MOPAR VIRGIN's 1968 Barracuda Convertible RestoMod Journey

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Mopar Virgin

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Many people on this forum have been graciously helpful with their advice, recommendations and referrals. Felt I should pull back the curtain on this project and chronicle it at bit and provide some visuals.

This all started in my attempt to build the car with my own hands with the help of a very experienced friend with a stunning '55 Chevy Delray who had built several cars. I still work, but he is 12 years older and retired. I challenged him to find a Gen2 Bcuda Convertible -- there were only 8510 of these ever built -- and darn if he didn't find one in two weeks. I really wanted a Gen3, but the ~$40K+ cost of entry was too steep and had seen a deep blue notchback at the Lewiston, ID show and saw potential. We both spoke to the seller who was flipping the car as a "project". It was an AZ car and he'd only had it a couple months to add parts and sell it. Decided to buy it site-unseen and have it shipped to my friend's place in The Dalles, OR. I was 2months removed from the area snowbirding in AZ, but when it arrived he felt the car looked great. Upon my return ... PROBLEMS!!!

The body shop we were arranged to have it prepped and painted at closed to retire. The machine shop we knew and trusted decided to do the same. So we hunted around a lot and finally found a 40yr running body shop who fit-in about 3 projects a year aside from their insurance repair work. I stripped the car down in a day with the Friend's help, and with the A-pillar/lower-windshield channel looking as good as new, we smiled with confidence the car was a winner and hauled it to the recommended sand blasting shop -- then, reality hit!!!

The bare metal revealed the driver-side floor was full of pinholes and need replacing, but the big trouble was learning the entire rear end had been damaged uniformly decades before and covered-up with bondo and a cover paint job. In summary, both rear quarter panels, trunk and lower valance had all been uniformly pushed in about 1/2". This now meant BIG BODY WORK and the owner of the body shop said he didn't want to deal with it, so we were screwed and had to start looking again for a 3rd body shop. The orignal idea was to have me do the body fill and sanding with the friend's help/oversight, then have a body shop do the prep and paint, but this was a MAJOR problem needing a pro and my soon to shrink bank account.

Through pure luck, a mutual close friend and Mopar enthusist, was at a local car show and struck up a conversation with someone who had recently completed a project with a small restoration and body shop business. His experience wwith the process was great, and the shop's painter was at the shop. Met the owner a week later and he was up for the task at a reasonable hourly rate. So, we hauled the car to him and off-to-the-races we went and the project continues.
 
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With the backstory provided above, this is the "inspiration car" we started the project with in our minds as-to what a Gen2 Bcuda RestoMod could yield. We did not enter into this with Panther Pink as our intended color, but more on that later.

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We bought the car based on several phone conversations with the seller in Jan'21. These are a couple of the photos provided, and no, there were to photos of the rear end ...

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And here are pictures of the rear end that provide a reference point of the damage. To us, it looked more like panel alignment and small amount of body work, but hey, what did I know?

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I wish I had more photos of the process and progress as the project moved along, but the shop owner is really old-school (e.g. he does not have an email account, mobile phone or digital camera). Plus, the half-year we live in the PacNW our house is 60miles from the shop, so we don't get many opportunities to just "stop-in". That said, with the body work about to be completed, we were getting pressure to make a color decision.

This was wearing on my wife and I for months. We did not have any firm direction where we wanted to go with it. Seeing the deep blue notchback, we knew that was always the "safe option". I have always been partial to greens, and I had a specific vision of a yellow-gold in my head that could have gone well with a harringbone/houndstooth cloth seat covering. And then there was our Mopar friend that kept egging us on to go with Panther Pink, but I was not interested in a single-stage paint scheme, and ... this is a RestoMod project vision, not a restoration.

So mocked-up $400 in custom paint colors to see what all these options looked like. The pink is no Panther Pink (more on that in a moment) ...

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So in our research, we learned that in 2010 Dodge made 450 special edition Challengers in a paint called Furious Fuschia that was on the cover of Motor Trend. No chance I was going to find 1 of 450 in our area to look at, but it is also known as Tuscadaro on Jeep Rubicons. We happened upon one at a regional car show and felt it looked to drab (e.g. not like the magazine cover). Our Mopar Friend recommend we talk to a paint supplier who color matched his '68 brown Roadrunner perfectly when someone had backed into the side of his car. Turns out the associate had been mixing paints for 40years and even painted a car for Carol Shelby when we was living in SoCal. We explained our interest in the 2-stage color, but wanted it to look lke the magazine depiction. He suggested dropping a few pigments from the paint and test it on white, grey and black bases.

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And so ... We ended-up with that custom paint color.

It was a BIG GAMBLE and the shop owner was not an advocate of it (he is now), but after deliberating over three visits over the other colors, we went for it and feel it has yielded an incredible result, but likely to tork the Mopar and classic restoration purists.

At first we planned to go with the "black-out" approach of the original inspiration car, but in seeing the car in person and referencing the 2010 Challenger pics we found, we are intending to use classic white horizontal stripes with a white interior. One of the pics has black electrical tape on it when we were playing around with striping options.

In a couple months we'll be back in the PacNW kicking-off the interior work, picking wheels and putting fresh replacment parts on. Our hope is to have this on-the-road by end of June and will post more on the project then.

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Convertibles are just soft top notch backs. I like your color choice, very nice.

Here is mine, a hardtop:

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Daring color selection!!! I would have jumped on the car depicted in the original pictures! Almost too good to be true.
 
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