@@royjohnson7760 The answer is yes. You can build your own car from scratch and as long as it meets all the requirements it can be registered and put on the road.
As a auto metal guy , probably my favorite company to install, just good quality stuff always a nice fit with minimal effort to install I have a great video on my channel doing one of you guys trunk floors seam to seam!
When the Daytona cars were built the donor car started life as a charger. So when the factory selected the 500+ cars to become Daytona chargers, the factory kept records of the original serial numbers.Those cars were built as Daytonas and sold at the various dealerships. Even if you rebuilt a Daytona that was commissioned by the factory and replace 99% of the sheet metal, that car still remains a true Daytona because the factory assigned serial number to that specific build. If it was born a charger and built into a Daytona it will always be a true Daytona.
To think. . . these guys did what the factory did on a moving assembly line. In doing so, they went back in American car history to a time before the model T Ford. Although the tools are parts and the mechanism by which they were manufactured have been improved, that "hands on" work requires a lot of the same skills and attention to detail. It's amazing.
The factory serial number indicates that vehicle as a true Daytona . You can build a complete car from New sheetmetal that looks like a daytona, but if you don't have a factory designated serial number, all you have is a body. That is what all daytonas started with was sheetmetal.
there are hidden serial numbers on the rear inside the trunk drip rail and on the core support your die hard car guys would not call it a true daytona even with the vin on the dash
@@woecp I think that's a bit of an exaggeration. They started with an actual original Daytona, and yes most of the metal was replaced with new, but it's still associated with the original car. It's a whole helluva lot better than just sending the original car to the crusher, which is usually what would happen.
In the end, the Dodge Daytona came back to life and it's great to have it back on the road when the restoration is complete. Everyone involved with this build did an amazing & quick job.
@@irocitZ Back then the parts would have been built in U.S / Canada. I've seen a few books on Daytona's (but not read them) and I'd hope one of them mentions where they were built. I'm guessing a local fabricator facility or speed shop would have been commissioned to build the parts
@@car_ventures I'm talking about the aftermarket parts used to put this back together, since this particular project requires an entire catalog of pieces I'm wondering where are they sourcing them from? I'm assuming there aren't many Daytona parts cars around. Anyone restoring or buying a classic car should consider what kind of parts went into the project, in my case I look for USA made stuff. If not I could be sitting on a Chinese or whatever car...
Today NASCAR is running like 185- 190, these ols Daytonas ran over 200 with no problem, imagine if they had all the modern underpinnings like NASCAR today, they would probably hit 215-220 and still embarass the new cars. NASCAR just seems too safe today and the rear is so loose they say at high speed on the bank, you could puss the rear right out with your hand, Bring back a moder version of these back and let them run em just like they used too. Gotta love that AMD sheet metal. I owned a 70 road runner I always wanted to clone into a winged car, somebody told me they used Coronet fenders because they were longer, don`t know how true that is. Great video guys.
It's just a canvas to put an original VIN tag on. The history of the car as it is now is an open book. Everyone knows it's a Taiwanese clone. IMO Mr Stephens should have the original parts treated to stop rust then "reassembled" as a display to accompany the clone rather than just the pictures of the beyond saving original. The history of the original owner and why he was running would be interesting. A wreck that violent before airbags could easily have been fatal.
I know a Russian body guy that makes his own sheet metal pieces to replace the rusted out parts. Now that's talent. He buys totaled cars from America and ships them to Russia. He rebuilds them paints them and sells them.
You guy's in America don't know how good you've got it. We can't get anything like this for our Australian built cars.. Back in the 90's you could still find good panels and the odd new old stock panels from time to time , but now since Covid and the boom in collector cars , parts cars and and old panels in general , not to mention the prices of cars and parts. . It's almost a pain in the ass to restore an old Australian car now..
It looks fantastic! It's proof that it's possible to build a very accurate replica from 3rd-part parts these days. Too bad more of the original sheet metal wasn't carefully and skillfully massaged back to life and included in the build. Oh well, it's still a beautiful car.😁
many years ago when i was just a boy i remember being at warren dunes state park in michigan i was standing on the sand and saw the coolest car ever . when i got older i realized it was a wing car ! It was a memory that i will never forget
I remember this episode of CCR many years ago. I met Craig of AMD several years later at the Tennessee Valley Mopar show near my home in Huntsville Alabama. I wonder if Dan Woods, Craig or any of those guys are still alive ?
Cool as Hell , she is in fact a true DAYTONA. Amazing watching you guys bring her back , it might be weird but i got a little emotional. This is a huge deal. She is magnificent. 👍👍🏁🏁
As a career automotive metal guy ,amd is the best ,always a good fit minimal issues ,even made a vod on my yt doing a full trunk floor panel from you seam to seam
At 59:00 it shows them putting new front fenders on. I was wondering about this....Daytona's used 1970 Charger front fenders. I wondered if they'd welded on extensions to the '69 fenders, or if they pressed out a set of 70 fenders? I have a '70 and AMD currently does not make 70 front fenders. Just curious...I'd assume the other shop welded on extensions....
