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Technical What is it about the field cars?

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by F-ONE, Feb 12, 2022.

  1. F-ONE
    Joined: Mar 27, 2008
    Posts: 3,470

    F-ONE
    Member
    from Alabama

    You know the ones that are or almost are lost causes. You have to think about it though. A lost cause in 1990 is a builder or almost a "survivor" today.

    I still think that a rough car is pretty much parts. If someone wants in to an old car, they are much better off finding one that is running and driving. So young guys or those new to it. Even though these rough old cars can be found cheap, the dollars and cents...make no sense.

    With this said, there still something about discovering an old broken down heap and "fixing it up". Maybe it's dreams. Maybe it's the hope, what was lost is now found. Maybe this is what draws us.

    Years and years ago I came up the road I live now and noticed a '39 Deluxe Tudor just sitting under a pine. It was a rough old car. A decade maybe 15-20 years later we bought our home in the same area. I remembered that old Tudor. Many times, I have driven down this road and looked for it. I assumed it was gone. Where it was is now a lake.
    Last summer the neighbors cut their property and low and behold, next to the lake, there it was under a pine. It now has a cotton-wood growing between the bumper and grille, a big one.
    Here's the thing...If I'm going to try to get it...now's the time. Now's the time to get it before the brush takes it back over and the cotton wood destroys it.

    I don't need it. I'm deep into a project now. Still though I look at it every time I go by.

    What is it about the field cars?
     
  2. Rickybop
    Joined: May 23, 2008
    Posts: 9,927

    Rickybop
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    You old softie.
    I'll bet you rescue lost puppies, too. :p

    That's great. You might not need it. Someone else will. You will rest in the knowledge that one got saved against all odds.

    And you can share pictures here. And I can look at your pictures and continue wasting time not getting anything done.
    Thank you.
     
  3. Model A Gomez
    Joined: Aug 26, 2006
    Posts: 1,745

    Model A Gomez
    Member

    My avatar was a field car I built in the early 90's, I wanted a Model A and it was cheap. The cost of building it wasn't a lot more than buying a runner and tossing half of it, I did the work myself so the cost wasn't really any more just more time involved.
     
  4. Johnny Gee
    Joined: Dec 3, 2009
    Posts: 13,459

    Johnny Gee
    Member
    from Downey, Ca

    "What's a field car?"

    upload_2022-2-12_9-49-51.jpeg
     

  5. "Something that runs through the fields dropping cow shit so the lettuce will grow"
     
  6. Tickety Boo
    Joined: Feb 2, 2015
    Posts: 1,663

    Tickety Boo
    Member
    from Wisconsin

    It's yellow and gonna be a football field ahead of you :p:p:p
     
  7. partsdawg
    Joined: Feb 12, 2006
    Posts: 3,629

    partsdawg
    ALLIANCE MEMBER
    from Minnesota

    The tug of field car is the irresistible urge to buy it thinking it can be bought and fixed cheap.
    Almost never is it cheap to fix up.
     
  8. 1952henry
    Joined: Jan 8, 2006
    Posts: 1,442

    1952henry
    Member

    For me, part this ^^^, and part thinking this was once someone's pride and joy. Later, as a 2nd or 3rd hand auto, someone's life blood for work, etc. Some do not call to me, some do. Lucky in the fact I cannot have projects outside (covenants) and a too small shop to have them inside.
     
  9. ramblin dan
    Joined: Apr 16, 2018
    Posts: 3,723

    ramblin dan

    I always thought of field cars like this. img091.jpg
     
  10. Save it, if for nothing more but parts to sell at a swap meet. You might regret buying it but most definitely regret NOT buying it later on when its hauled off for the price of scrap.
    Remember, it has the 39 transmission everyone wants and front spindles we all like.
     
    chryslerfan55 and VANDENPLAS like this.
  11. Johnny Gee
    Joined: Dec 3, 2009
    Posts: 13,459

    Johnny Gee
    Member
    from Downey, Ca

  12. Answer: Field of dreams.

    From an article:
    field cars.png

    Forget the Chevies (<= Edited to add, after Johnny Gee liked this comment). This 60 Falcon Fordor could've been running and driving in little time:

    field cars Falcon.jpg
     
    Last edited: Feb 12, 2022
  13. Forget the Dorfs and Cheapies:

    field car Hudson.jpg
     
  14. I think it starts with .. we all see “ what could be” and a “cool car”

    we all think we are smarter then the average bear , and can get it up and running and have fun for a bag of peanuts.

    it’s also I think saving something that’s just wasting away,
    Before I bought my merc I went to look at a early 50’s Dodge ( yes I think it’s funny too)
    Hemi , push button trans all the “ cool 50’s dodge stuff “

    poor car was parked beside the barn , hood up rusted in place , engine stuck mouse eating poop filled interior . Everything needed to be blown apart and new. BUT I STILL WANTED IT !!! Lucky the owner thought he was sitting on Barrett Jackson gold so I walked .
    Been there done that too many times to count.
    It’s an illness all car guys have .
     
  15. BJR
    Joined: Mar 11, 2005
    Posts: 10,511

    BJR
    Member

    My 49 Buick was a field car. I saved it!!!!
     
    rod1, Tickety Boo and VANDENPLAS like this.
  16. Mr48chev
    Joined: Dec 28, 2007
    Posts: 34,855

    Mr48chev
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    Laurie and Kraig in the 27 T.jpg I drug this body out of a field about 1/2 a mile behind the house I live in now where it had sat in a batch of cat tails beside a slough for who knows how long and I have no idea how many times I walked past it hunting along that slough every year before I spotted it when I was in my teens. My buddy had built the chassis out of channel iron and I never got the flathead running. I wish I had that body now though. A true roadster body that still had the back part minus the turtle deck when I found it.
     
