OldSchoolSS
04-29-2009, 06:02 PM
Hey Guys,
I picked up a 1962 Corvette back in January that I found a mile down the street from my house. The price wasn't great but it was pretty good judging from what I've seen on Ebay since then.
I digress. I'm looking for recommendations on what to do for a chassis. I want to go with a c6 front suspension and probably a solid axle in the back since I don't want to give up any space in the passenger compartment or in the trunk of the vette. I'd love to pick up an Art Morrison frame but at this stage in my life(26 years old and three years out of college) I can not justify the $7,500 for the bare frame especially when other guys are offering their bare frames from $3,500-$6,500 range. I have a couple options right now.
Option 1:
I found a stock 59 rolling chassis that is in need of repair. It is from a Michigan car and has rot through by the two rear kick ups and a dime size spot on the front passenger side by a body mount. The guy is asking 800 for the rolling chassis, I could probably get 500 out of stock suspension components on it and have a 300 dollar starting point. I could repair the rust issues, smooth the whole frame and graft one of Art's bikini front c6 clips on the frame and figure out my own rear suspension incorporating a watt's link. I'm thinking I could have a respectable frame for about $2,700 total.
Option 2:
I found a respected frame builder in Ohio that is offering nice smooth one piece boxed frame rails for $2,700 for the pair, he also offers a frame less front suspension for $3,500. I could put Art's clip on either one of those options. For the price difference I'd be better off going with the whole frame at $3,500.
Option 3:
I found a third builder who is a former NASCAR boy who offers his bare frame for $3,500 with his suspension mounting points on it, but he said he could do c6 corvette components but it would be more than $3,500. I'm still waiting to hear back on a final price.
I'd love to put my mechanical engineering degree to work and build a complete frame myself but I don't have the time to tackle such a project. What would you guys suggest? My car is running driving now so I don't really want to tear it apart to use my solid stock frame as a starting point.
Thanks for the help,
Scott
I picked up a 1962 Corvette back in January that I found a mile down the street from my house. The price wasn't great but it was pretty good judging from what I've seen on Ebay since then.
I digress. I'm looking for recommendations on what to do for a chassis. I want to go with a c6 front suspension and probably a solid axle in the back since I don't want to give up any space in the passenger compartment or in the trunk of the vette. I'd love to pick up an Art Morrison frame but at this stage in my life(26 years old and three years out of college) I can not justify the $7,500 for the bare frame especially when other guys are offering their bare frames from $3,500-$6,500 range. I have a couple options right now.
Option 1:
I found a stock 59 rolling chassis that is in need of repair. It is from a Michigan car and has rot through by the two rear kick ups and a dime size spot on the front passenger side by a body mount. The guy is asking 800 for the rolling chassis, I could probably get 500 out of stock suspension components on it and have a 300 dollar starting point. I could repair the rust issues, smooth the whole frame and graft one of Art's bikini front c6 clips on the frame and figure out my own rear suspension incorporating a watt's link. I'm thinking I could have a respectable frame for about $2,700 total.
Option 2:
I found a respected frame builder in Ohio that is offering nice smooth one piece boxed frame rails for $2,700 for the pair, he also offers a frame less front suspension for $3,500. I could put Art's clip on either one of those options. For the price difference I'd be better off going with the whole frame at $3,500.
Option 3:
I found a third builder who is a former NASCAR boy who offers his bare frame for $3,500 with his suspension mounting points on it, but he said he could do c6 corvette components but it would be more than $3,500. I'm still waiting to hear back on a final price.
I'd love to put my mechanical engineering degree to work and build a complete frame myself but I don't have the time to tackle such a project. What would you guys suggest? My car is running driving now so I don't really want to tear it apart to use my solid stock frame as a starting point.
Thanks for the help,
Scott