I had lost track of this car I am SO happy to hear that is back together *even if I am way late to the party now I just have to find a video of it running
Ya know im not a dodge guy , I refuse to like cars that laugh at you before they start , but what AMD has done for that crowd is invaluable . I mean they honest to god nailed it for those old girls that have been sitting and rusting away for so many years. As far as whoever would say its no longer a daytona . Well , we get a little too carried away with cars and in that we lose sight of what they are really . This car or any car is simply a whole lot of folded sheet metal and someones imagination as to what they wanted a particular car to look like at the time. Dodge gave this car a vin and a designation , end of story. AMD supplied its new skin . Its sheet metal and from what ive seen they do a damn good job of it.This sheet metal is jsut sheet metal just like the original sheet metal Dodge hung on it . The guys probably put more attention to detail in this car reskinning it than was put into it on the line when it first got built. I dont hesitate at all to say its a better car this go around than it was the first time. I do a ton of 65-70 mustangs and thats what you end up with if you do it right . So who ever pipes up flapping that trap simply because they want whatever ar they have to have more value... Sit down junior , your car was put together as fast as they could do it for money . There was no love involved . Get your head right.
A K-Frame, one Rocker Panel and a VIN Plate does not a Daytona make... Isn't this the same crumpled heap of rust that Graveyard Cars turned dow a while back?
Having installed reproduction sheet metal for many years I agree that AMD products are better. However the body shop guys should have at least got a little inclusion in the show. I know from Experience what kind of Labor and Hours go into straightening and prepping the body.
I remember a buddy of mine selling on Ebay a rear wing, two fender scoops and two nose pieces that were damaged but one could be made out of the two of them. He sold them as a package and got 27k for them and that was 20 years ago or more.
@davebrittain9216 15k sounds reasonable to me, especially if you consider the rarity. Any collector that's trying to restore a true wing car would gladly pay that.
@@kickithard Ya the guys that really want originality pay big bugs. I remember back in the 90's he was restoring a Hemi Super Bee and it did not have matching dual four barrel carbs. He paid 5k back then for consecutive serial number carbs for a Hemi for that specific year of manufacture to match the car.
Wish we had a junkyard around here like that, I would love to wonder around and see all the history. Glad to see one taken out with that cool story and redone, hopefully most of the ones left get the same chance. I got some front and rear floor patch panels this week myself from AMD, hope they fit like they say they do.
Even the shock towers are from a different car. Rocket, it should have been left where it was. Would you pay $100,000.00 plus for a car everyone knows is a Chinamobile?
13:35, Don't be so hard on, Ted. When I resurrected my 67 Shelby GT350 I purchased from the previous owner who kissed a telephone pole with the passenger rear, I saved all the mangled pieces I had to remove to rebuild it. Back then, there wasn't an AMD to get the parts I needed. I had to find donor parts from damaged 67 Mustangs in junkyards it was quite a job but I saved it and it new after I had it painted the original Candy Apple Red it began its life with.
Amazing work, love it. People need to get over the "It's not the same car" thing. Looks like a Daytona to me! What matters is, there is a beautiful car back on the road and not lost to the scrap yard.
@@nikoladamjanovic2313 I worked in a body repair shop many years ago and some cars came in needing a complete rebuild from the floor up. Sometimes only the firewall and part of the floor was saveable, the rest was brand new panels and interior. Granted, the cars are usually only a few months old for that kind of work but it's still the same car going out as what came in.
I'll never understand these kinds of rebuilds. Sure, the car once was a Daytona, but by the time you finish cutting all the rust and replacing original panels with aftermarket new panels, that thing will just be a clone in my eyes. You're gonna leave just the original tag or VIN number or whatever and pretty much all the rest will be new metal, motor and 100% of all components and interior. At the end, it'll look just like a Daytona, but it's gonna be just a Daytona clone. I loved the video though!
I wonder how much that carcass was worth , it so great to see any thing you can save, being saved, I find a lot of reproduction stuff just doesnt line up
I don’t understand any negative talk on this car or any car that needs fixed. Would it be better to let it sit in a junkyard and disintegrate into the ground? I sure don’t think so! And, besides, a rebuild on a car like this is fully documented so there will be no possibility of passing it off as all original or a survivor or anything other than a badass Daytona back on the road!
