Thread: For those who HATE "coupsters".
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02-17-2009 02:27 PM #1
For those who HATE "coupsters".
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I frequent another hotrod forum on the internet, where a guy was asking about cutting the top off a steel coupe which had a damaged top, to make a "coupster" from. He was immediately jumped on by one of the "traditional police" from southern California and told that if he wanted to be a real hotrodder, he had to either get an original steel roadster body, or a (Gasp) fiberglass one. Coupes with the top cut off were simply not acceptable!!! The following message is my response to that gentleman------For the guy in southern California who HATES coupsters---Okay, thats your right to hate them. Why don't we all get real roadsters, or fiberglass roadsters??? Well, the unfortunate reality is that the farther north you go from southern California, the fewer roadsters were sold. Us poor jerks that live where there is ice and snow a goodly portion of the year never bought that many roadsters in the twenties and thirties.---We bought steel topped cars with roll up windows and heaters. And now, for anybody wanting to build on a budget, thats what is most readily available and consequently least expensive. Yes, a person could buy a glass roadster body for $3000 to $7000, but hey---If ya can get a real steel coupe with a rotted top for free, or close to it, to build a "coupster" from then that $3000 to $7000 saved can damn near build a running car. (Or at least a good chunk of it). And you're right---its not going to fool anybody into thinking its a REAL roadster.--But---does anybody really care?? The hobby is about building unique, early style cars and enjoying them. "Traditional" has a lot of different faces.----BrianOld guy hot rodder
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02-17-2009 02:36 PM #2
Well put Brian. But if you are trying to speak directly to the SoCal guy who "hates coupsters", is he a member here as well as on the HAMB?? If not, then he won't hear you nor will your disgust of his attitude reach him.
But if you are only voicing your dismay because of his narrow minded attitude, then by all means, carry on. But I don't think you'll find that same attitude here. We love nearly all cars, with the exception of some really ugly ones.Bob
A good friend will come and bail you out of jail....but a true friend will be sitting next to you saying..."Damn....that was fun!
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02-17-2009 02:51 PM #3
Give me three guesses which site the haters are on & the 1st two don't count.
I guess they all forgot that they built their own cars/truck to impress no one but themsslves, they didn't build them because "WE" told them how & what they should look like. Who gives a rats butt what others think about our rides, when they pay for the parts then & only then can they say how to build them....joeDonate Blood,Plasma,Platelets & sign your DONORS CARD & SAVE a LIFE
Two possibilities exist:
Either we are alone in the Universe or we are not.
Both are equally terrifying.
Arthur C. Clarke
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02-17-2009 02:51 PM #4
Mopar---I did respond on "that other" forum. I simply posted it here to spark a little controversy.---BrianOld guy hot rodder
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02-17-2009 02:53 PM #5
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02-17-2009 03:53 PM #6
Hey, I think the coupsters are clever! I really appreciate innovative projects. The neatest one I have seen locally is/was a steel '27 Ford coupe made into a roadster with an excellent smooth windshield frame. Not only is the coupster well done but it was mounted on a REVERSED Bronco frame and was running a Mopar 340! Brian you know how low those '27s can be and in the summer local stand-around meets it is really a neat rod. I wish I could have found a metal coupe to cut up but I did not find one so settled for 'glass. I also recall a guy in my neighborhood in suburban Phila. who cut the top off a '30 Model A coupe. He was a guy in his '60s then and it was really neat painted robin egg blue with red wheels. Even so it is hard to beat a real steel restorod built from an actual roadster. Then again there was a soft top sport coupe that only had a canvas stay-up top, that would be an easy conversion IF you can find one!
Don Shillady
Retired Scientist/teen rodder
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02-17-2009 06:16 PM #7
I read that thread over on the other board. I'm starting to wonder if some of the most vocal traditional police even know what they are talking about. I've seen photos of MANY coupsters from now what is considered to be the period of time from which todays traditional hot rods emulate. Plus I have my dad as a reference and he remembers them too. What some of todays traditional purists seem to forget is that every hot rod on the road back then was NOT a cover car from the magazines.
That thread is a prime example of why I don't ask others opinions about what I should do to MY OWN car.I may not be good but I sure am slow
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02-17-2009 07:01 PM #8
Absolutely coupesters were very much in prominence back then...........I owned one, a '33 coupe cut down into a roadster. I was all of 14 at the time and never got it running, but it was a fairly done hot rod when I bought it.........for $75.00. And if any of the traditional police pick up any of the little books from the early years there were tons and tons of them.
It always amazes me that people who weren't even born or thought of back then can lay claim to what is or isn't "traditional." Tradition was that we were hungry for the next new idea and constantly modifying and changing our rides. And those "traditional" flatheads? We had NO problem jerking them out when the newer and faster OHV engines came out, and yes, even the small block Chevy was one of the engines we all wanted.
Don
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02-17-2009 07:19 PM #9
The older I get the more I realize it's all about personal happiness. If you want to build a coupster or a roadoupe, or a for that matter wear a toupe..lol I say if it makes you happy, build it..or wear it whatever the case may be. After all, you're driving it, not them.
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02-17-2009 08:07 PM #10
1st rule of Hot Rodding---The guy paying the bills is the one who decides what direction the build will go.... Opinions are just that, opinions. I'll listen to anyone's opinion--when it's accompanied by a big check!!!!!Yesterday is history, tomorrow is a mystery, Live for Today!
Carroll Shelby
Learning must be difficult for those who already know it all!!!!
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02-17-2009 08:50 PM #11
Yeah Brian, I know. I read all of the posts including several of yours and agree with you totally. Personally most of the "coupsters" that I saw in that thread looked pretty damn good. I wouldn't be shy about owning or driving one.Bob
A good friend will come and bail you out of jail....but a true friend will be sitting next to you saying..."Damn....that was fun!
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02-18-2009 04:49 AM #12
where can i purchase a rule book
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02-18-2009 05:48 AM #13
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02-18-2009 08:46 AM #14
Shine wrote:where can i purchase a rule book
I believe Fitzwell has them for about a buck two ninety-eight each.Bob
A good friend will come and bail you out of jail....but a true friend will be sitting next to you saying..."Damn....that was fun!
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02-18-2009 08:51 AM #15
In my area (MN) there were and are more "coupsters" than real roadsters.(quickly being out massed by fiberglass buggies,a whole different subject) Simply because there were more coupes. I agree a cpe w the top cutoff is not exactly stylish. but traditional? absolutely. I have pics of them from back in day and not all were from cold states. Gotta love the under 50 street rodder magazine "Experts"Last edited by Dgas56; 02-18-2009 at 08:54 AM.
A "skip" = a dumpster.... but he says it's proper english??? Oh.. Okay. Most of us can see the dating site pun, "matching" with an arsonist.. But a "SKIP? How is that a box? It must all be...
the Official CHR joke page duel