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Aprel 1, 2008

On eBay: Brand New 1969 Corvair In A Bag!

By Jen Dunnaway

Editor

It’s a little hard to believe, but here it is. This unrestored final-year Corvair has 5.9 original miles on the odometer, making it the lowest-miles Corvair known to exist. It’s never been registered, and according to the seller has never even had gas in the tank, so it must’ve racked up those miles just being rolled around over the years. The bias-plies still have the factory tire stubble: kind of makes you want to buy it and take it on a cross-country road trip, doesn’t it? Fantastic: a time capsule as cool as the Tulsa Belvedere, but without all the sludge and corruption. Check it out!

Comments

cknarf
Apr 3, 2008 at 9:26 pm

wow. develop a sense of humor. let’s not ruin the blog with a huge “internet tough guy” fight.

GTwildfire
Apr 3, 2008 at 6:55 am

I’m not voting for him either. As an advocate he did great but as a President? I think he’d have a complete lack of cooperation from the Democrats and Republicans just by virtue of the fact that he’s with neither of those parties.

retroman
Apr 3, 2008 at 2:41 am

don’t forget low back seats, solid steering wheel shafts and lack of crumple zones, unpadded steering wheels(I would say airbags, but that technology was years from being available), lack of side marker lights until ‘68, mirrors on both sides, and 5mph impact bumpers. While I think we lost alot of automotive art in design for the name of safety, it was an otherwise fair tradeoff. On todays cars, I wouldn’t want a solid steering shaft impaling my chest or be mangled the rest of my life for kissing a chrome steering wheel. As for vintage rides, well I’d only get them around to a Sunday drive or Saturday Night Cruise Ins anyway so I’ll take my chances. Nader’s efforts expanded beyond the auto industry and if it wasn’t for him we’d be making crappy cars and junk like China. And no I don’t plan to vote for him this year, but I appreciate his fathering of consumerism, the fact that consumers deserve safe high quality products.

GTwildfire
Apr 3, 2008 at 12:33 am

Nader’s efforts led to requirements that have saved thousands of lives. Over the decades, common sense has crept into the vehicular industry and those who use them.

When I was a kid, there were no car seats. I remember laying along the back window, moving about the cabin. I was lucky I never ended up being a projectile.

Cars needed just as much help. Lap belts, when used, resulted in back injuries, head injuries, paralysis and death.

Asphyxiation can be a problem, even a problem that leads to other problems, like when you blink out and careen out of control…

Which leads me to control, or the lack thereof. The stock Corvair, while nostalgic and when in shape such as this… handles like shit. The Bias plys didn’t help, that’s why we have radials.

So, cknarf… bashing someone because he thought the industry should have been doing better, to protect the public? Is that communism?

idiot.

cknarf
Apr 2, 2008 at 9:55 pm

That’s only if you belive Nader. That commie bastard.
ANYWAYS, if i had the $$$ to buy this, i’d drive it from the east to west coast three times.

Tony
Apr 2, 2008 at 7:01 pm

One of the worst cars ever made (in terms of safety). Good to see it off the road for all this time!

i_luv_dusty
Apr 2, 2008 at 5:50 pm

Why the bloody heck would you buy a car, stick it in a giant garbage bag, and put it up on blocks?!

kap0w
Apr 2, 2008 at 3:13 pm

How gorgeous – I’ve never seen a Corvair that clean (no surprise) and it looks great in that “never been driven” guise. Question for Ralph – is it safe if it never travels at any speed?

kap0w
Apr 2, 2008 at 3:13 pm

How gorgeous – I’ve never seen a Corvair that clean (no surprise) and it looks great in that “never been driven” guise. Question for Ralph – is it safe if it never travels at any speed?

GTwildfire
Apr 2, 2008 at 6:37 am

I bet if they used a Ziplock bag, the paint would still be perfect.
-
Fared a lot better than the Belvedere. Of course a garage makes a better time capsule than a concrete coffin with a leaky seal.
-
With 5.9 miles on the odometer, which was mentioned twice in the article was the lowest of all 1969 models in existence… are there Corvairs out there with fewer than 5.9 miles on the odometer? Can that be? Have any others been put away and bagged up from day one? Seems EXTREMELY unlikely to me.

Evan
Apr 2, 2008 at 3:19 am

That’s crazy. I too can’t believe somebody would buy it and just let it sit. Perhaps it was one of those dealers that just couldn’t sell it so he just tucked it away in the back of the Shop.

Good find!

Jim
Apr 2, 2008 at 1:55 am

The Tulsa Belvederw is corrupted? I didn’t realize that it is an Enron venture…

artie99
Apr 2, 2008 at 12:51 am

$25k is actually surprisingly low. Probably about what a car of it’s kind built today would cost. One thing that surprises me is that they didn’t put any options on it. Imagine what a loaded up Corvair would go for now.

Looking around further, they are also selling the first ‘87 Buick gnX available to the public. I may be reading the window sticker wrong, but it looks like it cost $20k+ new. Selling at $85k now, it seems like a better investment than the Corvair.

Stewart
Apr 2, 2008 at 12:00 am

This is really cool.
.
Obviously in great condition…
.
But still, it’s a little sad.
.
I wonder if the new owner will actually drive it, or
will it sit forever…

retroman
Apr 1, 2008 at 11:35 pm

I hate to see a car that’s not driven, but wow, it’s like the original owners knew an investment when they saw it. This is an awesome piece of history. Would love to see it in person.

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