They removed far too much of the car in the name of installing and promoting replacement panels. More than half of the rear quarters could have been saved as well as the roof. Sure they would have taken more time and skill to do it properly but in the end the more of the original car still there the better claim to a restoration. This is an aftermarket car with a few Daytona parts
Panel replacement with new panels is nothing a typical crash repair shop couldn't handle. Anyone can remove and replace. A real hot rod shop would have repaired the panels that were there . This is no longer a daytona. Simple
*When you replace almost every single part of a car it's not a "restoration" it's a Creation.* Everytime some greedy shop takes an old famous movie or historic car and replaces 90+% of the car with brand new parts. All they've done is thrown the famous historic car in the dumpster and hung all new parts and paint to lie about it's history to sell it for a large amount of money. For instance The Elvis movie car and original screen used Dukes of Hazzards intro jump car for two examples. Every piece of the cars were torn apart piece by piece and thrown away. Then replace every part to look like the original cars. It's been many years and I've blocked them from my memory but I believe ONLY one piece from one car and two from the other were actually saved. The vin code badge from one and the vin code badge and firewall from the other. *The rest of the entire car was thrown into the trash and replaced with shiny brand new parts.* I don't care about this fake Daytona the owners have to know what they're actually buying by law. But those other two famous cars should have been cleaned up and treasured for what they were. Not what they're pretending to be now. When anyone could have gone into the dumpster at the back of those shops and put all the pieces together again. *They would have had the original cars!* But now they've been melted down to make whatever. This all should be illegal to do this. A vin code nadge does not make a car make. I can afford to buy some of these cars but I'd never waste my money. They look beautiful and shiny as brand new imposters. But that's all they'll ever be. I'd rather have the real thing even in the worst condition. Because it's real. I've worked in the entertainment industry for most my life and this fake car would make for a great secondary car to wreck on screen in order to save a real Daytona car. No matter what it looked like. This was a hour long infomercial for all new replacement Dodge parts and that's it. Parts are made to replace broken or beyond repair "parts" on a special car. No for replacing the ENTIRE special car. *He said it himself when they found the car "that's not the Dayton".* Now we can say it at the end. *"that's not the Daytona"!* Rant over. These videos just make me sick. Not this particular car because the other car wasn't worth anything. But thinking about the famous cars that get trashed just to hang everything new on a new frame just to get Shiny New for money. That's just wrong. They're only original once and saving certain original cars are priceless just the way they are.
@@autometaldirect Where do these picky people draw the line? Any east coast car that saw salt is going to need new body shell floors, front and rear, trunk floor, rockers and likely quarters. And that’s a minimum. Is that OK? Any car that suffered a head on impact at 100 MPH isn’t going to have much usable metal forward of the firewall. So, according of these naysayers you write these cars off or display them as is. But who is going to be interested in owning or even viewing in a museum a beat to h**l rust bucket or a total wreck complete with bloody bandages left on the drivers seat? I’ve retired from restoring MG’s, which are all rust buckets except for California cars. I never felt that when I ran into that last unexpectedly rusty panel I should stop the restoration, throw up my hands in defeat and for the sake of purity send the car to the crusher.
@@erikbock2211 Desert Valley Auto Parts in AZ recently bought a collection that had a few decent '70 hoods, give them a ring to see if they have any left.
Love AMD Metal…. But when I can’t get quarter panel patches for my ‘68 Charger for months and months and months on end…. It gets old. I thought COVID and the supply chain issue was waaaaay behind us now. If I can’t get the parts I need soon, I will buy Goodmark or something else… what gives AMD???!!!
No eta on patches. Give us a call for a more accurate depiction. I do have the full Quarter Panels are in stock NOW!! www.autometaldirect.com/advanced_search_result.php?filter=&keywords=700-2668&x=0&y=0
Truth be told a lot of the sheet metal if not damaged was rusted or just not able to be repaired. You might say it’s a clone or it’s not a real car since it was a “re-body” but what if a factory does it does it then not make it the same car but just new and fixed. Either way it’s a beautiful car and one of very few made just over 500 Daytonas.
Unfortunately you'll have the naysayers out there- mostly in part because they'll never have an opportunity to own a rare car that is worthy of saving. You can clearly see the quality of craftsmanship in the AMD metal.
I was hoping to see them put it on a frame rack and pull out the damages, but I realized it was just too rusty to do that, it would've just tore apart, and besides that, hardly anything on that body was going to be reused, just brackets and smaller undamaged pieces
Only controversy is how come America has to deal with so many foreign cars coming into the USA. When I was in Germany all the cars were from Germany Saab Mercedes bmw
If AMD wants to be really authentic when making repop metal for Chryslers, put a half gallon of salt into the primer. Aside from that, AMD has done so much to bring previously unrestorable cars to life. Many thanks.
I saw George Washington's axe for sale on ebay once. You know the one he used to chop the cherry tree down? The handle had been replaced 3 times & the axe head twice but it's still George Washington's axe.
I like the video clip but, whats with showing the "Chop Cut Rebuild" sign all the time. The shirts you wear have it on them, and it is on the bottom right hand side all the way through ??
I wished AMD could fabricate some of the older AMC panels. They were relatively obscure and do not have the popularity as most others, but there are a few people that are waiting on the time and parts to restore those old Marlins and Rebels.