    AB Normal, Rand Man, AHotRod and 14 others like this.
  17. goldmountain
    Joined: Jun 12, 2016
    Posts: 4,655

    goldmountain

    You need to look at the recent updated thread by Rik Hoving on the resurrected Jimmy Summers '36 Ford coupe that showed up at the Grand National Roadster show to see a worthwhile field car comeback.
     
  18. Wanderlust
    Joined: Oct 27, 2019
    Posts: 884

    Wanderlust

    3C1239FF-813B-4710-9C8A-5DC1A5B7FC73.jpeg 3B0C8AE6-F686-4738-A3FF-E4AD2C0903CE.jpeg I must say that I love field cars, gives a guy a lot to dream about. As for putting one back on the road for not a lot of coin, it’s possible as long as you don’t get too carried away . That said, it certainly helps to be able to get parts for little to no money and repair or rebuild things yourself. My truck for example, more bush than field, cost me approximately 8500 cad. to get back on the road. If I’d been able to get away without rebuilding the y block it would have been about 4000 plus just over a year of working on it.
     
  19. gconnsr
    Joined: Sep 14, 2008
    Posts: 144

    gconnsr
    Member
    from AZ

    I snapped this one while I was in Needles California the other day. I don't even know what it is but it looks like a cool project.

    [​IMG]
     
  20. BJR
    Joined: Mar 11, 2005
    Posts: 10,511

    BJR
    Member

    The yellow one is a Dodge.
     
    stillrunners likes this.
  21. gconnsr
    Joined: Sep 14, 2008
    Posts: 144

    gconnsr
    Member
    from AZ

    The yellow one. I was thinking it'd make a killer tow vehicle but I've got other things going on right now.
     
  22. gene-koning
    Joined: Oct 28, 2016
    Posts: 4,589

    gene-koning
    Member

    The yellow panel is a 40-47 Dodge (a 39 had a different grille stainless). Could narrow it down even more if the headlights are mounted on the crest of the fender (43+), or more towards the center (39-42). There are a lot of replacement parts made for these trucks, the US military used them up to 1968.

    My field car (also in my Avtar pic and in its current form). I've been called a hack a lot, so at least I couldn't hurt the value of this one. Hit the road with about $2000 in it but have added more since that first drive. Been driving it since 2011, around 90,000 miles. Gene
     

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  23. gene-koning
    Joined: Oct 28, 2016
    Posts: 4,589

    gene-koning
    Member

    Another field truck, different field though. Paid $63 including sales tax for what was on the trailer!

    Drove this one 12 years before some lady turned right in front of me and we hit head on. Yes, that is a snow plow bracket on the front, the truck plowed my driveway for all of those 12 years. Truck got 10 mpg, probably saw an average of 6,000 miles a year. About a month before the crash it hauled my coupe home. Gene
     

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  24. indyjps
    Joined: Feb 21, 2007
    Posts: 5,383

    indyjps
    Member

    Thrill of the Chase, Savior, Challenge.

    Agree it's often " buy this cheap and get it running" There's a reason it's in a field - something major went wrong. Rare that a perfectly functional car gets driven to the hill and left there.

    Overcome whatever the major problem was (usually engine or trans) then contend with all the other things that came from sitting for years (brakes, wiring, tires, suspension). Then it still has bad paint and rust and usually a rotten frame.

    Guilty of doing it.

    Guilty of continuing to look at them.

    Gotten old enough to walk away, well except for maybe that next one :D
     
  25. The " Field car" aka project car to us who build our rides.
    As someone who has bought/built many, it's the basic starting point for the build of my vision.
    Often people will say "why not buy an already finished car, it's cheaper?"
    A finished car rarely will be a car I wouldn't change something (often many things), so out goes the ugly outdated (and not in a good way) upholstery, the color choice, the wheel choice, the engine/trans. choice..see a pattern here?
    Essentially you pay for someone elses idea/vision, dollars spent, of what it should be, to only change it all out in the end anyway.
    I'm all for people who buy the finished cars..but for me, the finding/planning/building of the car is what keeps me coming back.
    Some people lack vision, they can't see potential in a "field car"..I don't think those people are members of this site.
     
    redoxide, rod1, chryslerfan55 and 5 others like this.
  26. saltflats
    Joined: Aug 14, 2007
    Posts: 12,881

    saltflats
    Member
    from Missouri

    I have a 62 Chevy in my basement that came from that auction.
     
  27. lucas doolin
    Joined: Feb 7, 2013
    Posts: 560

    lucas doolin
    Member

    This field car is a one family owner, taken in trade by a car dealership fellow car club member. NEW PRICE. OBO. Very savable and a great first project. You won't see most of the needed restoration work (floors and rockers) so it is a great way to get your feet wet (and arms burned when you weld in the floor panels and rocker panels). Doors open and close nicely. Frame and suspension are good. Just reposted in Cars For Sale.
    [​IMG]
     
  28. pnevells
    Joined: Sep 5, 2008
    Posts: 553

    pnevells
    Member

    We called them field beaters, cars we drove in fields while learning to drive when we were 14 years old. My friend had this 54 chevy, he cut the body off and made a roll bar from old cow stantions from a dairy barn, fun way to start our hot rodding careers. Best part of growing up in the country. We had a real dragstrip just across the field hence the AA/GD class marking on our hot rod , mine still had a body on it PICT0001.JPG
    PICT0008.JPG
     

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