we often find interesting european cars in these american cemeteries where vehicles that have been off the road for years rest !! the mercedes-benz spotted here is a type 111 "heckflosse" (tail fin). it is a luxury sedan with a 6-cylinder engine produced from 1959 to 1968 by the german manufacturer from Stuttgart. Thanks for this nice footage
@@resurrectionauto5714 Hello, this car is not a rarity, however like many vehicles of this brand it is a valuable car sought after by collectors and that one does not expect to find abandoned and forgotten in a car graveyard.
I always wanted to camp out in a 59-60 Chevy wagon in a junkyard. That '59 would be ideal if it weren't full of parts in the back. If you go back near it, I wanted to see what engine it had in it. It was a 3-on-the-tree.
If a feller found a "complete" vehicle at Cooleys or here, and it was reasonably priced, ( I have zero clue to what something might cost) how the heck would it get pulled out and brought to the parking lot to load ??? Seems like it would have to be taken apart and brought out "one piece at a time"...
Cooleys will work most of em out for you. Kesslers I think you’re doing just like you said :/ one piece at a time. At least there’s a song you could play while doing it 😂
I'm surprised no one has snapped up that 59 flat top rear window. Those are gold.
That untouched junkyard was a good find.
It’s really cool! Lots of good stuff in there too!
we often find interesting european cars in these american cemeteries where vehicles that have been off the road for years rest !! the mercedes-benz spotted here is a type 111 "heckflosse" (tail fin). it is a luxury sedan with a 6-cylinder engine produced from 1959 to 1968 by the german manufacturer from
Stuttgart.
Thanks for this nice footage
That’s awesome! Thanks for the info!! Is it a hard to find car or pretty common?
@@resurrectionauto5714 Hello, this car is not a rarity, however like many vehicles of this brand it is a valuable car sought after by collectors and that one does not expect to find abandoned and forgotten in a car graveyard.
I always wanted to camp out in a 59-60 Chevy wagon in a junkyard. That '59 would be ideal if it weren't full of parts in the back.
If you go back near it, I wanted to see what engine it had in it. It was a 3-on-the-tree.
If a feller found a "complete" vehicle at Cooleys or here, and it was reasonably priced, ( I have zero clue to what something might cost) how the heck would it get pulled out and brought to the parking lot to load ??? Seems like it would have to be taken apart and brought out "one piece at a time"...
Cooleys will work most of em out for you. Kesslers I think you’re doing just like you said :/ one piece at a time. At least there’s a song you could play while doing it 😂
@@resurrectionauto5714 Thank you for catching that!😂
GO IN THE WINTER NO BEE'S SNAKES, IVY, BRUSH IS DOWN,.. BUT BEARS WILL BE OUT THEN SOON GOING TO SLEEP... THATS YOUR BED TIME STORY,,..
That’s what I was debating on. Just don’t want too much snow that we can’t see em
too far gone with rust