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I am the proud owner now for 4 months of a 10/72 build Pantera! (I did plan to tear into the car the moment it gets into my garage… I always do that! )

I drove this car, a whopping 1 mile since I bought it… its pretty looking but not perfect, the standard yellow cat like you see on all the pictures like any yellow cat…You really can’t tell them apart… unless you start getting closer… looking under, inside the cab, the frunk, the engine compartment and suddenly there are differences! Setting the cars apart, giving them character, soul and history!

And the more you dive into your car you are wondering what happened - a lot of why’s and who (the hell) did that…

Then again the nagging question about “accidents” … it may had a crash in the front and maybe in the rear….  Or I guess there was just a dent that got fixed… poorly…  checking the welds, hmmm solid welded, not spot welded.. something happened.. or someone do try to better the car, make it stiffer, preventing cracks…  maybe 🤔

dents in the frame “some idiot didn’t know how to jack up the car properly! Oh my!”

Digging deeper … under the dash… why is there a different color… why… ??? There are people who discover the real skin color of their baby this way!
AND the wires.. lots of red and more red and just terminating in space… there must’ve been special sale at AutoZone for cheap red wiring!  
but there certainly was NO sale on grease.. hinges dry … no grease anywhere..  

I would love to hear what you found while working on your car!
I found a lot of weird stuff in my car like a square inside the front fenders (left and right) towards the door that has no paint no undercoating nothing on it… size of a piece of copy  paper.. it seems to be welded in (buttweld) but so perfect and minimalistic.. just wow! But never treated.. who, why, what???

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50 Years just don’t pass by without scars, without being touched by more or sometimes less mechanical inclined people …  just the life of a car…..  another thing I found, digging on the internet was that my car was sold , I think it was 2015 to a museum and I bought it with one additional owner and solid 80 (eighty) more miles!  80 miles in 8 years….  Sad!!



tell us what you found…. History…

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my Pantera as I bought it! And once I am  done, I  will be able to spot my car in a herd (pack) of yellow Panteras!





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but if you don’t have any pics , it’s still OK!!

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Last edited by LeMans850i
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Roland, give me a couple of days and I will share my weird story what I found during my continuing (4-years, I work slow) mechanical restoration.   These cars do have histories and scars that just keeps you saying "what happen here", "Why did someone do that".  I wish I could find the owner I bought my cat from to get some of it's history #:3648, 06/1972 build, originally red, now yellow.  20190625_185340  Larry

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The other big head scratcher I found were the poly bushings on the .. no sleeve inside! Thread: the weirdest poly bushings.
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I pretty much document the whole work I’m doing on #4679 here on this forum and in the end ( if there ever is one) print all out… I always find myself wanting to know more when I buy a car (or bike) and if I’m lucky there are some receipt for parts but those don’t tell the whole story!  The next steward of 4679 knows just a bit more…

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I can absolutely agree. Several times I stood in front of my Pantera (I bought it from a member here) scratching my head, asking myself "WHY?"

I just bring the examples from the engine:

Because the engine ran quite poorly and had a very extreme camshaft, I removed it and after opening it up I found:

- port stuffers in the intake ports of the heads but standard 4V ports in the Edelbrock Intake, so more than a quarter of the mixture hit a wall

- sheetmetal between exhaust port and manifold which was bent towards the exhaust port, I suppose that should also represent something like a stuffer??? But the exhaust gases flow the other direction, so they were bent back again, partly melted and blocked more than half the exhaust port on 5 cylinders

- Sometimes you get good surprises too. After removing the oilpan, I found out the previous owner "had forgotten" to mention that the engine is a 408...

Last edited by GeorgS

I'll play, but I don't have much.   the Big "surprises" were the sales points when I saw it first.   The single suck through turbo and the cluster of gauges.   besides the factory under coating, it also had a spray of something amber on underside and wheel wells.

after driving for couple years, then disassembled for couple decades, I only discovered I had three 8 X 15" wheels.   I guess there was a curb rash incident.

the "Mystery" I wish I could get more info on would be the original owner.   the bits I have pieced or fabricated myself.   An Engineer in Ft Laderdale had a buisness to make turbo kits.   there was a corperation formed.   but it looks like the Engineer passed shortly after purchasing 5177.   I did reach out to the corperation secertary, whick now is a wealthy realastate agent, but she ignored my request for info. 

I have had several interesting things I have found after my Pantera was parked not running for 20 plus years.  I found mice / rants love Panteras yo hang out in.  Plenty of spots to make there home, like in the tail light.  They also liked the wires.  This is the main positive wire, about 3 inches of exposed copper.20210213_14413620230317_210607

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@jfb05177 posted:

I'll play, but I don't have much.   the Big "surprises" were the sales points when I saw it first.   The single suck through turbo and the cluster of gauges.   besides the factory under coating, it also had a spray of something amber on underside and wheel wells.

after driving for couple years, then disassembled for couple decades, I only discovered I had three 8 X 15" wheels.   I guess there was a curb rash incident.

the "Mystery" I wish I could get more info on would be the original owner.   the bits I have pieced or fabricated myself.   An Engineer in Ft Laderdale had a buisness to make turbo kits.   there was a corperation formed.   but it looks like the Engineer passed shortly after purchasing 5177.   I did reach out to the corperation secertary, whick now is a wealthy realastate agent, but she ignored my request for info.

do you have any pictures of the turbo set up  or gauge cluster?

When I took my engine out, there were 3 vacuum lines. A big one from the manifold went to the brake booster, one small one from the carb went to the distributer but the other smaller from the carb went to a copper tube that disappeared down to the RHS of the bulkhead.

It bugged me trying to think what it'd be for... a few weeks later, whilst replacing all the hoses, I blew into it to see if there was any resistance... free flowing. I removed the fuse box cover at the front right and there was the copper pipe disappearing up under the dash...only for about 6 inches and then it turned to a rubber tube... of 2 inches... dangling free. Vacuum gauge or boost gauge??

@simon posted:

no think not, the copper pipe  has not a logical route for this.

first I was thinking it was for venting the battery caps, like how a 69/70 Mustang Boss429 use a hose for venting the battery into the trunk.

Simon

I would assume that the objective would be to keep the hydrogen away from the Parts which could ignite the hydrogen..

routing it TO the engine compartment, would be counterproductive… 💥

Last edited by LeMans850i

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