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How many of you boys and girls...

Discussion in 'Off Topic Hot Rods & Customs' started by Mike VV, Feb 24, 2025 at 9:48 AM.

  1. Mike VV
    Joined: Sep 28, 2010
    Posts: 3,256

    Mike VV
    Member
    from SoCal

    I continue to see this "only" Chevy, and "only" Mopar, and...and...
    I don't get it...but...I guess, snobs will be snobs.

    In case you want to know...yeah, I've had four brands of cars, and four brands of motorcycles (all late models) over the years.

    Any of you folks like me that really don't care about the "brand", as long as it's an old...car or bike ?

    Mike
     
    Sharpone likes this.
  2. Certain styles I prefer certain brands. Late forties on up? Definitely gm. Say 48 and older? Ford wins. Especially 28-31. There are exceptions but yeah
     
    Bill's Auto Works likes this.
  3. Everything is fair game, more the merrier.
     
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  4. squirrel
    Joined: Sep 23, 2004
    Posts: 58,035

    squirrel
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    I don't really see how you can call folks who go for the lowest common denominator, "snobs" :)

    I like Chevys because they work and are pretty easy to understand and deal with. But I've owned a lot of different cars over the past decade, including edsel, hudson, pontiac, mg, mercedes, dodge, checker, fiat, buick, and whatever else I forgot.
     
  5. gene-koning
    Joined: Oct 28, 2016
    Posts: 4,775

    gene-koning
    Member

    Every brand has its perks, and its problems.

    I pulled wrenches for more then 20 years working on nearly everything built. Along the way, some brands tended to cause me more problems then others, and some brands sure seemed to be a lot easier to work on. I have more or less tolerances with some mechanical issues, some really bug me while other thing don't bother me too much.

    After all those years of pulling wrenches on everything that came in the door, when I just started working on my own stuff, I decided I would just work on the brands that made my life more easy.
    Its got nothing to do with being a snob and all about what made it easier and more enjoyable to me. If I have to work on it, its going to be that one brand that works for me.

    Fortunately, other guys have other brands they prefer to work on, and brands they would rather not work on, probably for the same reasons I have for the brand I like, or don't like. I'm OK with that, as are most of the guys with those other brands. Sometimes its a bit fun to rib the other brand guys about their brand, especially when things go wrong with their brand. I believe most guys do that. I do it in good nature, but to someone with out those bad experiences when working on specific hardships associated with a specific brand, they may not understand, or assume the ribbing is of serious nature. We can go over board with how we speak to friends.

    So, if you don't like the brand I like, something must be wrong with you! :D
     
  6. I love them ALL & I have way too many already but am always looking!:p

    Currently : Chevy, Pontiac, Oldsmobile, Cadillac, GMC, Nash, Jag, AMC & Suzuki.

    Brand loyalty & the rivalry that comes with it is more just for fun between most rational people. I am a GM man 1st & foremost as that is what I grew up with having a Dad that was a mechanic at a GMC Truck Dealership.

    God Bless
    Bill
    https://www.jalopyjournal.com/forum...ar-transport-hauling-open-or-enclosed.614419/
     
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  7. 41 GMC K-18
    Joined: Jun 27, 2019
    Posts: 4,421

    41 GMC K-18
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    In WW-1, there was no true standardized interchangeable parts of various trucks, between models and brands.
    WW-2, GM was a pioneer of standardization and parts interchangeability. That really made a big difference in how things moved and how things got repaired.
    @squirrel, his recent Checker adventure is proof of that concept !
    Everyone's results may vary greatly !
    Thanks from Dennis.
     
  8. oldolds
    Joined: Oct 18, 2010
    Posts: 3,517

    oldolds
    Member

    Hmm. Let's see what is on the patch right now I can drive. Oldsmobile, Pontiac, Buick, Chevrolet, Ford, VW, Saab, Mitsubishi, Kia.
     
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  9. The brands don't matter much to me, as long at it has a chevy motor/trans lol
     
  10. Mike VV
    Joined: Sep 28, 2010
    Posts: 3,256

    Mike VV
    Member
    from SoCal

    Relax...It's NOT a derogatory term !!!
    It's just a term that goes with anyone preferring one thing over another in "mass'...
    Used in MANY different "hobbies".

    Mike
     
    Sharpone likes this.
  11. Sharpone
    Joined: Jul 25, 2022
    Posts: 1,753

    Sharpone
    Member

    I like what I like, the brand doesn’t matter. All the majors produced some really cool stuff, they each have their strengths and weaknesses. When I was I kid I remember guys saying they wouldn’t drive …. (Fill in the blank) because said brand is junk and a dog. I think they missed out. Pontiac is the only major US brand I haven’t owned, not because I don’t like them.There are quite a few I really like just haven’t seen the right Pontiac at the right price at the right time. Yet! There a lot of cars by all the majors that I can’t understand a righteous car guy not liking, I won’t list because the list is long. Currently I’m a Mopar freak but could change at the drop of a hat or when I see the next car, not sure what ya call Pontiac freaks?
    Dan
     
    Last edited: Feb 24, 2025 at 7:21 PM
  12. Mike Lawless
    Joined: Sep 20, 2021
    Posts: 606

    Mike Lawless

    I reckon we all see people with obsessive brand loyalty, sometimes to what some would consider excessive levels. I find that amusing.
    On my Ol' Furd pick up, I've even had "Blue Oval Fanatics" criticize me for calling it Furd, and for modifying the front name plate to spell it that way.
    To that I say, "Lighten up Francis!"
    I love 'em all. The more unusual and out of the box, the better!
     
