Thursday, May 14, 2026

Barn find Ferrari

1959 Ferrari 250 GT Coupe. Estimate $300k - $500k. SOLD $255,000. The Ferrari 250 GT Coupé was a GT car produced by Ferrari between 1955 and 1960. The Ferrari 250 GT Coupé Pinin Farina would be the largest volume Ferrari model up to that time with 353 examples built. Here
1951 Ferrari 342 America Coupe. Estimate $900k - $1.2m. SOLD $533,000. Ferrari’s first big block, the 340 America, was introduced in early 1951. 23 were built, around a third of which were completed as super high end road cars. The 342 America was far more refined thanks to its de-tuned Lampredi engine, long wheelbase chassis, luxurious cockpit and synchronised four-speed gearbox. Seven Ferrari 342 Americas were built between 1951 and 1953. Here.

1971 Chevrolet Corvette LT1 Convertible

Two-time NCRS Top Flight winner. 48,105 miles. Matching numbers 350/330 HP LT1 V-8 engine. 4-speed manual transmission. Power disc brakes. Saddle leather upholstery. AM/FM radio. Rear luggage rack. Rally wheels. Redline tires. Owner's manual. Window sticker.
The 1971 Corvette Coupe was virtually unchanged from the 1970 model with just some interior restyling. It was the final year of high-compression engines before emissions-driven detuning, with 21,801 units built. 6,354 coupes and 15,447 convertibles left the factory with 1,949 being LT1s. The 350 ci LT-1 engine variant offered horsepower equivalent to Chevy’s larger 455 cubic inch LS-5 motor. By 1971, emissions regulations brought power down to 330 bhp. Twist was 360 ft lbs @ 4000 rpm with 0-60 mph in 6 seconds onto a top speed of 137 mph.
Rare options in 1971 were the ZR1 engine package (8), the ZR2 engine package (12), the LS6 425 HP engine (188), and the 4 Speed Manual, Close Ratio, Heavy Duty Transmission (130).
The car crosses the block at Mecum with an estimate of $60k to $80k.

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

1969 Ford Mustang Convertible - $170k high bid

1 of 26 428 Ram Air 4-speed convertible Mustangs built by Ford in 1969. Three-time MCA Concours Gold winner. 428/335 HP V-8 engine. 4-speed transmission. 4-barrel carburetor. 10.5:1 compression.

Candy Apple Red with Black Clarion interior. Power top with glass backlite. Visibility group. Power front disc brakes. Power steering. AM radio, Clock. Tinted glass.
Ford’s new 428/335 HP Cobra Jet big-block was offered in all mustang body styles for 1969. This mustang is one of only 26 convertibles produced with the Ram Air 428 Cobra Jet and 4-speed drivetrain combination. Candy Apple Red with a black Clarion interior and black top, the convertible has been honored with numerous show awards.
The through-the-hood Shaker scoop is a dead giveaway that the mustang is powered by the R-code 428 Cobra Jet with functional ram-air.
The hood scoop funnels cooler, denser air through the air filter and into the Cobra Jet’s Holley 4-barrel carburetor.
The car high bid to $170k against an estimate of $200k to $250k in 2020. Hagerty suggests a 1969 Ford Mustang Convertible R-code is trending around $206k today.

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

1959 Chevrolet Corvette Big Brake Fuelie

1 of 142 Corvettes produced in 1959 with heavy duty brakes and suspension. NCRS Second Flight Canadian Regionals 2011. Fuel-injected 283/290 HP V-8 engine. 4-Speed Manual. Tuxedo Black over black interior.
Big Brake (RPO 684) included special finned cast-iron brake drums with internal fans, air scoops, and stiffer suspension components designed for racing. The 1959 Chevrolet Corvette "Big Brake" Fuelie is one of the most sought-after variants of the C1 generation. The cars are frequently found with "radio and heater delete" for weight reduction. 0–60 MPH came in 6.6 seconds and quarter-mile times around 14.5 seconds.
The "Fuelie" Engine (RPO 579D) was a 283 cubic-inch V8 featuring mechanical Rochester Ramjet fuel injection. It produced 290 HP and was a major engineering milestone, as it achieved the goal of one horsepower per cubic inch. RPO 684 added $425 to the base price of $3,875, while RPO 579D (290-hp Fuel Injection) was $485.

