![]() So, for example, you have a similar wedge-shaped cabin, presumably giving you access to a bench instead of individual seats. It's basically muscle car inspiration from a bunch of eras stretched over the 3rd-generation El Camino body. This piece is by wb.artist20 and is quite entertaining. You can't just draw a bed on a 2020 model and call it a day. Here, you're supposed to take something really old and imagine what it would look like if it were in production right now. However, that's not the point of a modernizing rendering. Thus, it's quite easy to imagine your Mustang, Charger, or Camaro with a practical truck bed. I was pissed but I remembered what an old used car salesman once told me.Or could we? Ever since Holden got closed down, we've been hit with a lot of these muscle-truck renderings. ![]() My friend and my sister went into parking orbit. I had to stop two grown persons from beating her to death. What did you sell it for? Ready……….One case of beer. She had sold it while we were all at the bank. Now we told the lady that we were going to pay her $1500 and she was happy to hear this. ![]() We all went to our banks to get cash, when we came back the car was gone. We all decided to pitch in $500 a piece and get the car. My sister dropped by and asked about it and told her was going over to talk to the lady. So, I called my friend and he headed over to look at it with me. She said she would but that she wanted more than a couple of hundred bucks. I asked her if she would think about selling it. One fine day a 1959 El Camino like this one appeared in her driveway. There was a pitiful lady in my neighborhood that was a horrible drunk. Hagerty is at $23,000 for a #3 good condition car, can this one be saved?įirst, I am half crazy so I would do something stupid like restoring it, but I have history with a 59 Elcky. But, you can see that the floors will need a lot of work as will the quarters and we don’t see the drivetrain – if there is one – or the underside. The seller is listing all four of them for $5,000 each.įor being exposed to the elements, literally sitting in the woods for 50 years, the inside of the bed actually looks pretty good. They say that this car is one of four that they bought from the estate of the previous owner who bought the cars 50 years ago thinking that they’d make one car out of all of the parts and then they sat in the woods for 50 years. It may or may not still be under the hood, we don’t know because they don’t mention the drivetrain at all. This one decodes to having had a six-cylinder engine originally which should have been a 235 inline-six with 125 hp. The seller doesn’t give us any engine photos which is always supremely disappointing when they take a ton of other photos. The El Camino would go away for four years after the 1960 model year and when it came back it was no longer based on the full-sized B-body, based on the new two-door Brookwood station wagon, but on the intermediate A-body. If there’s a cooler tailgate you’ll have to let us know what it might be in the comments section, I can’t currently think of anything better than this design. ![]() Ford beat Chevy to the pickup punch by two years but Chevy nailed it with this cool and unusual design. This was the first year that they were produced and they only made the first-generation cars for the 19 model years. It’s hard to argue with the design of a 1959 Chevrolet El Camino. They have it listed here on eBay in Thief River Falls, in northern Minnesota, and they list a $5,000 buy-it-now price. The exterior photos look good other than the missing metal around the quarter panels, but you’ll need a Fred Flintstone costume to drive this one, at least until it’s restored. Once you check out the detailed photos you’ll see that they aren’t lying. The seller says that this 1959 Chevrolet El Camino is rusty, very rusty.
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