I actually preferred it when these cars weren't in the spot light or worth "big money"...I've owned mine over 20 years and used to take it anywhere, now I'm skeptical leaving it in certain places and even attending car shows...seen guys taking pics of dash area where serial # is and rear end of liscence plate.
Maybe I'm being paranoid, but know a fee people who's car was stolen right out their driveway.
Same, same, and more same. All the talk about these cars is about their value, speculation, and prices now, rather than wrenching on them or driving them. These used to be an everyman's car that average folks could afford and work on. When TA Specialties down here in Miami posts anything on FB regarding an upcoming car they have for sale, the first few sentences or two is about the car itself and how it runs/drives, and then an entire paragraph spewing info about their values and investment potential and blah, blah, blah. I'm like, yeah dude, I get it lol
I don't give a darn, I drive my '79 whenever the weather is nice. Take away rain and snow, and keep the car indoors, that alone is 85% of cosmetic wear and potential for rust eliminated. As for the mechanicals, you WANT to drive these cars to keep them running good. Every single gasket and seal on these hyper-low mileage cars is probably shot, and they probably leak like sieves from every orifice and flange.
It would be terrible if my car was stolen or wrecked, but honestly, anything is replaceable. That's what insurance is for, and the one single benefit of all the hype and rise in values for these cars is that the reproduction aftermarket has grown so much, you can practically build them new out of a catalog. Real Deal Steel just came out with full unibodies for ground-up builds or cars that are rotted out enough to warrant it. So like I said, anything is replaceable.