Looks like a good argument for putting time capsules above ground, which also has the benefit of reducing the chance of being forgotten about or hit by a crew doing utility work.
Maybe Jay Leno might be interested in acquiring it . . . ?
I was under the impression it was more or less a giant paperweight and not salvageable.
It's really not salvageable. Sure, there may be a few parts scattered about that could possibly saved for use on another car, but it's doubtful. The structure is so weak that the car would literally fall apart as it was disassembled for restoration. It's a wonder that they were able to clean it up as well as they have, and swap out the rear springs with out chunks coming loose. The only things that can be done would be to display it as is, or destroy it.
Well, if so, it will certainly cost more that $100,000. There's not much to work with. Almost all of the original sheet metal is beyond working. Even good canidates for restoration top $100k. This one is out of the ballpark. If a restoration was feasable, it would already been started.
A pig in the poke if there ever was one. Let it go back into the ground.
I guess you could do that. ... Build a whole new car around the serial number tag and call it "restored"
Someone already does that in OKC. Classic Recreations - Carroll Shelby GT500CR Built by Classic Recreations ®
Carroll Shelby did the same thing back in the very early 80's. He bought up a whole bunch of '65-'66 Mustangs and built about 20 "New" 1965 Shelby GT 350 topless roadsters. All of them blue. The cars were totally gutted, and rebuilt from scratch using new or NOS parts. The few parts that couldn't be found were rebuilt. Shelby then kept 3 or 4 for himself and sold the rest.
Miss Belvedere doesn't have enough sound metal to even swap out the quarter panels
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