Yep, lots of salt. The latest thing is they spray a liquid salt brine solution that get's in places where the granular stuff never did. It eats cars, concrete and steel bridges.
Yep i believe we have something similar,used to be grains and is now some kind of solution,its terrible and eats everything.
So it's a 73?
You guys who live in rust zones scare me with the cars that come from there.
I am not used to rust.
Yep.
To be hones im amazed when looking at videos and pics from some corners of America and how nice cars you can drag out of barns/fields there that have been parked forewer without being totaly destroyed from the elements or how you can drive your cars yeararound without them being eaten by salt..
You would probably have got a stroke if you saw the detoriation of the -78 caprice i drove for a few years as my dailydriver,that thing could have used everything new under the windowlines!
That thing looks cool,and love how you can put a truck frame under one of those ancient things and get some kind of roadworthiness out of them instead of the horsecarriege garbage handling most of them old things are blessed with from the factory.Box the frame you have. A friend put a 35 Dodge Pick up on a Dakota frame and it fought him all the way. The factory frames are plenty strong with some boxing in the proper places. Jeremy grafted a Dakota front and welded in a 4 link for the rear.View attachment 1715238245 View attachment 1715238246
I totally understand the feelings. My dart has some attatchment also.
Its a wreck, i intend in driving it again. After it being gone for 24 years.
Most would probably say that this whole hobby is realy stupid but i guess there are worse things to spend time and money on
I hope you get it driving and in better shape than ever or atleast better than presently and just keep working on it over time


















