Anyone remember this project? A summary follows, but you might want to visit the official website: http://www.mattsoldcars.com/charityamx/index.html. Started over at the AMC-List in 1999, a 70 AMX was donated and started rolling by late 99. It was determined to split the proceeds between three children's hospital organizations (the donater requested that the proceeds specifically go to children's charities). At first the project went as planned -- each group that took the car evaluated it when they got it, determined what work they could do, beat the bushes for donations, got some local publicity, did some work, and got it ready to be transported to another group to start the process all over. I was supposed to keep track of everything, handle monetary donations, and make sure it had somewhere to go"next". All went well the first two years, then the car really needed some major body work before anything else was completed. Some of that work had been started, but not repairing a quarter panel and a little rust damage. The body work proved to be a big hold-up/snag in the whole idea. It was beyond most hobbyist to tackle, and proved to be a good thing they didn't try. The car was transported to Kenosha for the big 2002 show. With a high density of AMC enthusiasts in the mid west surely someone would take it! No one did. Dave DeLabio volunteered to store it for the winter or until a group would stand up and take the car. No one did over the winter, so Dave beat the bushes and found a shop willing to tackle the car, convinced a local paint supply to donate supplies, AND got the project wrote up in the local newspaper! The shop took it with the intent of spending their down-time between jobs on it. First snag was the guy who planned on doing most of the work left the shop about a year later. A good bit of work had been done, and the shop discovered that the car hadn't been properly repaired after a side impact. It had been "covered up" pretty good, and no one had spotted the damage until a new quarter panel started to go on. Then it was discovered that the rear of the rocker panel was out by about 1/8". The shop put it on a frame machine and also discovered the door post was misaligned by over an inch! Good thing they had it -- it was all pulled back into place and is now good as new! There wasn't much down-time at the shop, but work was being accomplished, just slowly. I did send inquiries out to see if someone else wanted the car, but I think the remaining body work was still more than most hobbyist wanted to attempt. So it stayed almost THREE YEARS at the shop. At the start of the third year a big effort was made to get it moving. Tom Benvie, who donated the car, was especially frustrated at the lack of progress and and length of time this project was taking, and offered to take the car back and finish it. I wasn't ready to give up on the AMC community, and asked him to give me a little time to see if I could get it to someone else first. About a week later John Widker, co-owner of TDD Motorsports and a self-declared AMC nut, volunteered to take the car in his shop and complete the remaining body work and get it painted. John rated the body work as "good production work" (it was a production shop that did it), but John builds show cars. To him it was about 3/4 done, and he put the finishing touches on it. That's where it is now -- queued up at the paint shop waiting for paint (at a business partner of John's). The major body and paint work was the big snag -- now that it's done things should get back on track. All that needed to be done before anything else could be finished or even started. Once it's out of the paint shop I'll be looking for someone to take the car, or I'll work on arranging transportation back to Tom. Anyone within a 10-12 hour drive of Auburn Hills is fair game! Let's not let this project take another couple years to complete! It will need interior work and a lot of detailing. Tom Benvie made the suggestion that we might want to start a couple teams up to take on very specific tasks at this point. There are some details to work out on that, but it sounds like it might be a good idea. If you aren't close enough to take the car and do some work, you can still contribute! Just contacting a company to donate something like a repro 70 AMX dash overlay, or a partial donation (get the overlay at a discount) would be a big help! A local club could have a fund raiser to purchase and ship a specific part -- that would be a big help!! There are two things that need to happen first: The car needs to get back from the paint shop into John Widiker's hands. Then he can take better stock of exactly what needs to be done and parts that are needed. We actually have most parts to complete the car, but some (like the dash overlay) could be replaced with repro items to make it that much nicer when done (NOTICE -- a dash overlay has been promised, it's not needed, just used as an example!). Once we have a better list of needed items, I can publish the list. Then my job comes in: coordinating. When an individual or group (doesn't have to be AMC specific -- local car club or any type organization can contribute) decides they can help with an item/area, CONTACT ME (Frank Swygert, farna@xxxxxxx, 803-604-6548). I'll either write you in for that item or let you know it's already covered. DO NOT START SOLICITING FOR A PART DONATION UNTIL THIS IS DONE! We don't want three groups calling a vendor trying to get the same part(s) donated/discounted!! Of course money is always accepted! -- Frank Swygert Publisher, "American Motors Cars" Magazine (AMC) For all AMC enthusiasts http://farna.home.att.net/AMC.html (free download available!) _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://splatter.wps.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/amc-list