If someone cut the face out on the Mona Lisa, imposed it on a new canvas. Then, painted the rest of the painting by the best most famous painter in the world. It still wouldnt be considered the original painting. If a watchmaker took a face of a rolex and put it on a seiko watch movement, it wouldnt be considered a rolex. Over 95% of this car has been replaced. Its not a rebuild, its a tribute car with a couple pices from an original. With all that being said. Still, this was an amazing build, and the car looks amazing.
That car will never be the same from the wreck and it's not close to ever being Original after replacing the amount of parts. So it's basically just a charger. But still fun to watch it come together.
I stopped in at the AMD shop in Cleveland Ga many years ago and I seem to remember seeing a couple of Camaros but from what I'm seeing here is that you are all Mopar now?
I have passed by this car many times over the years glad to see it getting saved
It was more replaced than saved
@@woecp its getting rebuilt and put back on the road either way
@@867diesel I think they said there using it as a show example of what you can build with their company so it’s not even on the road sadly
It will never be a real car just a tribute Daytona.
It’s a shame they wait so long to fix a car, so much more work to do
I've seen videos of that Daytona in the yard for years. Really cool to see this one come back to life.
It was, absolutely!
If memory serves me correct, I’m sure it’s the one that set at R&R salvage for a long time before that
It’s amazing that we have companies like AMD , making it possible to restore early Mopar
I thought AMD made processors....
This is a great example of how much of a charger can be built using AMD parts. Basically an entire new car! Which is great.
yes that is great but once the car is completed would you be able too apply for a title and be able too register it ?
@@royjohnson7760 The answer is yes. You can build your own car from scratch and as long as it meets all the requirements it can be registered and put on the road.
The work you fellas do to save these bits of history is amazing. I'd like to watch the body panels being made. This whole thing is fascinating.
As a auto metal guy , probably my favorite company to install, just good quality stuff always a nice fit with minimal effort to install I have a great video on my channel doing one of you guys trunk floors seam to seam!
I've watched this video a few times in the past and it's still relevant and amazing craftsmanship...I'd definitely love to see more. Thanks!
we have it on display in our Gainesville GA showroom
When the Daytona cars were built the donor car started life as a charger. So when the factory selected the 500+ cars to become Daytona chargers, the factory kept records of the original serial numbers.Those cars were built as Daytonas and sold at the various dealerships. Even if you rebuilt a Daytona that was commissioned by the factory and replace 99% of the sheet metal, that car still remains a true Daytona because the factory assigned serial number to that specific build. If it was born a charger and built into a Daytona it will always be a true Daytona.
So you can cut the serial number off and slap it on some sheet metal and you got a “true” Daytona
To think. . . these guys did what the factory did on a moving assembly line. In doing so, they went back in American car history to a time before the model T Ford. Although the tools are parts and the mechanism by which they were manufactured have been improved, that "hands on" work requires a lot of the same skills and attention to detail. It's amazing.
The factory serial number indicates that vehicle as a true Daytona . You can build a complete car from New sheetmetal that looks like a daytona, but if you don't have a factory designated serial number, all you have is a body. That is what all daytonas started with was sheetmetal.
there are hidden serial numbers on the rear inside the trunk drip rail and on the core support your die hard car guys would not call it a true daytona even with the vin on the dash
@@woecp I think that's a bit of an exaggeration. They started with an actual original Daytona, and yes most of the metal was replaced with new, but it's still associated with the original car.
It's a whole helluva lot better than just sending the original car to the crusher, which is usually what would happen.
In the end, the Dodge Daytona came back to life and it's great to have it back on the road when the restoration is complete. Everyone involved with this build did an amazing & quick job.
Absolutely, thanks for watching!
I loved watching Chop Cut Rebuild
AMD does awesome work amazing
This was an incredibly ambitious project, holy cow. Thing is, it is not the same car hate to say, it is a new car built with 99.99% new parts.
I wonder where those parts were manufactured, I didn't research it myself. Maybe China?
@@irocitZ Back then the parts would have been built in U.S / Canada. I've seen a few books on Daytona's (but not read them) and I'd hope one of them mentions where they were built. I'm guessing a local fabricator facility or speed shop would have been commissioned to build the parts
@@car_ventures I'm talking about the aftermarket parts used to put this back together, since this particular project requires an entire catalog of pieces I'm wondering where are they sourcing them from? I'm assuming there aren't many Daytona parts cars around. Anyone restoring or buying a classic car should consider what kind of parts went into the project, in my case I look for USA made stuff. If not I could be sitting on a Chinese or whatever car...
Developed here, stamped in Taiwan
@@autometaldirect so u used the VIN snd the outer rocker psnrl from the Daytons from zhe junkyard and everything dlse was gone to the crusher
Today NASCAR is running like 185- 190, these ols Daytonas ran over 200 with no problem, imagine if they had all the modern underpinnings like NASCAR today, they would probably hit 215-220 and still embarass the new cars. NASCAR just seems too safe today and the rear is so loose they say at high speed on the bank, you could puss the rear right out with your hand, Bring back a moder version of these back and let them run em just like they used too. Gotta love that AMD sheet metal. I owned a 70 road runner I always wanted to clone into a winged car, somebody told me they used Coronet fenders because they were longer, don`t know how true that is. Great video guys.
