Bob Crowell has asked me to identify these doors, can anyone help. They don't look like T doors to me. Chris
No T, but what else? Hard to tell, no low price car (hidden hinges)- might be mid 20's Buick?
http://tinyurl.com/c5kc655
Id say in the 24-26 range, buick or similar in that era.
The only door I can identify is the garage door
Old car parts like that are worth a lot to the guy who needs them for a rebuild. I have had parts that are for some old car but which on is the key and I hate to get rid of them.
The doors are worth keeping if you have the room.
Hopefully some one will identify them.
Wouldn't be great if there could be some kind of hobby supported clearing house to find the people that need a part or at least can identify it.
The problem is that even in a hobby such as this, too many people want to get as much as they can for the part someone else needs. In my forty years in this hobby, I have given away almost as many parts as I have ever sold. That is especially true with the non-Ford stuff. I was usually too happy to find it a home to care about what I could get for it.
This idea has come up and been discussed numerous times before. Usually, the prevailing opinion is that greed would ruin the effort required.
Ford parts are not the problem. They are identifiable, and fairly easy to find someone that could want it and set a fair value. Non-Fords are not so easy.
Drive carefully, and enjoy, W2
Wayne
That clearing house exists
Go to AACA Forums, under the Photo and video forum header is a sub forum "What is It?"
There you can post photos and antique car experts around the world will comment on the identity of the car or part.
http://forums.aaca.org/f170/