At least one does!Just goes to show you.. Some peeps actually read your posts....
Or maybe some people read my posts for the articles, while others look at the pics? (maybe that is why @ceebuddy was asking for centerfold pics )
At least one does!Just goes to show you.. Some peeps actually read your posts....
I'm curious, where does the number 100 TNT '70 300 convertibles come from?A bit of research this weekend, and help from a couple of members, has allowed me to track down 18 U-code 1970 300 'verts still on the road, plus one that is rotting away (CM27U0C182955). AFAIK, that means one seventh of the total 300 TNT production is still on the road! And, I am sure there are more out there.
Thank you -- typo on my part. The figure I have is 135 (in all likelihood) in total for the US and Canadian market. I have edited the post, glad you caught it.I'm curious, where does the number 100 TNT '70 300 convertibles come from?
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Until Saturday, CM27U0C250282 had had a single owner since new. He put it up for sale last week and, on the basis of a lone low-resolution screen shot of an old photograph that he posted in an online ad, I decided to contact him.
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Good thing that I did as, with @Ripinator's help, I ended up buying the car this Saturday. @saforwardlook and @polara71 have often advised folks not to dismiss sellers from the photos they post, and my experience is proof positive that their recommendation is on target!
This 1970 300 'vert is EB7 blue, has white buckets/top/stripes, a console, cruise control, manual A/C, disc brakes and... a TNT engine, 3.23 gears and SureGrip. Save for the lack of power windows/seats and the presence of a rim blow wheel, it is pretty much equipped the way that I would have optioned out a car (if I had been a buyer back in 1970).
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This car has high miles (138k) but was left to sit under cover in the first owner's garage for many years. Before being parked away, it had been repainted "a few times" -- once it came back B5 blue and he sent it back for the proper B7. The front seats were redone twice: when he first had it re-upholstered, he was not happy with the results and sent it back. The rest of the interior appears original, save a couple of extra speakers (I'll be looking for unmolested kick panels) and an extra radio under the dash.
Bottom line, I could not pass on the car. It is a one-owner U-code 'vert that I plan to get back on the road. I will need help, of course. I am lucky that @71Polara383 will continue to help me improve my BB 1970 Polara 'verts and my two NYBs, and I am lucky that @david hill (who did an amazing job with his 1969 300 TNT 'vert) will help me bring back this 300 'vert.
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Thanks! Buttercup is coming along nicely — @71Polara383 has finished the metal work on the top, primer is on, and she’ll have her top painted white before receiving a brand new SMS gold vinyl top. I hope she’ll be at the Illinois River Run on May 2nd!I can't believe I missed this somehow. Another stellar car @ayilar ! You are probably thinking about moving out that ol Buttercup to make room for the growing vert collection!! Ha!
Nope, custom made for Poppy, my 1970 Polara ‘vert — Ironshield from Carscover.com:Is that a BUDGE car cover?! If so, what # cover fits a 20’ FUSELAGE?!
If you are interested in a same quality cover as that one in ayilar post check out the Car Cover Company. that cover is a 5 layer which is what I use. There are many different many Cover suppliers doing rebranding covers made by the same company. Do your research as prices can vary significantly. I found the cover for my 69 300 vert by using Newport vert as my car model. If you buy chance use 300 in your search, you may get a cover for a late model 300. It happen to me.Is that a BUDGE car cover?! If so, what # cover fits a 20’ FUSELAGE?!
Nope, custom made for Poppy, my 1970 Polara ‘vert — Ironshield from Carscover.com:
CarsCover.com: Online Shopping for Covers & more
Poppy is stored indoors and won’t be going to Carlisle this year (I’ll take another car there), so she temporarily agreed to swap her waterproof and wind resistant cover for the interior cover that the seller included when I got her TNT cousin. The Ironshield fits tightly at the corners on the TNT with lots of extra material and creases on the top, but that is not the case on Poppy (good since it’s a custom cover!) — clearly the cars are not the same.
Can’t really answer. There are two vents, one up front and one in back. I’ve used this cover almost exclusively inside, in a garage where humidity has not been an issue at all. I think Poppy’s cover has seen rain only twice in three years, and both times it was just overnight — I mopped off whatever water was left on the cover outside in the morning, and found the car bone dry underneath.Just curious whether that Ironshield car cover breathes OK, i.e. it lets any water that has condensed under it escape when the weather is dry again?