It's just a canvas to put an original VIN tag on. The history of the car as it is now is an open book. Everyone knows it's a Taiwanese clone. IMO Mr Stephens should have the original parts treated to stop rust then "reassembled" as a display to accompany the clone rather than just the pictures of the beyond saving original. The history of the original owner and why he was running would be interesting. A wreck that violent before airbags could easily have been fatal.
I know a Russian body guy that makes his own sheet metal pieces to replace the rusted out parts. Now that's talent. He buys totaled cars from America and ships them to Russia. He rebuilds them paints them and sells them.
That is really cool!
Beautiful! lots of hard work.
AMD, thank you for the great sheet metal for my GMC.
Thank you for your support!
No way Baby!!! Poison Ivy for me, thanks for the insight of something like this.
You guy's in America don't know how good you've got it.
We can't get anything like this for our Australian built cars..
Back in the 90's you could still find good panels and the odd new old stock panels from time to time , but now since Covid and the boom in collector cars , parts cars and and old panels in general , not to mention the prices of cars and parts. . It's almost a pain in the ass to restore an old Australian car now..
Very fortunate that we can do what we do. Thanks!
That's a shame bro, ya"ll got some of the coolest cars down there. We Yanks love the cars from OZ.
It looks fantastic! It's proof that it's possible to build a very accurate replica from 3rd-part parts these days. Too bad more of the original sheet metal wasn't carefully and skillfully massaged back to life and included in the build. Oh well, it's still a beautiful car.😁
Thank you for sharing.👍
I was a bit surprised by the colour change, but the reason for it and the result were actually really great!
Yes, but the color should have been the same it left factory with.
In year 2017, here, black primer or fresh out of the box look bare metal
@@missingremote4388 Has it been repainted since then I wonder?
it is still in that 'Hot Rod' Black
Nothing was said about the Cornet front fenders used on the Daytona and special modified Cornet hood. (Am I right?) Were those AMD...or?
many years ago when i was just a boy i remember being at warren dunes state park in michigan i was standing on the sand and saw the coolest car ever . when i got older i realized it was a wing car ! It was a memory that i will never forget
very cool!
Nothing left except the VIN # !! It'll take at least 70K to restore.
probably more to get it just right
I remember this episode of CCR many years ago. I met Craig of AMD several years later at the Tennessee Valley Mopar show near my home in Huntsville Alabama. I wonder if Dan Woods, Craig or any of those guys are still alive ?
both are still!
@@autometaldirect I remember that show. The attempt at humor always fell short and was just corny but that was automotive shows at the time.
Cool as Hell , she is in fact a true DAYTONA. Amazing watching you guys bring her back , it might be weird but i got a little emotional. This is a huge deal. She is magnificent. 👍👍🏁🏁
FREAKIN AWESOME!!!
Clamp Dan, love the video content. Awesome job on the build.
It's a nice replica
makes you wonder what the VIN goes with , the floor, fenders, roof ?
As a career automotive metal guy ,amd is the best ,always a good fit minimal issues ,even made a vod on my yt doing a full trunk floor panel from you seam to seam
thanks! @hammerdownfabrication
@autometaldirect makes my job easier ,and better looking
Very nice work love it graveyard carz looking good to 😮😊
absolutely! we love our friends at @graveyardcarz
At 59:00 it shows them putting new front fenders on. I was wondering about this....Daytona's used 1970 Charger front fenders. I wondered if they'd welded on extensions to the '69 fenders, or if they pressed out a set of 70 fenders? I have a '70 and AMD currently does not make 70 front fenders. Just curious...I'd assume the other shop welded on extensions....
I had lost track of this car I am SO happy to hear that is back together *even if I am way late to the party now I just have to find a video of it running
Ya know im not a dodge guy , I refuse to like cars that laugh at you before they start , but what AMD has done for that crowd is invaluable . I mean they honest to god nailed it for those old girls that have been sitting and rusting away for so many years.
As far as whoever would say its no longer a daytona . Well , we get a little too carried away with cars and in that we lose sight of what they are really . This car or any car is simply a whole lot of folded sheet metal and someones imagination as to what they wanted a particular car to look like at the time. Dodge gave this car a vin and a designation , end of story. AMD supplied its new skin . Its sheet metal and from what ive seen they do a damn good job of it.This sheet metal is jsut sheet metal just like the original sheet metal Dodge hung on it . The guys probably put more attention to detail in this car reskinning it than was put into it on the line when it first got built. I dont hesitate at all to say its a better car this go around than it was the first time. I do a ton of 65-70 mustangs and thats what you end up with if you do it right .
So who ever pipes up flapping that trap simply because they want whatever ar they have to have more value... Sit down junior , your car was put together as fast as they could do it for money . There was no love involved . Get your head right.
