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The price of a Model A Ford I purchased my 28CCPU a couple years ago, after quite a bit of research.
I've continued to check on current prices, because I'd like to have a nice hotrod, too. I'm 72, and don't want to spend the time and effort to restore a Model A, or build a nice rod, so I've been looking at someone else's project cars, and finished offerings. What I've found is nice hotrods and restored Model As are two completely different ballgames. You can get a decent Model A for relatively low price, but the decent hotrods are sky high in prices. The trouble is, there is a finite number of model As, and very few restorable As are likely to surface, from this point forward. Those that do, are mostly molested by the current rat-rod craze. I can't find fault with that, but it's a shame that some of the nice restored and restorable Model As will be chopped up to make rat-rods.....and, they are forever gone from the gene pool when that happens! My prediction is the number of nice restored model As is going to continually decrease, making your investment worth more at some future time. But, I may be nuts to think younger enthusiasts for restored model As will ever be a thing with them.....? From my POV, it looks like restored to original antique cars is pretty much an "old guy" thing, and we are dying out! Your opinions on this are invited... |
Re: The price of a Model A Ford You might find one pops up on Bringatrailer.com
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Re: The price of a Model A Ford Yes, thank you. I am aware of BAT.
Was mostly interested in opinions concerning where the hobby is headed, and all those factors that do, will, or might come into play. |
Re: The price of a Model A Ford I don't know where the hobby is going. The same is happening with vintage hit & miss engines and antique aircraft. It looks like the latest generation of ipad users, etc. has ignored us old timers and are onto new and better things. Sad and IMHO (in my humble opinion) as the newer generation says, is a loss equal to extinct animals.
John |
Re: The price of a Model A Ford And don’t even get me started on stamp collecting!:p I’m a walking antique! Does anyone here have a stamp collection?
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Re: The price of a Model A Ford Plenty of good restorable “A’s” are still out there. A few really nice ones for restoration have been on eBay lately… ones that are not really good enough to preserve as original yet mostly unmolested. Unfortunately these tend to be of the tudor sedan or standard sedan variety.
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Re: The price of a Model A Ford In our downtown, we have a model train layout. The time period depicted is late '30s - early '50s. I find this is the most common time period for these layouts, both because it's the only time period featuring both diesel and steam engines, and because it's the time that the typical operator of this layout remembers from his childhood.
Anyway, last month I was talking to the operator, and I asked what he thought the next generation of model train hobbyists would depict in their layouts. He said he thought it would be the trains they remembered from their childhood – the ones they saw onscreen. He predicted layouts featuring the Hogwarts and Polar Expresses, the Thomas characters, maybe some of the really famous survivor engines like UP 4014. I think probably the same thing will happen with car collecting. Folks will collect the cars they remember from media. |
Re: The price of a Model A Ford Someday in the future I suppose because of government mandates antique cars might be electrified once battery technology improves and a original Model A will only be viewed in a museum depicting the “Petroleum” age of human existence. In the mean time I see the hobby dwindling down as us Seniors pass on. The younger folks in my family ignore my Model T’s and Model A’s and only show interest in my more modern “odd” rebuilds as my Isetta 300 and Messerschmitt KR200.
Many of the younger folks I am around were never taught the pleasure of building something or working with their hands so older machinery does not interest them. |
Re: The price of a Model A Ford What's "collectable" is definitely generational, trends come and go. Some things get "hot" for a while, and then are not. For a while now there has been a lot of overseas interest in Coleman lanterns, of all things. I don't know why. I've been waiting for used Martin guitar prices to collapse, without much success.
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Re: The price of a Model A Ford IMO, the price is a mere reflection of the supply and demand for each.
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Re: The price of a Model A Ford And don’t even get me started on stamp collecting! I’m a walking antique! Does anyone here have a stamp collection?
Ray I started collecting stamps when I was 9 and was finished by 14. I saw more equity in coin collecting and that has overall been true. whether you collect silver bullion or rare coins, they continue up with inflation. neither being a bad hedge for the long run and pretty much none taxable if you sell correctly. so the same can be said with A's, the rarer models tend to hold their value better. the common not so much, but they do continue up with inflation. Best to collect what you enjoy. |
Re: The price of a Model A Ford the problem with used Martin guitars are there were never many to begin with. I have been following the Vincent mkt for awhile and they never go down. didnt make enough.......
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Re: The price of a Model A Ford I put all my retirement funds into Beanie Babies! Waiting on the uptick!
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Re: The price of a Model A Ford I have a collection of pet rocks in case anyone is interested.
Do not assume the asking price is the selling price. On ebay you can show the selling price if you are logged in. |
Re: The price of a Model A Ford Quote:
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Re: The price of a Model A Ford If you have an antique that is one of one or one of a few, than value will be a different story.
When you have an antique that is one of almost five million, well there are more to go around. As we lose more and more Model A’s for one reason or another, the price should be effected by the increasing lack of available product. The Law of Supply and Demand. The very well restored, the well taken care cars with a low number of owners, the un molested originals. As with almost any antique. The prices could go up or down but there will be a market. Junk is junk no matter what it is. My advice is to not worry about the cars going to street rods or what ever. The fewer cars that are available for sale. The higher the prices will be. |
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I only mention dollar value, as a comment on the current market, as I see it. My reason for buying and enjoying my Model A Ford, is because it's what I've wanted for a long time. Now that I'm older, I can make that dream come true. I was hoping one of my sons would also have an interest in it, but I'm not seeing it so far. My 28CCPU will probably be sold when I'm gone, as I think that's what happened to it when I bought it......the family just didn't have the interest that Grandpa had in it.....so, off to the auction block it went! I do hope it increases in market value, though.....just so my family will benefit from that increased value.....that is, when the time comes for me to depart this world! :D |
Re: The price of a Model A Ford 700rpm you got it entirely right!
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Re: The price of a Model A Ford Quote:
Eccentric Old Guy this is a tough question, there aren't any simple answers. About the time you think this hobby is toast interest resurges and a-way we go as Ralph Cramden (Jackie Gleason) used to say on 'The Honeymooners'. I've noticed that prices on pre-War Fords seem to stay strong for solid, ORIGINAL cars either professionally restored or bone stock original survivors. Roadsters will always bring more than Sedans, that is just a given. It's always been that way. Plus the '30-'31 Roadsters remain darlings of even the Street Rod guys, Speaking of which brings me to the second part of my observation and you will see this in the collector car auctions like Mecum. Street rods cost some big wampum to put together, nicely, not the rat rod crap. But at sale time they fall on their faces and only bring a small portion of what the owner has wrapped up in it. A GOOD well restored original antique will outsell that rod dollar for dollar all day long. Pre-War pickups are a good example. Ford-Chevy-Dodge doesn't matter. Most have been rodded, painted purple with white vinyl interiors, SBC's, etc. etc. ad infinitum, but hang onto your seat and your wallet when an original rolls out :eek: |
Re: The price of a Model A Ford bitcoin is the new throw-a-way culture collectible...… you cant' see or touch it, but it's worth $350,000.00 a unit to somebody right now.
These are the same people who have no idea where milk comes from either. |
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