This example appears at Mecum with an estimate of $150k to $160k.

Monday, May 11, 2026

1940 Mercedes-Benz Rometsch Cabriolet

Patina. If cars could talk, this one would have tales, starting as a limousine in wartime Berlin, then as the recipient of a sporty cabriolet body by an obscure German coachbuilder, then as a traveler to the New World that took it as far as Albuquerque, then to a barn in Michigan, and finally to California. This 85-year-old Mercedes with a 78-year-old custom coachwork body spent over 50 years in a barn.
In 1940, British bombers were already in the skies over Germany, attacking industrial targets such as aircraft factories and plants that built airplane components. Daimler-Benz was one of them, a supplier of V-12 engines to Luftwaffe fighters and bombers even as the company still built trucks and passenger cars for the domestic market. At some point, one of the final Mercedes-Benz 320 civilian models, a Pullman limo, rolled off the line at the company’s Stuttgart plant, headed for Berlin and likely Nazi government duty. What happened after it left the factory, or how the car survived a war that flattened much of Germany is unknown. Also unknown is who bought the car in 1948 and brought it to Karosserie F. Rometsch to be lavishly rebodied.
In 1948, during the Berlin Airlift, the car’s new body took shape from hand-beaten steel and copious lead filler. At some point in the late ’40s or early ’50s, the Mercedes made its way across the Atlantic. The story is again unknown, but it was probably the work of a U.S. serviceman, or a German rocket scientist.
After the war, the Reich’s missile men immigrated to work on rocket development at the U.S. Army’s ballistic missile range in White Sands, New Mexico. The fact this car’s known history begins in Albuquerque is suggestive, as is an old business card found in the car for a chrome shop just across the border in Mexico, where the German rocket engineers used to go regularly to get drunk.
A new owner bought the car in the late ’50s. In 1968, he decided to move back to Michigan. He flat towed the car to his barn and that is where it would sit for the next 50 years. After some work, the engine fired up for likely the first time in five or six decades with a cloud of smoke and a sporty snore from its tailpipe.
The old Mercedes has given its owner joy in the heavily patinaed state it’s in. “The goal was to get it together, get all the pieces on it, make it run and drive, and take it places. The couple events I’ve taken it to so far, it gets a ton of attention just like this. So as far as restoration goes, what's the point?”

1962 Ferrari 250 GTE police car

With a past chasing Italian gangsters and it's lights and siren still in working condition, who WOULDN'T want this 1962 Ferrari 250 GTE?
Enzo Ferrari donated two GTEs to Rome's Squadra Mobile. The first car was destroyed in a crash in weeks. Chassis number 3999 survived. The highway police sold their original Ferrari interceptor in 1972 via a public auction of army surplus. The Italian buyer, Alberto Cappelli, knew what he had and spent his next 40 years preserving it. A 2+2 GTE isn't a 250 GTO but this is the only private car still allowed to wear blue lights and siren in Italy.
Celebrity status was acquired after a series of spectacular high-speed chases, including one that involved chasing gangsters in a Citroën down the Spanish Steps next to the Trinità dei Monti church in Rome. A low-budget action movie called Poliziotto Sprint followed, which included a sequence with a 250GTE driving down the steps. The real star was for sale, offered by Girardo & Co in Milan in 2020. No word on price or fate of the car.

Sunday, May 10, 2026

2011 Ferrari 599 GTO - $1.1m

9,462 miles. 6.0L/661 HP V-12. Automatic. Corsa Red over Nero. The 599 GTO is a road-legal version of the 599XX track car. Its engine generates a power output of 660 hp at 8,250 rpm and 457 lb⋅ft at 6,500 rpm. The car has the multiple shift program for the gearbox from the 599XX along with the exhaust system. Ferrari claimed that the 599 GTO could accelerate from 0–100 km/h (0–62 mph) in under 3.3 seconds and has a top speed of over 335 km/h (208 mph).
At 1,605 kg (3,538 lb), the 599 GTO weighs almost 100 kg (220 lb) less than the standard GTB. Production was limited to 599 cars. Of these, 125 were produced for the United States market.
The 2011 Ferrari 599 GTO had a base price around $416,550 for the chosen Ferrarista. By 2019, the cars were often trading for $550k–$600k. This example made $1.1m at Mecum. In January an example with 2119 miles high bid to $1.4m.