WE2Regal
Active Member
- Joined
- Feb 22, 2003
- Messages
- 439
Seeing one of the original methanol test cars in the for sale section, it reminded me of a car I saw recently. A local man purchased a car from the government he wanted me to look at and tell him what I thought it was worth. I think it was a 69 or 70 Ford Galaxie XL fastback. A pretty rare example with bucket seats and console, 429 w/C6 auto and a 9 inch posi rearend. Not my cup of tea, but there are those who love those big cars. Galaxies are not extremely valuable, but this XL fastback is probably better than the average Galaxie. It was originally purchased by the US government for use for running some type of high speed tests on airport runways. Still had a NASA gate pass in the window. The guy told me the car had been shipped to other countries for tests during it's lifetime. It also still had various emergency lights installed outside. The decal on the doors had been spray painted over before sale, but the buyer managed to remove the paint and make a template for future restoration. It had been filled with all sorts of test equipment at one time and still bore the remnants inside. The passenger bucket seat was removed and equipment had been placed there. The rear seat was removed and replaced with a "jump seat" for a passenger in the middle to sit higher while running the tests. It had a roll bar installed.
The suspension was the most interesting part. The whole car had a lowered look. It appeared like someone from a race car team designed it. I have only seen this type of suspension used in old NASCAR stock cars. The front suspension had been relocated and had what appeared to stock car type tubular control arms. The rear suspension was a truck arm type suspension. And this was obviously done a long time ago! The white steel "wagon" wheels were attached with the biggest lugs I have ever seen. The frame was even reinforced. Probably everything designed by some engineer back in the day would be my guess. A very interesting car, but does this history make this Galaxie any more valuable than the average used Galaxie?
If the car had been a factory built test car, it no doubt would be more valuable. But a "beat on" test car with no real historical significance? While this particular car had relatively low miles, it still needed a complete restoration. In the end, I think it was just another used car with little or no value added by it's previous usage. I would still love to know who the builder was, though. I wouldn't be surprised to learn the mods were farmed out to an actual race team somewhere way back then.
The suspension was the most interesting part. The whole car had a lowered look. It appeared like someone from a race car team designed it. I have only seen this type of suspension used in old NASCAR stock cars. The front suspension had been relocated and had what appeared to stock car type tubular control arms. The rear suspension was a truck arm type suspension. And this was obviously done a long time ago! The white steel "wagon" wheels were attached with the biggest lugs I have ever seen. The frame was even reinforced. Probably everything designed by some engineer back in the day would be my guess. A very interesting car, but does this history make this Galaxie any more valuable than the average used Galaxie?
If the car had been a factory built test car, it no doubt would be more valuable. But a "beat on" test car with no real historical significance? While this particular car had relatively low miles, it still needed a complete restoration. In the end, I think it was just another used car with little or no value added by it's previous usage. I would still love to know who the builder was, though. I wouldn't be surprised to learn the mods were farmed out to an actual race team somewhere way back then.