As you can tell by my screen name, I'm big into cars.
You may have heard the term "resto-mod." For the non-car people, a resto-mod is when someone restores a classic car and modifies it with a modern engine, suspension and other new parts to made it more drivable, and also much safer.
There is a company called YearOne that goes one step futher: they make officially licensed, replica "factory correct" parts which includes complete body shells. Say you want a '70 Chevelle? You can call YearOne and pretty much order all the parts needed to make a BRAND NEW '70 Chevelle, with no worries about having to deal with an old body and things like rust etc.
Well I was looking at one of those classic car forums and someone mentioned doing just that. Complete with a modern engine, transmission, suspension and everything. Well one guy didn't take to well to that, writing:
"Only someone who can't hack it would build a f*cking kit car. Instead of actually taking the time to restore a real Chevelle, you decide to have some stupid shop build you a damn kit car that is an imitation of a Chevelle. You're an insult to the people who take years to restore a real car. You know what, if you enter a classic car show I hope you never take home a single award. If it were up to me, I would kick your ass and your kit car right out of the show! And don't get me started on a modern drivetrain, get a f*cking Corvette Z06 if you want modern handling. Have fun with your custom shop putting together your kit car, you lazy f*ck."
This guy was so ignorant it wasn't even funny. First off, this a-hole needs to know what "officially licensed" means. It means General Motors themselves gave their blessing to YearOne to make these parts. They're not some two-bit company making poorly fitting crap out of China. It's designed to have the look and feel of OEM parts from the manufacturer with none of the headaches of trying to deal with over 40 year old hardware. Finally, if the man who built the car puts his "new" Chevelle next to a regular Chevelle, I would make a safe bet that no one would tell the difference between the two.
You may have heard the term "resto-mod." For the non-car people, a resto-mod is when someone restores a classic car and modifies it with a modern engine, suspension and other new parts to made it more drivable, and also much safer.
There is a company called YearOne that goes one step futher: they make officially licensed, replica "factory correct" parts which includes complete body shells. Say you want a '70 Chevelle? You can call YearOne and pretty much order all the parts needed to make a BRAND NEW '70 Chevelle, with no worries about having to deal with an old body and things like rust etc.
Well I was looking at one of those classic car forums and someone mentioned doing just that. Complete with a modern engine, transmission, suspension and everything. Well one guy didn't take to well to that, writing:
"Only someone who can't hack it would build a f*cking kit car. Instead of actually taking the time to restore a real Chevelle, you decide to have some stupid shop build you a damn kit car that is an imitation of a Chevelle. You're an insult to the people who take years to restore a real car. You know what, if you enter a classic car show I hope you never take home a single award. If it were up to me, I would kick your ass and your kit car right out of the show! And don't get me started on a modern drivetrain, get a f*cking Corvette Z06 if you want modern handling. Have fun with your custom shop putting together your kit car, you lazy f*ck."
This guy was so ignorant it wasn't even funny. First off, this a-hole needs to know what "officially licensed" means. It means General Motors themselves gave their blessing to YearOne to make these parts. They're not some two-bit company making poorly fitting crap out of China. It's designed to have the look and feel of OEM parts from the manufacturer with none of the headaches of trying to deal with over 40 year old hardware. Finally, if the man who built the car puts his "new" Chevelle next to a regular Chevelle, I would make a safe bet that no one would tell the difference between the two.
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