A K-Frame, one Rocker Panel and a VIN Plate does not a Daytona make... Isn't this the same crumpled heap of rust that Graveyard Cars turned dow a while back?
I was on the fence on which metal company to use. This video was a big help!!
Still a special car,and story,love it no matter what,tuff job and they nailed it
I found your channel today and subscribed to it today 😀 👍
Awesome! Thank you!
Having installed reproduction sheet metal for many years I agree that AMD products are better. However the body shop guys should have at least got a little inclusion in the show. I know from Experience what kind of Labor and Hours go into straightening and prepping the body.
absolutely, the body shop guys really bring the whole project home and, depending on the level of the project, can take it to a complete show stopper.
Your informative and entering a true craftsmen i really look forward to your video 😊
These guys do amazing work.
Thanks!
"You couldn't run it on a Nascar track now because it would still win" you betcha buddy!
I remember a buddy of mine selling on Ebay a rear wing, two fender scoops and two nose pieces that were damaged but one could be made out of the two of them. He sold them as a package and got 27k for them and that was 20 years ago or more.
$27k sound like you rip someone off. original Dodge Daytona wing shouldn't go no more than $5k.
@@funtyes1970 It was a public auction so how could you ever think "you rip someone off"?
@@funtyes1970 Was just looking and the last factory wing in Ebay was 15k for just the wing with out a nose piece and scoops.
@davebrittain9216 15k sounds reasonable to me, especially if you consider the rarity. Any collector that's trying to restore a true wing car would gladly pay that.
@@kickithard Ya the guys that really want originality pay big bugs. I remember back in the 90's he was restoring a Hemi Super Bee and it did not have matching dual four barrel carbs. He paid 5k back then for consecutive serial number carbs for a Hemi for that specific year of manufacture to match the car.
Wish we had a junkyard around here like that, I would love to wonder around and see all the history. Glad to see one taken out with that cool story and redone, hopefully most of the ones left get the same chance. I got some front and rear floor patch panels this week myself from AMD, hope they fit like they say they do.
let us know if you have any issues, we are here to help
Basically screwed the original VIN on an all new body..oh wait..there's that original rocker and shock towers😆.
Pretty much 😆.😆.😆.
This car is a fake. Nothing to do with restoring an original car.
@@rockettcustoms6266 How would you have fixed it?
Even the shock towers are from a different car. Rocket, it should have been left where it was. Would you pay $100,000.00 plus for a car everyone knows is a Chinamobile?
I agree showing that license plate constantly is stupid
Let's Turn it into a drinking game. LMAO!
Good one sir !
13:35, Don't be so hard on, Ted. When I resurrected my 67 Shelby GT350 I purchased from the previous owner who kissed a telephone pole with the passenger rear, I saved all the mangled pieces I had to remove to rebuild it. Back then, there wasn't an AMD to get the parts I needed. I had to find donor parts from damaged 67 Mustangs in junkyards it was quite a job but I saved it and it new after I had it painted the original Candy Apple Red it began its life with.
Thanks for your words and thank you for watching!
Just remember one thing:it’s your money do what makes YOU happy.
You guys put your heart and souls in these cars. I don't any controversy🚦
thank you! we appreciate your support
Amazing work, love it. People need to get over the "It's not the same car" thing. Looks like a Daytona to me! What matters is, there is a beautiful car back on the road and not lost to the scrap yard.
that is our feelings exactly, this is obviously an extreme case but there is another Daytona back on the road now. js
It is a repro body with a VIN from a wrecked car
@@nikoladamjanovic2313 I worked in a body repair shop many years ago and some cars came in needing a complete rebuild from the floor up. Sometimes only the firewall and part of the floor was saveable, the rest was brand new panels and interior. Granted, the cars are usually only a few months old for that kind of work but it's still the same car going out as what came in.
I'll never understand these kinds of rebuilds. Sure, the car once was a Daytona, but by the time you finish cutting all the rust and replacing original panels with aftermarket new panels, that thing will just be a clone in my eyes. You're gonna leave just the original tag or VIN number or whatever and pretty much all the rest will be new metal, motor and 100% of all components and interior. At the end, it'll look just like a Daytona, but it's gonna be just a Daytona clone.
I loved the video though!
YEA. THANKS FOR YOUR OPINION….
I wonder how much that carcass was worth , it so great to see any thing you can save, being saved, I find a lot of reproduction stuff just doesnt line up
Cool video I enjoyed watching
Thanks @BOBFOX2733
It doesn’t matter that you are replacing about 95 percent of metal, it’s the fact you are saving a rare piece of automotive rarity
It’s just a shell and more like 98% was . They saved a vin tag and 12sq inches of original metal that’s all. It’s no longer a true Daytona
@@jasoncardoza6375 BINGO!
I don’t understand any negative talk on this car or any car that needs fixed. Would it be better to let it sit in a junkyard and disintegrate into the ground? I sure don’t think so! And, besides, a rebuild on a car like this is fully documented so there will be no possibility of passing it off as all original or a survivor or anything other than a badass Daytona back on the road!
