Jon Early
Active Member
- Joined
- Dec 4, 2014
- Messages
- 511
More progress. It may seem minor from the outside looking in, but demodifying a car you didn't put together as inexpensively as possible is kind of a puzzle!
I know I don't exactly care about performance for this rebuild, but I'll do the easy free stuff!
I managed to find all the original supercharger bolts and stock fuel rails in a box that came with the car. That's a relief. Now I need to eliminate the elbow.
Squeaky clean brand new throttle. I don't remember the story about why he bought this, but it couldn't have been cheap!
Looking stockish again! I found the original oil fill neck too, so I threw that on there. I was going to put the billet ZZP cap up for sale, but after feeling how nice of a part it is, I think I'm going to keep it for myself.
If I can personalize it with a power six or tri-shield, I'm all about it. Sure enough, the badge is just glued on. Sweet! I knew this car would start paying itself back.
I sold the stainless log manifold last week, and the A-pillar gauge pods sold today. After replacing the log manifold with a stock one ($20), shipping costs ($30), and PayPal fees I've reclaimed about $80, a cool oil cap, a nice intake manifold, a wideband for the GN, two scan gauges, and a full stack intercooler kit. I'll have some of these parts for sale on Facebook, and I think the car will still be worth more than I paid when I'm finished with the the engine installation. Afterall, it's still a Comp G with 120k miles, minimal rust, and an F-body brake conversion. Will the money have been worth my time? Not really, but it's a learning experience. The parts proceeds will go directly toward Camaro suspension parts. Whatever money I get for the car will go towards a down payment on a tow vehicle.
I know I don't exactly care about performance for this rebuild, but I'll do the easy free stuff!
I managed to find all the original supercharger bolts and stock fuel rails in a box that came with the car. That's a relief. Now I need to eliminate the elbow.
Squeaky clean brand new throttle. I don't remember the story about why he bought this, but it couldn't have been cheap!
Looking stockish again! I found the original oil fill neck too, so I threw that on there. I was going to put the billet ZZP cap up for sale, but after feeling how nice of a part it is, I think I'm going to keep it for myself.
If I can personalize it with a power six or tri-shield, I'm all about it. Sure enough, the badge is just glued on. Sweet! I knew this car would start paying itself back.
I sold the stainless log manifold last week, and the A-pillar gauge pods sold today. After replacing the log manifold with a stock one ($20), shipping costs ($30), and PayPal fees I've reclaimed about $80, a cool oil cap, a nice intake manifold, a wideband for the GN, two scan gauges, and a full stack intercooler kit. I'll have some of these parts for sale on Facebook, and I think the car will still be worth more than I paid when I'm finished with the the engine installation. Afterall, it's still a Comp G with 120k miles, minimal rust, and an F-body brake conversion. Will the money have been worth my time? Not really, but it's a learning experience. The parts proceeds will go directly toward Camaro suspension parts. Whatever money I get for the car will go towards a down payment on a tow vehicle.