Not being particularly gifted in the car mending area (in all honesty, I'm pretty useless), I have spent a small fortune in getting the car as close to perfection as I want it to be whilst retaining the originality of the car. I joined the forum and then the Register before I bought my car and the rest, as they say, is history.
So, the point of this posting: I drop in and out of the Forum from time to time and often note other cars for sale. Almost always, there is a comment to the effect that "it isn't worth that much" . The "that much" amount is always less than the cost of a comprehensive engine and suspension rebuild by professionals (and you can work out how I know that little fact!)
Then we get other comments regularly commenting on the low values of our cars. Is there a connection? I think there is. If we don't value our cars, we can be quite sure no one else will. Why is a mark 2 Jaguar worth so much more? Granted, it has a larger and more powerful engine, but they rust and rot just as ferociously, probably more so. Even the most humble Ford from the same period is worth more than the top of the range Triumph and in its day, which was the car you would aspire to? And which was the car that defined and created the concept of the performance "executive car" - the segment now occupied by BMW and Audi? When changing a company car once, I was offered the usual "choice" of a Cortina, Cavalier, Marina
So my thought for the day is that we should actively talk up the merits of our cars, why they are desirable and why people should be prepared to pay a good price to enjoy luxury classic motoring.
This is just my personal view - nothing to do with being a club Director or the Editor.
Kevin


