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Jeremiah 29:11 01-20-2007 07:00 PM

At the Arizona classic car auctions, muscle is still king but 'bling' is in, too.
 
These are priced so high, I don't even consider them.

Flashy cars from the '50s and '60s fetch big prices
At the Arizona classic car auctions, muscle is still king but 'bling' is in, too
.


POSTED: 10:17 p.m. EST, January 19, 2007
By Peter Valdes-Dapena, CNNMoney.com staff writer


NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- American "bling" from the 1950s and '60s is expected to make a big showing at Barrett-Jackson's annual collector car auction in Scottsdale, Ariz.

Cadillacs, Lincolns and Chryslers with big fins and big engines will be getting lots of attention from well-heeled collectors, Barrett-Jackson president Steve Davis said. Especially convertibles.

The auction started Tuesday, but Friday through Sunday are expected to be the biggest days in terms of high-dollar sales. The event is expected to attract 225,000 visitors and more 1,200 cars will be sold.

A 1961 Chrysler 300G convertible, painted in "mardi gras red" and sporting chrome-tipped tailfins, took the top price Tuesday, going for $140,800. That car marked the tail end - so to speak - of the era of finned cars. It was the last year they appeared on a Chrysler 300.

Gallery: Big sales from auction

On Wednesday, a 1960 Cadillac convertible that had been bought by Pamela Anderson for then-fiancee Kid Rock, then subsequently given back to her when two broke up, sold for $155,000. The car was consigned for sale by a subsequent owner, not Anderson, according to Barrett-Jackson.

At Thursday's auction, top dollar went to another big Cadillac, a 1957 model. Also Series 62 convertible, this one, black with a red interior, sold for for $222,000.

These aren't just "used cars," of course. Cars that fetch these sorts of prices are in pristine condition, fully restored and extremely desirable to begin with. (In other words, don't think you're going to make a mint selling your father's 1975 Mercury Cougar.)

On Friday, a high-finned 1959 Cadillac Eldorado Seville with only 2,240 miles sold for $165,000. The car is believed to be the lowest-mileage '59 Cadillac in the world, according to Barrett-Jackson

The Eldorado's mileage is so low because on Feb. 9, 1959, when the car was still brand new, it was found on a back street in Nashua, N.H., with the owner's dead body stored in its trunk.

The car was then impounded as evidence in the murder of the owner, Maurice Gagnon, who ran a plastic molding company. Gagnon's alleged killers were sentenced to death but later paroled, according to Barrett-Jackson.

The Eldorado was found in 1981 in a warehouse, still standing on its original tires. It also has its original battery.

The car is expected to fetch a high price because of its virtually showroom-new condition, not because of its sordid past, said Steve Davis, president of Barrett-Jackson.

"If you just picked one car to represent the '50s it would be the '59 Cadillac," Davis said.

Offering what a 1959 magazine ad called "A new realm of motoring majesty," the Eldorado has air suspension, power seats, power windows, air suspension and a power-closing trunk.

Muscle still flexing
Classic muscle cars from the 1960s and early '70s are still the main attraction at these auctions, however.

A car purported to be the most valuable muscle car in the world will be crossing the auction block at a competing RM Auctions event in nearby Phoenix on Friday afternoon.

That car, a 1971 Plymouth Hemi 'Cuda convertible, is estimated to be worth as much as $5 million. It is one of just 11 Hemi 'Cuda convertibles produced that year.

The cars that end up being worth the most as collectibles generally have three things in common, said Larry Batton, president of the Auto Appraisal Group, a company that estimates automobile values.

"They would have been expensive, fast and impractical," he said.

That explains why big-engined muscle cars with convertible tops are espe

1 Bad Mirada 01-21-2007 02:22 PM

RE: At the Arizona classic car auctions, muscle is still king but 'bling' is in, too.
 
amanda and i watched it for a while...the CNN hummer went for something liek 1 million...

there were also 2 1954 dodge firearrow concepts that went for a mil a piece

MGDMike 01-21-2007 02:44 PM

RE: At the Arizona classic car auctions, muscle is still king but 'bling' is in, too.
 
Did ya'll see the Hummer catch on fire? I guess they flooded it or something and whoosh! Just minor burn's to the Hummer though.

RLSH700 01-21-2007 07:19 PM

RE: At the Arizona classic car auctions, muscle is still king but 'bling' is in, too.
 
I watch the Barret-Jackson auctions on the SPEED Channel once in a while. My question is what would be the point of having the original battery from the 1981 Cadillac Eldorado, it couldn't possibly work could it?

Jeremiah 29:11 01-21-2007 10:51 PM

RE: At the Arizona classic car auctions, muscle is still king but 'bling' is in, too.
 
I wouldn't mind having a project car but I would use the latest parts and not spend thousands of dollars for the originals.

I want to the car to be better than it was not just the same. That is what the Foose Dodge Challengers built by Unique Performance.......better
than the originals in all aspects.


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