 w30 convertible, not mine
On BAT there is a beautiful 1968 442 4 speed convertible being auctioned..says w30 but so far no docs proving that. Turquoise car, truly gorgeous car..
Mmmm, cold start? That engine does not idle like a cold engine to me.
Dollars to doughnuts the stripe, if it had one from the factory, came painted black; difficult to know without pw.
A pleasing car to the eyes though.
Dollars to doughnuts the stripe, if it had one from the factory, came painted black; difficult to know without pw.
A pleasing car to the eyes though.
I have a bigger cam in my 72, I think, and it starts, cold, after about 7 seconds of filling the carb, with a roar that is the audio equivalent of the guy blasting out of the grave on his Harley on the Bat out of Hell album artwork. Then it sounds like a bunch of old men muttering till it warms up a little.
True, the roar was not there, in fact, it appeared the engine almost stalled out rather than ran initially.
In making my comment, I referred to the high RPM condition of a choke set, carbureted automobile engine when cold; however, the description of a roar at start also is a good description.
In making my comment, I referred to the high RPM condition of a choke set, carbureted automobile engine when cold; however, the description of a roar at start also is a good description.
True, the roar was not there, in fact, it appeared the engine almost stalled out rather than ran initially.
In making my comment, I referred to the high RPM condition of a choke set, carbureted automobile engine when cold; however, the description of a roar at start also is a good description.
In making my comment, I referred to the high RPM condition of a choke set, carbureted automobile engine when cold; however, the description of a roar at start also is a good description.
Lot of good and some bad. I do like the Ocean Turquoise. Certainly pretty and looks like a good driver. Its no Barret/Jackson white glove car.
Whats presented is a Lansing build, stick G block, D heads, UHV, 344678 vin with FE2 and an OAI system...good. No W paperwork no mention of matching numbers, not so good.
I could nit pick the hell out of it. But hey if it goes for 35 its a fair deal.
The doors and a trunk lid seams aren't great. Could have at least hit the bondo on the trunk lip with 36 grit before spraying.
Whats presented is a Lansing build, stick G block, D heads, UHV, 344678 vin with FE2 and an OAI system...good. No W paperwork no mention of matching numbers, not so good.
I could nit pick the hell out of it. But hey if it goes for 35 its a fair deal.
The doors and a trunk lid seams aren't great. Could have at least hit the bondo on the trunk lip with 36 grit before spraying.
Last edited by droldsmorland; Jan 20, 2024 at 02:40 PM.
Do want to stay with the gauges for info, power bench for headroom for my tall self, and fm radio for entertainment.
On the other hand, I also want to acquire a 67 4 speed post car and minimalize it. Heater delete is probably not wise.
It will easily hit 40’s on bids in my opinion..I think possibly more, who knows. BAT can be very fickle..doubt it hits reserve..thats a damn nice car..perfect ? No..but I would be proud as a peacock to own and drive it..carb choke definitely not functional, tad bit of blue smoke and lower rear quarters behind both wheels need reworked..possibly you could do that and blend in the paint..However as we all know, pictures are deceiving..heck a set of D heads can be 3-5 grand easily
Last edited by Andy; Jan 20, 2024 at 06:32 PM.
I think this will probably go for $70-80k based on convertible prices, unfortunately. However, I do have a question; I thought W-30 manual transmission cars are supposed to have manual front disk brakes , this has 4 wheel drum brakes. Any comment on this?
Manual disk brakes on W30 cars first became available late in the 1969 model year. This is a 1968 car, so manual drums are correct.
One thing that seems to have faded with time. Is the reality of early muscle. It was raw and dangerous. Vs the heavily option laden way people want or envision them today ...
My first car was a 68 442 convertible. The only thing I hated was the ignition location. My car was stolen twice as you could buy a cylinder at any parts place for $6 - unplug the old and plug in the new. Got tired of fixing where people would cut the top to steal it.
I think that was one of the reasons they went to column lock.
The Feds mandated that the steering wheel and shifter lock with the key, starting with the 1969 model year. The irony of fact that this made cars EASIER to steal (slide hammer and a screwdriver, 30 seconds tops) is lost on those who make the laws.
Not that it's a big deal but I'm kind of surprised with the level of detail that went into the restoration they didn't put the dash stripe back on
Last edited by allyolds68; Jan 25, 2024 at 06:46 AM.
https://classicoldsmobile.com/forums...30-vert-17126/ Post #7
One thing that seems to have faded with time. Is the reality of early muscle. It was raw and dangerous. Vs the heavily option laden way people want or envision them today ...
One thing that seems to have faded with time. Is the reality of early muscle. It was raw and dangerous. Vs the heavily option laden way people want or envision them today ...
Seller paid 90k? Damn that’s a 35,000 haircut. Whoever bought it at 55k got a damn nice 68 4 speed 442..whether it’s a true w car or a tribute car, thats a great buy in my opinion.


