Great Cars Available…Get It Before It's Gone. Check the date of the post. If it is a few weeks old, it is probably too late.

By

Privacy Camper: ’63 Volkswagen Panel Van Camper

63 VW Camper

This is a black-plate California Double-door Camper without any of those annoying windows to clean. If you watch any auction on TV you will undoubtedly see a 23-window vintage bus sail across the line selling for $80,000 or more. And that won’t even be a camper model. This one has so few windows it must be dramatically cheaper. But wait, it has a full kitchen and beds inside. Game on! Read More

By

Kee Moh Sah Bee: ’73 International Harvester Scout II

73 International Harvester Scout II
We didn’t see Johnny Depp’s Lone Ranger but remember vaguely watching reruns of the TV show. Tonto refers to Lone (they were on a first name basis) as Kee Moh Sah Bee. Some Native American linguistic scholars translate that to mean One Who Peeks or Scout. So the folks at International Harvester picked a good name when they landed on Scout. Kee Moh Sah Bee would have never worked. The first Scout was introduced in 1960. The Scout II was introduced in 1971. The basic sheet metal remained unchanged until production stopped in October 1980. During the 20-year period, 532,674 Scouts were produced. The Scout, introduced as a commercial utility pickup in 1960, set the stage for future 4-wheel recreational vehicles of the 70s, 80s, and 90s. Read More

By

Longroof: ’73 Volvo 145 Station Wagon

73 Volvo 145 Wagon

A solid, unrestored 145 wagon with 4-speed + Overdrive is a rare bird. For some uncanny reason, old Volvo station wagons have become cool. They started out as grocery-getters and safe transportation for the family and now a cult has formed. The seller states the original owner stored the car for 20 years before donating it to charity. The current owner bought it from them and has taken pretty good care of it. Read More

By

Rare Sighting: ’77 Toyota Corona Station Wagon

77 Toyota Corona Wagon

Okay, if it weren’t a station wagon, it wouldn’t be here. Vintage station wagons are just fun cars to have. You know you always need something to haul around stuff on occasion but not frequently enough to buy a new Mercedes-Benz E350. So why not get a cool wagon with that period Japanese funky styling. Read More