I wanted a Mustang for my first car. Mom and Dad tried to find one. Dad said if the saw one that was in good condition and look nice they couldn’t afford it. If they found one that they could afford dad said it looked like it had been road very hard and put away wet.
I owned one of the first Mustangs out =- a ‘641/2 (even tho’ Ford said 65 was the first). Lot of fun to drive unless the roads were slippery, then a death trap. Finally sold it with over 130,000 miles on it.
There’s an old Beach Boys song that starts out " Well I saved my pennies and I saved my dimes," before they purchased the 409 which was a Chevy with a big block 409 engine. Get a job; save your money up; don’t buy those $5.00 coffees or beers; stop spending hundreds of dollars on marijuana and you can have that mustang pretty quick……
Reminds me of a guy who parks his car in the bushes around the street while he works down the block. Every day he backs out of the bushes, which pulls off his rickety plastic bumper, gets out, bangs the bumper in place and drives away. It’s only a matter of time before it comes off on the highway and endangers someone.
When I was 12 I decided that I would purchase an automobile for my child when he or she turned 12 and then we would have 4 years to rebuild it and then he or she would have a vehicle in which he or she was able to repair and was proud of what had been accomplished. It did not go quite like that. When my son was 15 I purchased the perfect first car – Porsche 914. It is a VW with a Porsche design and attitude.There is no backseat from which a fried can distract the driver.There is enough power to get out of the way, but not enough to get killed.Great balance, handling, and braking.My son did not want it because it was not new.I gave it away. A friend’s minivan died and I told him to sell it and purchase something that would hold the wife and seven children.
allen@home almost 3 years ago
I wanted a Mustang for my first car. Mom and Dad tried to find one. Dad said if the saw one that was in good condition and look nice they couldn’t afford it. If they found one that they could afford dad said it looked like it had been road very hard and put away wet.
ronaldspence almost 3 years ago
good thing he didn’t want a Pinto, dad would have set it on fire’
Copy-&-Paste almost 3 years ago
Impressive! But I’d still like to know how Dad cut those rounded corners using a table saw.
zerotvus almost 3 years ago
shoulda made it a convertible……
Aficionado almost 3 years ago
Mr McPherson is on break again. This is from 2012, pre-Bleeb.
Technicholls almost 3 years ago
It’s a Custom Roush 0.5 Mustang.
joe piglet Premium Member almost 3 years ago
I wanted a TR 7, my parents gave it to me. 1/32 scale.
vaughnrl2003 Premium Member almost 3 years ago
My Dad always said, “You should have the very best car you can afford.”
jango almost 3 years ago
The Oreo of the automotive world???
geese28 almost 3 years ago
Well it’s a start. Dream big
Michael Helwig almost 3 years ago
You cut all those curves on a table saw?
smgray almost 3 years ago
I owned one of the first Mustangs out =- a ‘641/2 (even tho’ Ford said 65 was the first). Lot of fun to drive unless the roads were slippery, then a death trap. Finally sold it with over 130,000 miles on it.
Lee26 Premium Member almost 3 years ago
Dustin? Is that you?
jscarff57 Premium Member almost 3 years ago
This joke didn’t age well. If he can’t find a job NOW, he’s trying to avoid one!
Dobie Premium Member almost 3 years ago
I remember this from 2012, I thought it was BRILLIANT!
I got the idea that I wanted to do this for myself so I could drive a different car every week!
Then I remembered I was lazy… and didn’t have a saw… or lumber… or a car. シ
raybarb44 almost 3 years ago
There’s an old Beach Boys song that starts out " Well I saved my pennies and I saved my dimes," before they purchased the 409 which was a Chevy with a big block 409 engine. Get a job; save your money up; don’t buy those $5.00 coffees or beers; stop spending hundreds of dollars on marijuana and you can have that mustang pretty quick……
mistercatworks almost 3 years ago
Reminds me of a guy who parks his car in the bushes around the street while he works down the block. Every day he backs out of the bushes, which pulls off his rickety plastic bumper, gets out, bangs the bumper in place and drives away. It’s only a matter of time before it comes off on the highway and endangers someone.
j4m35 almost 3 years ago
When I was 12 I decided that I would purchase an automobile for my child when he or she turned 12 and then we would have 4 years to rebuild it and then he or she would have a vehicle in which he or she was able to repair and was proud of what had been accomplished. It did not go quite like that. When my son was 15 I purchased the perfect first car – Porsche 914. It is a VW with a Porsche design and attitude.There is no backseat from which a fried can distract the driver.There is enough power to get out of the way, but not enough to get killed.Great balance, handling, and braking.My son did not want it because it was not new.I gave it away. A friend’s minivan died and I told him to sell it and purchase something that would hold the wife and seven children.
vonskippy almost 3 years ago
With today’s lumber prices – that gag would cost a few hundred bucks. Cheaper to buy a plastic model and glue it to the junker as a hood ornament.
ars731 almost 3 years ago
I guess Bleeb went back home to report his findings on his ongoing observations of Humanity.
fstop8 almost 3 years ago
my 66 Mustang was my third car and I bought one about 15 years ago too.