Considering the amount of time/labor involved to be "all in" on a project, I have to believe it will have "the look" in the end. "the look" being my look, not necessarily for the masses..a personal thing (as it should be).
I'm kind of in a similar situation real tight on budget but have a certain look that I'm going for. My thinking is kind of middle of the road, I'm not going to throw together some turd box just to have something to drive nor am I going to hold my project up to make it a high-end show car that I'll be too afraid to drive. I'm building my car for me, and how I want it done, but I also want to be able to look out the window and think to myself that's a pretty cool-looking car.
Sgtlethargic, what makes your thinking different from many? You don't have to have a showboat but it doesn't have to resemble a beater, either. For the last 15-20 years people have been doing what they want, or need to at the time, to be rolling. As long as it's not phony patina your ride should be good to go (when you think it's ready). The best car gathering I ever attended was something called the Hunnert Car Pile Up in Illinois. The cars ran the gamut and it was great seeing the states of finished and in progress.
Anything we build is a function of our esthetic sense, skill level, time and budget. A shortage in any of those areas requires compromise. Compromise means the end result may not be as cool as humanly possible, but it can still be cool. That ought to be enough for most hoodlums.
Those are going to be some tough shoes to fill! Seems like it would be much easier to work at being "cool"!
My gauge in life for cars that I have owned and rodded, is this...When I get up in the morning, if the first thing I want to do is drive it, then I've accomplished what I wanted and I'm at peace with the world. BUT, everyone person should consider themselves "Cool". All hot rodders are cool in my book! That never goes out of style.
Was that called the high and mighty? Saw it in Detroit a couple times. Made to go fast, not look good. Looking good was "color me gone" saw it also.
I wanted to have a firewall on my 27T that had nothing hung on it. Rapidly came to the conclusion that it was a pain in the arse to do and that future maintenance would be bloody awful. Everything is now where I can get to it. Sent from my moto g(8) using The H.A.M.B. mobile app
Like already said above, if it's cool to you or what you want, then it is. Every car built will appeal to some and not to others.
Hey sgt. Way too vague to even really comment on. Perhaps some pics or concept drawings to give an idea of your direction.
If the last thing you do when leaving your garage is look back over your shoulder and smile as you close the door, or as you drive down Main street anywhere and catch a glimpse yourself in the shop windows and you look good...mission accomplished.
What makes THIS car interesting is it's history...it's purpose and it's function over form. If you were to build something similar today, for the street, it would probably be considered just a rat rod.
Stop beating around the bush, tell us what you are doing or this thread is more about the 49 Plymouth.
IT HAS TO LOOK GOOD, 98% of any vehicles life is spent parked in a driveway or garage, if the hood is closed you don't have to have an engine in it to look cool. Bob Nobody remembers how fast the Butt Ugly Plymouth went, but once seen it is never forgotten.
Spending time and money, yes it should look good and run well, too. "The look" doesn't always involve a paint job.
If you want to enjoy driving while building/improving, then jump in the pool and enjoy the swim. Driving an under construction project is a lot of fun. People will ask what you plan to do next and maybe offer suggestions on where parts exist or alternative ways to do it. The exchange of ideas makes it more fun. When someone has a finely painted and polished car, people are less likely to suggest anything for fear of insulting the owner, but an uncompleted project is a magnet for others just like you. The one thing I would do is to set down and write down exactly what you want in the car if you could have everything you want. Then I would decide which components are "must haves". No since saving a little money putting something in the car that you will have to change later. By that I mean if you are going to install an engine (eventually) that makes 400+ HP, then don't install a weak rear end that has to be changed later ($$$). Figure which components you need installed that will be "forever" components. The other simplier things will probably change over time anyway. For the most part, suspension and steering parts should be a "forever" choice. As for being "Kool", there will always be those that think your car is Kool and those who don't. Actually being Kool is to not give a Sh*t what any of them think.
Cue Huey Lewis, cool is the rule, but sometimes bad is bad. It’s in the eye of the owner, IMO. I’m sure many have built things they thought were cool, others wouldn’t think so and vice-versa. One more opinion. When I see anything old going down the ride I think “cool”. When I see a new Vette, etc, I think “expensive”. Get it on the road and make yourself smile.
I think the look is everything, if it wasn't about the look there wouldn't be a hamb and we would all be driving buzz boxes. Worth as much time ,effort and money as YOU can afford to get the look you are after.