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Featured Features The Collector Car Market continuing its steady fall...

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by Brians53vicky, Nov 17, 2025.

  1. finn
    Joined: Jan 25, 2006
    Posts: 1,480

    finn
    Member

    Anything more than four or five years old was an old car to most people when I was growing up in the fifties and sixties. I don’t think I saw my first 32 until I went to my first car show at the local National Guard Armory in 1966 when I was 15, and recall exactly two 40 Fords squirreled away, plus two 37s occasionally seen on the streets.
     
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  2. Lone Star Mopar
    Joined: Nov 2, 2005
    Posts: 4,213

    Lone Star Mopar
    Member

    Nothing to do w the price of tea in China but... Our 57 Chevy wagon was put out to pasture in 1963. Where it sat until the 2000's & we bought it. Hard to imagine using a car only 6 or 7 years now & calling it done. Our daily drivers today are 19 & 23 years old.
     
  3. Steve Reddy
    Joined: Feb 1, 2025
    Posts: 34

    Steve Reddy

    and I just started a ground up build of a Model A Tudor last year. I know it is a money losing proposition but it is my hobby and it brings me joy!
     
  4. K13
    Joined: May 29, 2006
    Posts: 9,721

    K13
    Member

    If you had to come up with $7000 a year just for insurance you wouldn't be in a hurry either. I know its not the only factor but its a huge expense if you tack that onto the cost of a car (which even used are also ridiculously priced unless you get a total.piece of ****) gas and maintenance.
     
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  5. dan c
    Joined: Jan 30, 2012
    Posts: 2,653

    dan c
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    no tears here. we used to sit in the tavern and watch those "don't know what to do with all my money" auctions, and moan about them being the ruination of the old-car hobby!
     
  6. alanp561
    Joined: Oct 1, 2017
    Posts: 5,541

    alanp561
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    Strange, I was also born in '44, and aside from some definitely OT road course burners from across the pond, I have no desire to own any of the new crop of offerings from the multi-national manufacturers. As Lewis Grizzard said in his book, "I Haven't Understood Anything Since 1962".
     
  7. partsdawg
    Joined: Feb 12, 2006
    Posts: 3,927

    partsdawg
    ALLIANCE MEMBER
    from Minnesota

    Parts sales are a bit down. I have a ad in the cl***ifieds with doors fenders and hoods for sale with a link to the pictures. $50 each buys most of the stuff. Not one response.
     
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  8. guy1unico
    Joined: Aug 30, 2006
    Posts: 1,227

    guy1unico
    Member

    When purchasing a hot rod I look for added value. Something old and built correctly with history. This move has always helped me when it comes to selling.
     
  9. Squablow
    Joined: Apr 26, 2005
    Posts: 18,498

    Squablow
    Member

    I'm 45 and I can't say I know anyone who has one of the 90's tuner cars, although that might be just the area I live in. I don't think they were ever that popular here. I'd actually welcome that, instead of the jacked up diesel compensater trucks that seem to be everywhere here.

    I've said it before but I think we've all (including myself) forgotten what it was like to not have a shop full of tools or a garage to work in, a lot of young guys don't even have their own place. Sure, we can all whip up a driver of some kind on a shoestring budget but most of us here have a shop to work in, all of the tools, lots of leftover hardware and s****s, etc.

    I'm sure there's quite a few people younger than me that would love to have a garage full of cl***ics, but it's not the price of the cl***ics that holds them back, it's the price of the garage.
     
  10. alanp561
    Joined: Oct 1, 2017
    Posts: 5,541

    alanp561
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    I totally agree. When I was in my teens, I complained when parking a car outside in the weather over a red dirt bar ditch was the only way I had to pull a transmission; now I have a pretty nice garage, and I complain because I'm several decades older and don't have a lift.
     
  11. Big Dad
    Joined: Dec 20, 2005
    Posts: 4,897

    Big Dad
    Member

    None, zero , zilch , nada of the cars I like have gone down in price .. up, up and away !
     
  12. My daily driver is 16 years old.Back in the day an 8 or 9 year old car was usually rusted out and beat!Majority of cars never reached 100k miles.My first car was a 1960 Rambler.Bought it in 1968 and it was considered "an old car".Cars are much better built these days.Some have clocked 100's of thousands of miles!
     
    Last edited: Dec 1, 2025 at 10:00 AM
  13. 57JoeFoMoPar
    Joined: Sep 14, 2004
    Posts: 6,502

    57JoeFoMoPar
    Member

    Man, I've never really thought of it in those terms but you're right. Less than 37% of people under 35 own a home, let alone a home with a garage big enough to mess around with frivolous cars in. The average price of a home in NJ is almost $560K now. Buying a $15K Model A or Crown Victoria isn't the problem.
     
