The first thing I wanted to do when I got the car home was decode the VIN tag. Decoding a car can be fun. Funny how some of the simplest and basic tasks can be interesting-at least to me. I know I’m looking right at the car and can tell most of the parts of…
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What do you call a ‘group’ of Marlins?
I know what you are probably thinking. He still hasn’t resto-modded and finished the Marlin he has and he’s buying yet another. And this one is not in that great of shape body-rust-wise and it doesn’t seem to want to start. And where is he going to put it? All valid questions. All of which…
Uh,oh. What’s he gotten himself into now?
New post coming soon.
Iola Car Show
Check out this post on our companion blog Paddle Pedal and Coffee. We took a trip to Wisconsin and started it with a visit to a huge car show in Iola.
Wait, did that come on the car from the factory?
Is that a passenger door mirror. Yes, some Marlins came with the passenger side mirror as part of a trim package but this one didn’t. I like the symmetrical appearance of two mirrors. My Torino came with just one mirror so I found a pair of Cougar mirrors, had them painted and they look perfect….
Wheels, what to do
We all know wheels and tires make the car. The wheels that came with the car were three different colors and two different designs. I had three original rusty and corroded hubcaps. My first reaction was to buy some nice new wheels but stopped when I had to decide the size limits and back-set especially…
Kenosha Homecoming Car Show
Take a look at these posts about the Kenosha Car Show (Friday, Saturday) on Paddle, Pedal, and Coffee. Paddlepedalcoffee.com is a companion website to David’s Workshops.
Decoding the Marlin
As the pictures of the Marlin show, the paint is rough. If fact when I first saw the car, I joked it looked like it was on it’s third paint job. Turns out I was right. This is the fender tag for the Marlin The build sheet, usually under the rear seats in most older…
Torino Blog Post
Nothing posted as of yet
A dash from this and a dash to that
The Marlin’s dash pad was trashed. It was in two or three pieces with chunks missing. While the hot and dry New Mexico desert had been kind to the metal, it had been ruthless to the interior. When I started removing it, it fell apart in my hands, literally turning to dust. Replacement dashes are…