They could just cut the vin from the junkyard snd let it sit
Hell it already HAD rotted into the ground!
They removed far too much of the car in the name of installing and promoting replacement panels. More than half of the rear quarters could have been saved as well as the roof. Sure they would have taken more time and skill to do it properly but in the end the more of the original car still there the better claim to a restoration. This is an aftermarket car with a few Daytona parts
Panel replacement with new panels is nothing a typical crash repair shop couldn't handle. Anyone can remove and replace. A real hot rod shop would have repaired the panels that were there . This is no longer a daytona. Simple
So cool 😎
Dodge Daytona VIN plate on a new car..
just about
I wish i wish they did panels for Australian gmh holden hq monaro 2 door coupe and 4 door, Australia biggest selling car of all time
RIP to the Legends!!
So worth restoring! Nice job guys
out thoughts exactly! Thanks for the support!
The Daytona Of Theseus.
This was the comment I was looking for! Exactly right!
That VIN# is the valuable part,the after market will make it a driving Daytona again.
Absolutely!
*When you replace almost every single part of a car it's not a "restoration" it's a Creation.*
Everytime some greedy shop takes an old famous movie or historic car and replaces 90+% of the car with brand new parts. All they've done is thrown the famous historic car in the dumpster and hung all new parts and paint to lie about it's history to sell it for a large amount of money. For instance The Elvis movie car and original screen used Dukes of Hazzards intro jump car for two examples. Every piece of the cars were torn apart piece by piece and thrown away. Then replace every part to look like the original cars. It's been many years and I've blocked them from my memory but I believe ONLY one piece from one car and two from the other were actually saved. The vin code badge from one and the vin code badge and firewall from the other. *The rest of the entire car was thrown into the trash and replaced with shiny brand new parts.* I don't care about this fake Daytona the owners have to know what they're actually buying by law. But those other two famous cars should have been cleaned up and treasured for what they were. Not what they're pretending to be now. When anyone could have gone into the dumpster at the back of those shops and put all the pieces together again. *They would have had the original cars!* But now they've been melted down to make whatever.
This all should be illegal to do this. A vin code nadge does not make a car make. I can afford to buy some of these cars but I'd never waste my money. They look beautiful and shiny as brand new imposters. But that's all they'll ever be. I'd rather have the real thing even in the worst condition. Because it's real. I've worked in the entertainment industry for most my life and this fake car would make for a great secondary car to wreck on screen in order to save a real Daytona car. No matter what it looked like.
This was a hour long infomercial for all new replacement Dodge parts and that's it. Parts are made to replace broken or beyond repair "parts" on a special car. No for replacing the ENTIRE special car.
*He said it himself when they found the car "that's not the Dayton".*
Now we can say it at the end. *"that's not the Daytona"!* Rant over. These videos just make me sick. Not this particular car because the other car wasn't worth anything. But thinking about the famous cars that get trashed just to hang everything new on a new frame just to get Shiny New for money. That's just wrong. They're only original once and saving certain original cars are priceless just the way they are.
Thanks for watching! No impropriety presented or suggested - it is still on display in our showroom! Stop by sometime and check it out
to me its more of a KIT car than a restoration
@@autometaldirect Awesome! Got pics of the car in it's current state? I'm from Argentina can't go there yet sadly :(
@@autometaldirect
Where do these picky people draw the line? Any east coast car that saw salt is going to need new body shell floors, front and rear, trunk floor, rockers and likely quarters. And that’s a minimum. Is that OK? Any car that suffered a head on impact at 100 MPH isn’t going to have much usable metal forward of the firewall. So, according of these naysayers you write these cars off or display them as is. But who is going to be interested in owning or even viewing in a museum a beat to h**l rust bucket or a total wreck complete with bloody bandages left on the drivers seat?
I’ve retired from restoring MG’s, which are all rust buckets except for California cars. I never felt that when I ran into that last unexpectedly rusty panel I should stop the restoration, throw up my hands in defeat and for the sake of purity send the car to the crusher.
Nice work!👍
Thanks! 👍
How long ago was this and what happened to the car since?
quite a while back, the car now resides in our showroom in Gainesville, GA - stop by and check it out
I thought Daytonas had different front fenders to accept nose cone?
Where’d that 70 charger hood come from? I need/want a clean one.
got it from Ted
@@autometaldirectthanks, I’ll call and see if he has, or can locate an acceptable one for my ‘70
@@erikbock2211 Desert Valley Auto Parts in AZ recently bought a collection that had a few decent '70 hoods, give them a ring to see if they have any left.
Love AMD Metal…. But when I can’t get quarter panel patches for my ‘68 Charger for months and months and months on end…. It gets old. I thought COVID and the supply chain issue was waaaaay behind us now. If I can’t get the parts I need soon, I will buy Goodmark or something else… what gives AMD???!!!