  14. There are a lot of factors involved... From what I've seen, restored stockers have fell quite a bit in value unless it's a very rare model and/or particularly desirable; prewar cars have taken a pretty big hit (the older they are, the bigger the hit), but it's also somewhat true of the postwar cars up to about the late '50s. IMO it's the fact that most of these cars can't compete in terms of handling and braking performance with the late models, as well as lacking the amenities like AC that are now standard on everything you buy. Well-done upgraded restomods now bring more money than a restored stocker, although their prices have fell in tandem with the stockers, just not as far. The prewar stock restored cars up to the late '30s have been reduced to parade duty in many locales simply because of this increased traffic on the roads.

    Demographics plays a large part. Most buyers want a car they coveted as a youth, as older buyers die off interest in 'their' cars dies with them. Add in the economic pressures on the working middle cl***, reducing the size of the pool of potential buyers, applies more downward pressure on hobby car values.

    And while we don't do politics here, ignoring it doesn't mean it's going to go away. The day is coming when gasoline will become a controlled substance and not in a good way...
     
  15. SR100
    Joined: Nov 26, 2013
    Posts: 1,325

    SR100
    Member

    I guess the Dan Tanna fan club has disbanded…
    upload_2025-12-1_15-51-10.jpeg
     
  16. @SR100 ...Hopefully not all of them! LOL

    That is exactly what I bought Laura, right down to the hubcaps & wide whites:D

    @Crazy Steve,

    Lots of valid points, but I quoted the last paragraph only to say that oil is NOT "fossil fuel" & the earth remakes it daily, in other words....It will NEVER be gone & with good folks like us fighting for all that is Right, it will be available for use until well after we are gone!

    Plenty of opinions/healthy debate in this thread & as far as I am concerned that is good. Facts are facts though...Folks that created & continued this hobby are dying off, the dot com boom is over & prices are falling on average across the board. Cherry picking a few cars owned by a celebrity (which in some cases adds value to a particular vehicle) is meaningless to people who live this hobby. Several vehicles on my bucket list that I watch constantly have dropped to the point that I may actually buy them in the next few years. Fortunately Laura only has one other on her bucket list (after she gets this Christmas present) & that is a mid/late 50's Chrysler/Desoto in red...Think Christine or similar. Who knows....maybe a good one of those might drop to the point I can buy her one:rolleyes:

    God Bless
    Bill
    https://www.jalopyjournal.com/forum...ar-transport-hauling-open-or-enclosed.614419/
     
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  17. Oh, I don't expect that to happen in my lifetime, but I'm pretty sure my grandkids will. As to the earth 'remaking' it, unfortunately we're using it faster than it's being remade. I have royalty interest in a couple of Oklahoma oil wells inherited from my mother. When oil prices quadrupled in the '70s she made good money ($10K a year) for about five years. Now? I'm lucky to see $200 for the year, usually less.
     
  18. Very well said!! At 48, all of my friends and others are still into late 50's, early 60's cars and trucks, plus a few late 60's musclecars. No tuners at all, but even one of my friends has an unrestored 36 5-window coupe he'd inherited from his dad when he p***ed. It was an old hot rod in the 60's, but for him to replicate the style and build it was, he said he is struggling to buy the parts. His flathead intake, for example, he'd like a dual or tri carb intake. Some of the 65-plus guys around here hang onto those things like gold, even if they will never use it, and/or if they sell it's an astronomical price 'cause you know what they're worth.....

    And to echo your sentiment about a garage full of tools and whatever we have...YES! My 56 and anything my buddies have around here are not bad looking and fun drivers that we cruise the wheels off of. I don't think any of them would p*** qualifications for an indoor car show, but whatever. We are in it for the build, the parts hunt, the fun of driving, and the pure enjoyment of the hobby, not value.
     
  19. 01Jazz
    Joined: Nov 5, 2025
    Posts: 10

    01Jazz
    Member

    In my area you don’t want to be working without shelter in winter. Winters are long and cold and a good place to hibernate. Shop is a big ticket item to tinker on your hobby
    My insurance company informed me replacement cost for my garage $96K. I built for $20k
     
    Bill's Auto Works likes this.
  20. krylon32
    Joined: Jan 29, 2006
    Posts: 10,776

    krylon32
    ALLIANCE MEMBER
    from Nebraska

    I'm not sure the sky is falling just yet We recently finished a complete bare metal deuce highboy ready for paint & interior and it sold quickly. My finished highboy roadster & highboy sedan are another story. I refuse to budge on price so it's a standoff with potential buyers. Potential buyers in today's world seem to think the seller is obligated to cut the asking price. I may have so sell my daily driver deuce pickup next spring because a recent right knee replacement has left me unable to drive it, we'll see how that goes? I been building and selling hot rode since the early 70's and have seen a roller coaster of prices. It think the current market will stabilize when the panic prices stabilize?
     

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