Well, it's official. The Berkeley is listing next week in a BAT auction. Thank you everyone for your input, your PM's, and support. I hope it finds a great home with the right person. I will post when it goes live.
We had some nice weather here this week, so I took the opportunity to take it to a cruise night to show it off one last time and park it next to some much bigger (and nicer) cars. Dull and rough around the edges, it felt out of place next to perfectly restored hot rods, but it also felt more authentic.
It got me thinking about some of the other car's I've owned and looking back, I have great memories of each one, stories, adventures, failures, and lessons learned. In the end, it wasn't the car I was trying to hang onto, but that specific moment in time.
Shortened by 11 inches to remove the rusty rear floor pan. 1973 Catalina 455 (my first engine rebuild) and a 4 speed manual. Fate: Parted Out
A real clunker. Survived about 6 weeks delivering pizza. A friend had some stock car tires we stuffed onto it for this photo, but it couldn't spin the skinny tires it came with. It was much better off the road than on it. Fate: Junk yard
I had a whole fleet of Renaults that people used to give me (I'm not kidding). These two were the most abused and I took them anywhere through anything. Indestructible and under-powered both of these still ran when they went to the junk yard.
My first turbo car. I learned a lot. An oil pump failure scored the bearings and I took the engine out in a parking lot. A used oil pump, a bit of Emory paper, and some 50 weight oil got me the 400 miles from college to home. My brother continued to drive the car for several more years and gave it away somewhere down south. Fate: unknown.
Heavily abused, this car went places it was never intended to go. At 280,000 miles, the rear driveshaft came apart and I was forced to lock the center diff and drive 500 miles with only front wheel drive. After replacing the driveshaft I drove it for several more years and it was retired to the junk yard still running.