as long as there will be vanilla and chocolate ice cream there will be a
diference of opinion. to some rebuilt means it has stopped knocking or
leaking or burning oil. to others rebuilt means a no expense spared
excursion down the "i relaced evrything that moves and more" highway. then
there is remanufactured to manufacutrer's original specifications. yeah
then there is only do what it needs , then there's the "i don't have a lot
of money , just put in what itneeds right now", then there is the do the
bottom end and we'l do the head later. opinions, opinions, opinions.
personally i would like to do the work like i was going to keep it forever.
when you have done your very best you have no regrets! when you have cut a
corner and something goes wrong (and it usually does )(murphy covered this
somewhere i think*murphy's laws*) while you are doing it for the second time
at a double expense , then you sit and do "the why me thing". now not evry
owner of evry car is a self made good looking millionare(well possibly the
good loking thing right? lol!). so in some cases a line gets drawn as to
how far is far enough. that is a personal thing that is determined by
each individual owner. once again the chocolate and vanilla thing.
remember! to some restored or rebuilt means as good if not better that it
left the factory. to others it means a fresh coat of shine from maaco, new
carpets from rayco, new tires from sears sale flier, and throw in the sale
flier cheapo battery for good measure.
both versions suit individual owners needs or expectations of their
projects. and amusingly enough both types are equally proud of their cars
end results arrived at by 2 completly diffrent methods and expenses.
so who is right and who is wrong? neither is wrong! it's vanilla and
chocolate. they are both right for theright person.
chuck.
heading for my big rock for cover from yeah but's! ..................c.
:)
given the current content of our atmosphere, we have red sun rise and red
sun sets! so what color were they at the dawn of time? and why are they
depicted as the red we see now in paintings and prints.
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