Craigslist find became even sweeter!
#1
Craigslist find became even sweeter!
Hi All
Just wanted to share about my latest Craigslist purchases. I found a listing for a 1968 Olds 98 4 door hardtop at a price I considered good. So I went to check it out and decided to buy it. I've drug home several dead cars in the last few months so space at my place is limited. I asked if he could give me a week or so to finish dismantling a car I'd been slowly pulling parts off of. The seller, Wayne is a really nice guy and he said no problem. I'm not finding any rot in the car although the interior is ratty and the drivers door has heavy bondo in it. It would be nice to save this car but I'll likely end up parting it out as the cost to restore would be way more than the value of the finished car, and as you all know demand for 4 door cars is limited. When I call to schedule a time to pick it up he tells me he found something he'd bought years ago, but now that the Olds is going away he has no use for it and will give me a really good deal if I want to buy it. Its an Edelbrock 065 dual quad intake with two quadrajets and linkage. The intake is clean and so are the carbs, so I don't think it has many miles/hours on it. He did give me a really good deal, not sure which car I'll put it on but its too cool to not use it on something! John
Just wanted to share about my latest Craigslist purchases. I found a listing for a 1968 Olds 98 4 door hardtop at a price I considered good. So I went to check it out and decided to buy it. I've drug home several dead cars in the last few months so space at my place is limited. I asked if he could give me a week or so to finish dismantling a car I'd been slowly pulling parts off of. The seller, Wayne is a really nice guy and he said no problem. I'm not finding any rot in the car although the interior is ratty and the drivers door has heavy bondo in it. It would be nice to save this car but I'll likely end up parting it out as the cost to restore would be way more than the value of the finished car, and as you all know demand for 4 door cars is limited. When I call to schedule a time to pick it up he tells me he found something he'd bought years ago, but now that the Olds is going away he has no use for it and will give me a really good deal if I want to buy it. Its an Edelbrock 065 dual quad intake with two quadrajets and linkage. The intake is clean and so are the carbs, so I don't think it has many miles/hours on it. He did give me a really good deal, not sure which car I'll put it on but its too cool to not use it on something! John
#7
It is interesting how the Q-jets are placed front to back. I wondered why the adapters [risers] were on there. Without numbers on the carbs, they appear to be around 66 vintage with the side inlets.
#8
The E-brock dual plane dual quad is a great manifold, even on the street. I'd loose the Qjet adapters and run a pair of E-brock 500 CFM carbs. I had the same setup on a 455 years ago (OK, they were actually Carter AFBs, since E-brock hadn't yet taken over production) with progressive linkage that pulled well over 14 MPG and turned high 11s in a 1971 Cutlass.
#12
Eric, your previous question about the linkage to the front carb. I am missing some parts of the linkage including something running forward to that front most carburetor. But since the carbs have the correct application for a couple project cars I've been collecting parts for I'll likely pull them rather than add what's needed to run as is. Joe's suggestion might be a cleaner setup as well. The cool factor of having multiple carbs is nice, but I also want to make it driveable on the street. This setup under full throttle would be pouring a lot of gas into the engine.
#14
Actually, Holley carbs and the like won't fit. The center-to-center spacing only works with AFBs or 4GCs or similar carbs. Since it's dual plane, you can't mount the carbs sideways, either, unless you mount them in opposite directions and use a simultaneous linkage.
#15
Back to the 98. Hate to see cool old rot free sleds go to the crusher. That would make a cool dark sider sled cleaned up, bags, hoops, flat black, Von Dutch treatment. Ekstensive Texas Metal style. I'll bet you can make some $$ to the right crowd. If not I understand the parts biz...Allyolds may be interested in that power antenna?
#16
Back to the 98. Hate to see cool old rot free sleds go to the crusher. That would make a cool dark sider sled cleaned up, bags, hoops, flat black, Von Dutch treatment. Ekstensive Texas Metal style. I'll bet you can make some $$ to the right crowd. If not I understand the parts biz...Allyolds may be interested in that power antenna?
#17
A friend of mine had a 67 98 LS we use to cruise all over the place damn fine ride! Taught my wife then girlfriend to drive in her Mom's 70 98 LS, another damn fine ride that would haul ***. As for the two fours I have been running an Offenhauser 360 dual quad, with two Competition Series 500 cfm Carter's on my 68 442 with a 455 for over 30 years with zero issues get about 13.5 MPG on the highway. Around town about 8MPG! Oh but it's soooo much FUN! Joe
#18
Another idea for all you non-salt non-rust belter parts entrepreneurs...Target these areas (the NE) in your Craigslistings. This will widen the audience. Some guys up here are just looking to flip a nice rot free car. By broadening the audience to a crowd that sees nothing older than 2007 in a bone yard; someone not typically looking for an Olds might toss their hat in the ring, especially with the rot free metal.
We unfortunates in this hell-hole AKA sunless-rotten-rust-overtax-over politician York, yearn for rot free cars.
We unfortunates in this hell-hole AKA sunless-rotten-rust-overtax-over politician York, yearn for rot free cars.
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
jaunty75
General Discussion
4
August 17th, 2022 06:10 PM