>>28499355 (OP) my project car started rusting badly during winter and I didnt have a garage I sold it because I didnt have the time either
bought a bicycle, its pretty fun to ride and wrench on, and I am loosing weight
Anonymous
7/6/2025, 6:58:55 AM No.28499850
>>28499355 (OP) Don't get in over your head. The best project car is one that you can still drive semi-regularly to help keep your passion for the project going. A bad project car is when you buy some absolute lump of scrap metal convinced that you have the capability to restore it to glory, you'll inevitably find that your ability fails to match your ambition and it'll sit under a tarp for years until you give up and try to sell it on. Start small and make incremental progress, don't take on tasks that you aren't confident you can't accomplish over a couple of weekends.
>>28499355 (OP) Depends on how much you actually enjoy working on cars. You're gonna have to deal with some really irritating repairs a lot of the time. For me it's worth it to put cool cars back on the road, but for most people I'd recommend just finding the car they want in good condition. You'll save a lot in the long run
>>28501961 >if you hate fun and like being broke Stamps work for that too
Anonymous
7/7/2025, 12:48:08 PM No.28502038
>>28499355 (OP) >Have you paid off your house? >Have you paid off your daily car? >Are you mostly debt free? >Are you maxxing out your 401k and investing? >Do you have no kids below 18? >Still have leftover money? >Enjoy a very specific version of autism that is working on a pos breaking down? If you answered yes to all of these questions then go for it.
Anonymous
7/7/2025, 1:49:19 PM No.28502098
>>28501965 >just finding the car they want in good condition Absolutely. Retards get gas lit by youtube hype beasts into thinking they too can take on this totally $2k project that's neatly smoke screened into actually being a $50k+ investment.