  13. Sharpone
    Joined: Jul 25, 2022
    Posts: 1,753

    Sharpone
    Member

    ^^^^^^^^^^^
    Absolutely,
    Dan
     
  14. squirrel
    Joined: Sep 23, 2004
    Posts: 58,035

    squirrel
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    When I was young, I worked at a junkyard for about three years. One thing that impressed me about the Pontiacs we got in, was that none of them had an engine we could sell as good used...they were all junk. Including the wrecked cars! pretty weird, and influenced my opinion of Ponchos all my life.
     
  15. Sharpone
    Joined: Jul 25, 2022
    Posts: 1,753

    Sharpone
    Member

    Interesting, I don’t have any Poncho experience but weren’t the Ram Air and HO engines pretty stout?
    Dan
     
    Bill's Auto Works likes this.
  16. I am a chevy guy by birth but i own a ford truck that kind of fell in my lap. I have built engines for fords, plenty of chevies and one american motors car. Never have messed with any mopar stuff though. Would, but the opportunity has yet to present itself.
     
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  17. SS327
    Joined: Sep 11, 2017
    Posts: 3,334

    SS327

    GM and Chrysler is what I gravitate to. I understand the engineering. Ford always had bad experiences.
     
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  18. snoc653
    Joined: Dec 25, 2023
    Posts: 727

    snoc653
    Member
    from Iowa

    I've had one or more of almost every brand. Every brand has had some truly great cars and trucks and they've also had some real duds. I don't think I've ever had one that couldn't be made better, at least I thought they could be made better. Some I did make better, some not so much so, and a few I even left well enough alone. It depends on the mood I'm in which ones I prefer that day and why. But to the people that can't find a good one in any particular brand, they aren't looking hard enough. They are out there, or they can be out there as soon as we fix what we didn't like about them before we bought them.
     
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  19. mohr hp
    Joined: Nov 18, 2009
    Posts: 1,253

    mohr hp
    Member
    from Georgia

    That seems strange to me, but I won't discount it. I learned how to drive in a '72 Lemans with a 350. I wound the sucker to valve float all the time, beat on it mercilessly. The body rotted away, and the engine lived on untouched, in another Poncho, for years. A few years later I got a '72 Catalina with a 400. More abuse, and those cast rods took all of it. Maybe I was lucky.
     
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  20. I have no loyalty to car manufacturers, they all at one time or another have created something I would own.
    Currently I own three Fat Fender Fords, one has a Buick Nailhead, one has an Olds 303, and one has a SBC.
    A lot of considerations for engine choices, availability, costs, fitment, etc., no rules.
     
    Bill's Auto Works likes this.
  21. only four brands? You need to up your game lol.


    Myself I am just a serious car guy I don't know how many cars I've had over the years but it has been a lot, a couple of ramblers, a Pontiac, a couple of plymouths, a few Dodges, a Ford, a few Lincolns even an old Chevy truck. Basically if I see a car that I like and it's reasonably priced I will purchase it and drive it. I'm pretty big on fixing stuff and making it run then enjoying it for a few months to a few years then selling it for a slight profit and then doing it all over again. The itches I still need to scratch I've never owned a studebaker and I really want one of those business coupes (I think it is called a champion from the real early '50s or late '40s), I also really need to scratch the itch for an international pickup truck, Bone stock nice and crude from the early post-war period. Great looking trucks and so underrated and from everything I've ever read and been told about them They just don't die They will outlive their owners if they are taken care of properly. I could go on and on about cars I want both on topic and off topic.
    When it comes to pre-war stuff I am also not a snob and I like restored stuff and hot rods, I like it all but I'm partial to Ford's because of parts availability and I've had a crush on Model A's since there was 12 years old if not younger, most guys lust after a 32 deuce roadster or three window coupe but give me a 29 roadster slightly channeled on its original rails and I'm all about it. Give me a Model A pickup with fenders set up early '60s style and I might drool a little... When it comes to the real early stuff I'm also real partial to Dodge Brothers cars, In my opinion they are the best engineered cars of the early twenties or late teens even if I do like a Model T, The dodge is a better car in pretty much every way when we are talking stock to stock.
    I also like Chevy truck from the mid '30s I think they got great looks but they are so loaded with wood and everyone I have ever came across that's reasonably priced is basically a pile of sheet metal so that keeps me away from them not because I can't put one together but you need patterns to make wood and that stuff is like non-existent.
    Edit: when it comes to 1920s 1930s and 1940s and 1950s cars almost all of them are winners regardless of brand, they're all built well, they're all easy to work on and the styling is so good compared to modern cars that for the last 20 years now all look like mid-size SUVs.
     

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