that is a great story Colin. ________________________________ From: Colin Comer [mailto:colin@colinsclassicauto.com] Sent: Fri 4/8/2005 12:37 PM To: mikeldrew@aol.com; rogerhol@willapabay.org; = ShelbyMustang@carmemories.com Subject: Re: yes, there are good alternatives Ok, this is slightly off-subject, but I think sums up the feelings of = both Roger and Mike. I had lusted after a Ferrari 275 GTB since grade school. In high school, = I got to know a guy who had a 275 GTB/4. After driving that, the desire = became even greater to own one , what a magnificent machine! As my restoration business grew, I actually restored a few more, even sold and brokered a = few. I had owned Dinos, 308s, TRs, the usual suspects, but never the elusive = 275 GTB. Even the Daytona I had was a disappointment. Fast as hell, but = heavy and not much fun around town. One day, a 275 GTB/2 was offered at auction. It was from an estate , and needed work, paint, engine smoked like a train, etc. But it was Daytona money, and I just happened to have the Daytona money from the one I just sold burning a hole in my pocket. So I bought the tacky 275 GTB. Over = the next 8 months, I restored the car myself, ground up, seven days a week = and damn near 20 hours a day at times. Painted it Fly Yellow, just like the picture I had in my room as a kid. The car was gorgeous, I won a few = major shows and also used it on some tours and even did track time in it at = Road America. Early am banzai runs at 7400 RPM in 5th gear were not unheard = of . What a magnificent machine! At the time I owned this car that I dearly loved and was a hell of a lot = of fun, I also had a girlfriend that was, well, a hell of a lot of fun. One weekend I convinced her to take a weekend trip with me in the 275 - in = spite of the fact that "it doesn't even have a radio!". When we arrived at the hotel a few hours away, not much to my surprise but unfortunately to = hers, our luggage smelled of unburnt fuel and oil, a lovely smell to me. This (at this point not-so-lovely) girl demanded on the spot that we go shopping to buy her clothes that did not smell like Ferrari exhaust. = Along with it was an ultimatum - find another car to drive home or she would = find her own way. I always have wondered just how she got home. Of course, I never talked = to her again to find out! But boy, did I love that car. We had a great = weekend together tearing up back roads , just the two of us. Alas, all good things must come to an end, and I sold the Ferrari to get some money to expand my business. And the next year I bought CSX 2327. = Which I love just as much, but is entirely different than a Ferrari. More of a "bull in the china shop", easier to work on, and easier to get parts for = at NAPA. I still have my Dino, and usually there are no expletives between the = "my" and the "Ferrari". Usually. Regards, Colin ----- Original Message ----- From: <mikeldrew@aol.com> To: <rogerhol@willapabay.org>; <ShelbyMustang@carmemories.com> Sent: Friday, April 08, 2005 11:16 AM Subject: Re: yes, there are good alternatives > Roger wrote: > > They say the 2 loveliest words in the English language when spoken > together are "my Ferrari." >>>>That's only about half the time. The other half of the time, the > two most aggravating and obscenely expensive words in the English = language > when spoken together are "my Ferrari." Except there are usually a = bunch > of expletives between the two words (like, when your 308 sputters to a > stop because of a cracked distributor cap, and find out that there are > NONE available new, anywhere, and used ones sell for $500 each--and = that's > for one of the most mass-produced Ferraris ever made!) > >>I'd like to be able to use those words sometime. > >>>>Ferraris are guaranteed to both please and disappoint in equal > measures. It takes a strong character and a strong wallet to put up = with > one. And yes, I love them too. :>) > > Mike (whose Pantera disappoints from time to time, but it's easy on = the > wallet!) > >