by john » Thu Oct 23, 2008 10:30 pm
Richard and Tuckeroo,
Truly good replies and Tuckeroo, your right, its the enthusiast and authorities posts and replies that makes this Club and others great. Shared thoughts and working together always seems to be the best policy.
We too make mistakes, everybody does and we hope that if we error in our postings, someone will correct us for all to learn, thats what a Club is all about!
We also get confused to what constitutes a body shell, frame, serial numbers and authenticating.
We would like to share this, there seems to be a general rule that collectors and Clubs use.
I have been in the Shelby American Auto Club for 20 years, handled many Shelbys over the years, but not limited to just that brand. SAAC has very strick rules in documenting cars and authenticating them.
Ferrari, Jaguar, Rolls Royce and the Dodge Clubs follow suit or vice versa and have excellent recorded history.
The Histories of all cars are printed in books which they sell & the records are housed for updating whenever one sells or a lost one turns up, records are updated or corrected.
It's funny but sometimes 2 cars show up with the same serial number, have seen this many times, point, one guy gets a body with a serial # and another guy has the original chassis and motor, which is the car?
Latest court case, the chassis with the motor, trans and rear end won out.
This happens a lot gentleman, real sad actually.
I personally watched with enthusiasism as a vey important early race Ferrari TR became two cars this way, I do know this because I rescued a car from the same group of significant cars that were burned rusty incomplete hulks, but they were real in all regards.
Reflecting back to the Tucker.
The general rules that the above have set as standards;
Irregardless of condition by being burned, rusty, body incomplete, no drive components etc, if the serial number is stamped on the framing from the factory, it is a real car and recognized as such.If it still retains some of the body parts, that is just that much better for authenticating it and avoiding issues mentioned herein,
That also brings us back to why they have histories in the books, it stops fraud and gives a possible new owner opportunity to be reassured in a purchase in knowing everything about the automobiles life and history.
A tucker body was welded onto the frame for the most part and it almost becomes what one would call a unibody affair, please correct if we are wrong.
We all have seen bare Tucker chassis, seems most had the cowls grafted on with other parts of the car being the same.
The point, a body really would not be a body without the frame, it would be for the most part, just parts laying there, we would assume and concede though, that it is possible one could have a roof, qrts, rear & front bulk heads, but is this real likely with no attachments to a frame?
It seems with no base, floor or frame, would it in all probability, just fall apart?
Here is a good question that needs answer to possibly resolve the issue;
were the panels of the body, on the Tucker factory line, welded on as it moved down the line so it would become a car?
All the best this evening,
John