What is this eBayer talking about??? - NCRS Discussion Boards

What is this eBayer talking about???

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  • Tom P.
    Extremely Frequent Poster
    • April 1, 1980
    • 1814

    #31
    Re: What is this eBayer talking about???

    Originally posted by Stuart Fox (28060)
    Joe;

    I agree. When they closed down the old admin. building at the GM Locomotive plant where I worked they pitched out a whole lot of irreplaceable records, drawings, photos, and art work from way back in the early days of diesel electric locomotives. 75 years of history out in the trash. Some of us rummaged for what ever we could save, but there was just too much to go through and the practice was discouraged as they didn't want the rail fan magazines access to the "Mother Lode". What a shame, but that seems to be the GM way so nothing would surprise me.

    Stu Fox
    Sooooooooooooooooooooo, who the heck cares about diesel locos anyway????????????
    If it ain't steam-------------it ain't right!!!!!!!

    Comment

    • Michael J.
      Extremely Frequent Poster
      • January 27, 2009
      • 7121

      #32
      Re: What is this eBayer talking about???

      Right, if only there were a way to make sure the BB C2 you are buying is the real deal. But as for now it just takes a lot of work, research, and sorting through phoney baloney cars. But it is caveat emptor.
      Big Tanks In the High Mountains of New Mexico

      Comment

      • Joel F.
        Expired
        • April 30, 2004
        • 659

        #33
        Re: What is this eBayer talking about???

        This thread is over a year old

        Comment

        • Tom H.
          Extremely Frequent Poster
          • December 1, 1993
          • 3440

          #34
          Re: What is this eBayer talking about???

          Originally posted by Joel Falk (41859)
          This thread is over a year old

          My car is over 40 years old !!
          Tom Hendricks
          Proud Member NCRS #23758
          NCM Founding Member # 1143
          Corvette Department Manager and
          Specialist for 27 years at BUDS Chevrolet.

          Comment

          • Valeria H.
            Very Frequent User
            • July 27, 2009
            • 463

            #35
            Re: What is this eBayer talking about???

            But does anyone know what happened to the corvette in question????? Did anyone in this organization buy the car?
            Valeria
            Valeria Hutchinson
            Past Chairman of the Carolinas Chapter

            1960 Roman Red w/ White Coves -"Bella"
            2005 Millennium Yellow 6 speed 400 HP - "Trixie"

            Comment

            • Robert R.
              Very Frequent User
              • May 31, 1975
              • 358

              #36
              Re: What is this eBayer talking about???

              Tom,
              Just imagine if ALCO or Baldwin also made cars!

              Can you see it? ... a 4-8-8-4 steam powered sports car?!!

              Bob

              Comment

              • John H.
                Beyond Control Poster
                • December 1, 1997
                • 16513

                #37
                Re: What is this eBayer talking about???

                Originally posted by Robert Ricchio (599)
                Tom,
                Just imagine if ALCO or Baldwin also made cars!

                Bob
                Bob -

                ALCO DID make cars for a few years! When I was a kid, the owner of the Chrysler-Plymouth dealership in Hudson, Ohio had a beautifully-restored ALCO touring car (along with several other classics).

                Comment

                • Robert R.
                  Very Frequent User
                  • May 31, 1975
                  • 358

                  #38
                  Re: What is this eBayer talking about???

                  John,
                  Amazing, I thought you were pulling my leg.
                  See the attached:

                  Alco automobiles

                  An Alco winning the 1910 Vanderbilt Cup.


                  The company diversified into the automobile business in 1906, producing French Berliet designs under license. Production was located at ALCO's Rhode Island Locomotive Works in Providence, Rhode Island. Two years later, the Berliet license was abandoned, and the company began to produce its own designs instead. Alco cars won the Vanderbilt Cup in both 1909 and 1910 and also competed in the Indianapolis 500 in 1911, but they had less success in sales, abandoning automobile manufacture in 1913. The Alco automobile story is chiefly notable for starting the automobile career of Walter P. Chrysler, the plant manager, who left for Buick in 1911 and subsequently founded the Chrysler automobile giant which went bankrupt in 2009.

