When a COPO dies.....
Man,
Came across this today and its a bummer. I used to own this car. It was a 1970 Z28 COPO, and a #'s matching, build sheet JM certified Z28-COPO. Sold it several years back. Just came across this ad, and it's been "pro toured" with a 572ci engine. On bring a trailer https://bringatrailer.com/listing/19...olet-camaro-21 https://bringatrailer.com/wp-content...?fit=940%2C627 I know it's not a "COPO" copo, but still cant believe that someone pulled the numbers engine and pro toured it. This is what it looked like when I sold it: http://davidsclassiccars.com/images/...ctor-car-1.jpg and the Build Sheet http://davidsclassiccars.com/images/...ctor-car-7.jpg Bummer..... But this America. Looks like it brought in the $90's as a Pro Tour, much more than as the original COPO 9796. Rich |
Why no black grille?
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My worst nightmare...
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That's a travesty IMO.
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Absolutely brutal. I wonder what they did with the drivetrain and comfortweave...
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Man, well, I thought I was going to see a picture of a rolled/totaled car when I read the thread title, so I guess it could be worse! Still a bummer when you think of all the NOM 2nd gens out there.
Wonder what happened to the original engine. |
Who ever changed that Z should be shot!! Everyone with a nice original car worst nightmare indeed...
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I've seen plenty of this with Corvettes, so sad but it's the world we live in.
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Substantial engineering went into COPO 9796 beyond just the rear spoiler.
Oh well, my car remains, and today is just a little bit more rare.:3gears: |
I mean, I'm sure there are other stockers. I really don't like Pro-Touring stuff but it's honestly not that big of a deal. Especially if the guy kept all the original parts
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When I bought my '69 Z I was told the story that a previous owner was interested in the pro-touring style and off-hand asked for a quote from a high-end SoCal shop for what it would take starting with this Z. Mercifully the shop straight up refused to do it to this car. So thankfully some shops like that do exist and say no!
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/Rich |
For those curious, the seller states the original drivetrain and other parts come with the car if sold -------
"Throughout this build most of the original parts were kept such as engine, transmission, rear differential, all suspension, original front subframe and good small parts which are bagged and labeled. Good condition interior parts were kept as well. There are several pallets that will accompany this sale if the buyer wants it. Also, the original metal hood was fitted, prepped and painted to the same high quality as the rest of the car and is included. |
Why wouldnt you just use a clean body 1970 Camaro instead of tearing everything out of an original car like this. You would have the same result. Just doesnt make any sense.
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Wow.... just read the comments from the dealer
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R |
Ha! $375k...I don't believe it for a second...but even if it were 1/4 that amount, I'd be surprised if you would recover the build cost.
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I don't understand why the original certified car did not have a black grille?
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For $375K they could have easily started from a rusted out shell and accomplished the same thing:haha::haha:
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Grill should have been to GM specs as any other color car. |
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If that is there cost, and they lose $200+, this shop won't be open a whole lot longer. |
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