No eta on patches. Give us a call for a more accurate depiction. I do have the full Quarter Panels are in stock NOW!! www.autometaldirect.com/advanced_search_result.php?filter=&keywords=700-2668&x=0&y=0
Truth be told a lot of the sheet metal if not damaged was rusted or just not able to be repaired. You might say it’s a clone or it’s not a real car since it was a “re-body” but what if a factory does it does it then not make it the same car but just new and fixed. Either way it’s a beautiful car and one of very few made just over 500 Daytonas.
agreed, Maybe not what every one WOULD do but it is definitely something every COULD do ;)
Unfortunately you'll have the naysayers out there- mostly in part because they'll never have an opportunity to own a rare car that is worthy of saving. You can clearly see the quality of craftsmanship in the AMD metal.
they have always hated on this car, the naysayers - you are absolutely correct.
....old mopars never die....
Ive seen this car in videos 20 years ago, always wondered why someone didn't save it. It wasn't nearly as bad 20 years ago.
you wonder why they dont put them up and blocks to keep them off the ground
Wish AMD would get more into the 88-98 C/K GM trucks as they are the next hot old school vehicles 👊
You need to check out our website!! 😎 www.autometaldirect.com
i hope yall start producing new body panels for 57-58 plymouth furys,Belvederes and savorys
I still love it
I was hoping to see them put it on a frame rack and pull out the damages, but I realized it was just too rusty to do that, it would've just tore apart, and besides that, hardly anything on that body was going to be reused, just brackets and smaller undamaged pieces
Indeed, what got that Charger killed was the rust. If it didn't had rust so much of it could have been salvageable.
I absolutely love that look,color is kciller
Loyal very dedicated men.
Car looks great I notice the antenna on car at one time of the showing then it was not on car what’s with that?
they decided to leave it off until it goes to paint and final body work
Hey Cleveland GA!!!! My good friend Sgt Jason Harkins was killing Iraq back in ‘07. ….. he was from there! Your post office is named after him!
I've been going to World of Wheels since the mid 70s👍
We will be at the World of Wheels in Birmingham 2024
Only controversy is how come America has to deal with so many foreign cars coming into the USA. When I was in Germany all the cars were from Germany Saab Mercedes bmw
‘Is that a real Daytona ?’
‘The VIN is ‘……
it was a great starting point with the original Daytona 😉
Was the opening minutes cameraman 3-feet tall or why were a lot of the shots of the sky or people out of frame?? lol
Really nice video. The editing could have limited the repeating of introduction of the same people over and over again.
agreed!
If AMD wants to be really authentic when making repop metal for Chryslers, put a half gallon of salt into the primer. Aside from that, AMD has done so much to bring previously unrestorable cars to life. Many thanks.
I used to watch Dan on Degrassi.
The 80’s T-Bird did quite well innBASCAR
Just a question. Why not keep the original colour of the car which was Red?
because they wanted the car to appear to be unpainted other than the daytona stripe
Oh yeah yeah. Well I’ll be damned. Makes sense.
I saw George Washington's axe for sale on ebay once. You know the one he used to chop the cherry tree down? The handle had been replaced 3 times & the axe head twice but it's still George Washington's axe.
I like the video clip but, whats with showing the "Chop Cut Rebuild" sign all the time. The shirts you wear have it on them, and it is on the bottom right hand side all the way through ??
Id say, you are correct. Just too much for sure
I wished AMD could fabricate some of the older AMC panels. They were relatively obscure and do not have the popularity as most others, but there are a few people that are waiting on the time and parts to restore those old Marlins and Rebels.
IMO, it's a re-body when you attach a V.I.N. to all new sheet metal.
@AVB2 With this build (where almost everything has been replaced), that would be quite a stretch.
If someone cut the face out on the Mona Lisa, imposed it on a new canvas. Then, painted the rest of the painting by the best most famous painter in the world. It still wouldnt be considered the original painting.
If a watchmaker took a face of a rolex and put it on a seiko watch movement, it wouldnt be considered a rolex.
Over 95% of this car has been replaced. Its not a rebuild, its a tribute car with a couple pices from an original.
With all that being said. Still, this was an amazing build, and the car looks amazing.
Where is the car now?
check our recent stories post
That car will never be the same from the wreck and it's not close to ever being Original after replacing the amount of parts. So it's basically just a charger. But still fun to watch it come together.
nope, never will be the same but we also agree it is fun to bring it back
There is nothing from the original that means anything except the fender tag and vin number, if it even has those. Its just a Chinatona
Exactly
maybe "Dayclona" fits better 🤣😂😛
I stopped in at the AMD shop in Cleveland Ga many years ago and I seem to remember seeing a couple of Camaros but from what I'm seeing here is that you are all Mopar now?
nope, just a snap shot of a Mopar being reassembled. Camaro, Chevelle, Ford Fairlane, Galaxie, and many more still in the mix
I hate thinking of all the earlier cars that were scrapped because parts were not available