Holden Monaro 1976 News
Brock Daytona Coupe unveiled
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By Mark Hinchliffe · 08 Nov 2010
"It's a beautiful race car, and Peter loved driving it," says museum owner and long-time Brock friend Peter Champion. The nine-time Bathurst champion died in September 2006 when his Daytona slammed into a tree at a rally event near Perth.
Champion said most of the 40 people attending the unveiling on Saturday night shed a tear. "It is an emotional thing but something had to be done to preserve his memory," he said.
"I've been living with it for four years but I still shed a tear. It's sad but it's a part of history." Champion had the wreckage restored to its racing glory by the original builder, Richard Bendall, and his company Daytona Sports Cars, in Dromana, Victoria.
Champion would not disclose the cost of restoration for the 1960s-style muscle car. "Put it this way, you could have bought a new one for the price we paid to restore it," he said.
A new Daytona coupe can cost between $150,000 and $200,000. James Bendall, who did most of the restoration work, said it took about 800 hours over two years to complete.
"That's about how long it takes to build a new car," he said. "It still has the original engine, gearbox, differential and suspension. It was very gratifying to see it back in one piece again and a bit sad when it left the factory.
"We've copped a lot of criticism from people over the crash in the past few years which is fairly annoying, but we were very proud of how it came up in the end."
Champion said it was difficult to decide on how to display the car. "We thought about putting it in a room on its own, but it would have become a shrine and personally I don't think there is any place for a shrine among over 40 of his cars," he said.
"It's like the last chapter of a book. It has to be part of the same story. A good friend of mine was against restoring and displaying it but he changed his mind after visiting the Henry Ford museum in the US and seeing the car JFK was shot in. He said it was a tragedy but part of history."
Champion said he had thought about moving the museum to a more popular tourist location such as the Gold Coast. "There has been a big push to get it moved to Melbourne, Sydney, the Gold Coast or Sunshine Coast,"
"If you wanted more people through it you'd have to be on the Gold Coast somewhere. Who knows, it may end up there some day." Champions Brock Experience is the largest collection of Brock road and race cars in the country and features Brock's first 1956 Austin A30, Bathurst winners, rally cars and his Bathurst 24-Hour Monaro.
There is also a collection of highly modified road-going HDT Special Vehicles built in the 1980s by Brock until he parted with Holden in 1987. The only Fords in the collection are a 1989 EB Fairmont Ghia Brock built after the Holden split and his Sierra Cosworth touring car.
Champion's collection of vehicles and memorabilia was sitting in a Blackwater shed until Brock suggested it be turned into a public museum.
Spy Shot 2011 Chevrolet Camaro
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By Paul Gover · 02 Nov 2010
A hotrod Camaro is now being developed to go head-to-head with the Ford Mustang GT500, promising a return of the classic Z28 badge in 2012.
Chevrolet is finalising testing of the born-again Z28, right down to running it against the GT500, and the car is caught by Carparazzi during the trails.
There is predictable camouflage, but not enough to disguise the much- larger air intake in the nose and a pronounced lip spoiler. There are also giant 20-inch alloy wheels and brakes that could have come from the Cadillac CTS-V.
The rear end reveals a set of dual pipes on either side of the car and Carparazzi photographers report a thunderous Nascar-style exhaust note. There are also potential mounting points for a rear spoiler.
The car will be powered by a supercharged 6.2-litre V8 and the test car is running an automatic gearbox.
The final result for the Z28 is likely to be similar to the Transformers Camaro displayed on the American motor show circuit last year, although GM's engineers are having some of their own fun with a Nascar-style number 2 on the side.
The Z28 is likely to be revealed at the Detroit Motor Show in January for American sales, headlining a mildly facelifted 2011 Camaro range, in the first half of next year.
My Pontiac Collection
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By Mark Hinchliffe · 07 Jan 2010
Paul Holter, 54, of North Arm on the Sunshine Coast got his nickname from years of converting American cars, mainly Pontiacs, to right-hand drive.Over the years he claims he has restored, converted, traded and owned as many as 600 cars and now has a dozen in his backyard and shed as well as a few restoration projects belonging to mates. "I've been collecting cars all my life," he says "When I got married 35 years ago my wife threatened that if I got any more cars she would leave me. She's still here."Holter got his first car when he was 11 years old. "My dad bought a Mk V Jag and sold off the tyres and battery and gave me the rest," he says. "I sold it and bought a '48 Ford Prefect for $40."His daily drivers are a 2005 CVZ Monaro, a 2007 Holden Rodeo and a 2008 Honda Civic, while his collectible cars include a 1976 Chrysler VK Valiant Hemi, a 1968 Pontiac Firebird Convertible, a 1959 Plymouth Suburban sports wagon, a 1960 Pontiac Ventura, a 1962 S Series Chrysler Valiant and a 1983 Pontiac Trans Am race car.He bought the Trans Am for $2000 and converted it into a race car by pulling out the 305 Chevy engine and four-speed auto box and replacing them with a Gen III Commodore 5.7-litre V8, six-speed Tremec gearbox and adding GT-R Skyline rear suspension and brakes. He claims it gets about 350hp (260kW) at the rear wheels and propelled him to 77th out of 185 cars at last year's Noosa Hillclimb.His current project is the Plymouth he bought for $8500 two years ago. It features nine seats, including a rear-facing row in the back. He's leaving it in left-hand drive, but is replacing the engine with a 440 V8 he bought online. "I don't know what it will all cost," he says. "I'd prefer not to know as it could get expensive."It's all the little bits and pieces you have to buy that add up." Over the past six years he has spent up to $40,000 in a loving restoration of the Ventura he bought for $11,000 and plans to spend about $30,000 _ "or something stupid like that" _ on the S Series Valiant. "When you do it a bit at a time it doesn't seem so expensive," he says.He plans to fuel-inject and turbo-charge the Valiant's 225 slant-six engine. "It's rated at 145bhp (108kW), but I reckon I can get it up to the middle 300s," he says. "I do all my own mechanical work, but I get interiors, paint and body done by experts."Holter is a qualified train driver who moved from Victoria to Queensland 21 years ago and started his right-hand-drive conversion business. He also had a business importing Nissan Laurel four-door, rear-wheel-drive pillarless sedans but found compliance laws kept changing too often. He bought an Autobarn franchise six years ago and another a year later.Business must be good because Holter has been able to indulge his interest in American cars, travelling several times to the US to buy cars and ship them home for conversion and restoration.And Holter is always looking toward his next project. He's currently considering trading his Firebird for a Grand Prix and he's always had a soft spot for a Valiant Charger although he reckons they cost too much these days, some fetching as much as $300,000.