
 Originally Posted by 
HOTRODPAINT
					
				 
				Not really that unusual to put hundreds of hours into a street rod finish.  If it's an original car, you have 75 years of wear and tear.  If it's a 'glass car, you have the flaws that were in the original it was cast from, plus some manufacturing flaws due to shrinkage in the glass and such.  If it's a steel car, you have the flaws that will be in the stamping dies.  These companies can't spead that cost over a few million bodies, so they have to spend a lot less on the dies than a new car manufacturer would, so it is going to be a compromise.
Compounding the problem is the high level of professionalism that the hobby has risen to.  Todays older, more astute builder expects a much higher level of workmanship, than the high school kids who built these in the '50s.  What is now a "street and show paint finish", was the "full-blown showcar finish" of the past.  Rods have truely become rolling art, except, of course rat rods, which are more like a comfortable old sweatshirt, complete with holes and stains.  :-)~
			
		 
	
I'm happy to see it back up, sure hope it lasts.
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