                  I guess that was at a time when companies tried different things to continue to grow.

                  Thanks for the heads up , I learned something today.

                  Bob

                  Comment

                  • Brett H.
                    Expired
                    • January 1, 1996
                    • 367

                    #39
                    Re: What is this eBayer talking about???

                    It's good to see that the C4 Challenge car paperwork still exists today. Not that many people are interested in them. I have every build sheet for every Challenge car from 1988-1990. Why? Because they exist. Why not?

                    Comment

                    • Kenneth B.
                      Extremely Frequent Poster
                      • August 31, 1984
                      • 2088

                      #40
                      Re: What is this eBayer talking about???

                      Originally posted by John Hinckley (29964)
                      Joe, Chevrolet assembly plants didn't retain paper build documents - they went in the trash barrels every day. Only one year's production at St. Louis-Corvette would generate 40,000 individual build records, and there was nowhere to store that volume of paperwork.
                      OK
                      Then why did Pontiac have all of there build sheets. Way more Pontiacs than Corvettes. Another thing I wonder about no line sheets are found in the Corvettes. I must have been that the conspericy theory. I think Commies horded all the fuelie & big block parts.
                      KEN
                      65 350 TI CONV 67 J56 435 CONV,67,390/AIR CONV,70 454/air CONV,
                      What A MAN WON'T SPEND TO GIVE HIS ASS A RIDE

                      Comment

                      • Brian M.
                        Extremely Frequent Poster
                        • February 1, 1997
                        • 1838

                        #41
                        Re: What is this eBayer talking about???

                        That race went right thru my town. Before my time.
                        Originally posted by Robert Ricchio (599)
                        John,
                        Amazing, I thought you were pulling my leg.
                        See the attached:

                        Alco automobiles

                        An Alco winning the 1910 Vanderbilt Cup.


                        The company diversified into the automobile business in 1906, producing French Berliet designs under license. Production was located at ALCO's Rhode Island Locomotive Works in Providence, Rhode Island. Two years later, the Berliet license was abandoned, and the company began to produce its own designs instead. Alco cars won the Vanderbilt Cup in both 1909 and 1910 and also competed in the Indianapolis 500 in 1911, but they had less success in sales, abandoning automobile manufacture in 1913. The Alco automobile story is chiefly notable for starting the automobile career of Walter P. Chrysler, the plant manager, who left for Buick in 1911 and subsequently founded the Chrysler automobile giant which went bankrupt in 2009.

                        I guess that was at a time when companies tried different things to continue to grow.

                        Thanks for the heads up , I learned something today.

                        Bob

                        Comment

                        • Joe L.
                          Beyond Control Poster
                          • February 1, 1988
                          • 43219

                          #42
                          Re: What is this eBayer talking about???

                          Originally posted by Kenneth Barry (7808)
                          OK
                          Then why did Pontiac have all of there build sheets. Way more Pontiacs than Corvettes. Another thing I wonder about no line sheets are found in the Corvettes. I must have been that the conspericy theory. I think Commies horded all the fuelie & big block parts.
                          KEN
                          Ken------


                          Yes, there were a lot more Pontiacs built than Corvettes. However, there were LOTS more Chevrolets built than Pontiacs and therein lies the problem. Corvettes were a Chevrolet Motor Division vehicle and Chevrolet produced the vast majority of GM cars---probably more at that time than all other divisions combined. Apparently, so many that the Chevrolet Motor Division decided it was way too much bother to archive production records, especially when there was absolutely no business reason to do so.

                          If the Corvette had been a Pontiac Division vehicle, there would be records available today. But, it wasn't; it was a Chevrolet.
                          In Appreciation of John Hinckley

                          Comment

                          • John H.
                            Beyond Control Poster
                            • December 1, 1997
                            • 16513

                            #43
                            Re: What is this eBayer talking about???

                            Originally posted by Joe Lucia (12484)
                            Yes, there were a lot more Pontiacs built than Corvettes. However, there were LOTS more Chevrolets built than Pontiacs
                            Yup - 18 assembly plants built Chevrolets in the 60's; Pontiacs were built in the equivalent of two.

                            Comment

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