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A little wisdom from Jay Leno on restoring vehicles.

Randyzzz

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So…I copied this from Facebook. I can’t vouch that Jay actually wrote this, but it sure echoes what I’ve been thinking for many years.




Mr. Leno hits the nail on the head with this one!

CARS - LIFE - RESTORATION

Here are some very sage words from Jay Leno about old cars and their restoration.
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"Once I had a gentleman on The Tonight Show who had climbed Mount Everest, which is an amazing feat that is nearly impossible for most people under the best of circumstances. But this guy was also blind. Imagine being 29,000 feet up, grabbing at snow, not knowing if it’s night or day, with the wind howling and every breath a challenge, and you can’t see anything. Anyway, he was a nice gentleman and an incredible athlete who afterward had been doing motivational speaking. I asked him how it was going and he sort of grimaced. He said the frustrating part was the meet-and-greet after, when at least one person in every audience would come up and say, “Yeah, I was going to climb Mount Everest, but, you know, the kids have soccer and work is crazy and I just haven’t gotten around to it.”

Like it was so easy except, you know, soccer practice. Here this fellow had trained his whole life to do something that maybe one out of 10 million people can do, had endured incredible hardship, and had even overcome the fact that he was blind, and people were so dismissive of it.

Maybe it’s because life has gotten pretty soft and we don’t make anything for ourselves anymore, but we’re losing respect for other people’s accomplishments and hard work, for what the human hand can do instead of just the human brain. I hear this all the time from guys who have their cars restored and who have never turned a wrench in their lives: All mechanics are crooks, they’ll overcharge you at every turn. They’ll moan about the high cost of a paint job, for example, not realizing that the paint is $600 a quart and somebody has to spend hours sanding it and finishing it because a good finish doesn’t come out of a rattle-can of Rust-Oleum.

Our appreciation or understanding of other people’s hard work is fading, and that rankles me. The last time I pulled a transmission out of something here at the garage, it took hours and my hands were bleeding and covered in grease, and I thought, “Some guy only makes a couple hundred bucks for doing that?” That’s why I don’t usually question a quote for something we need to get done outside the garage. Good work doesn’t seem expensive when you think about how much actual effort goes into it, and that someone needs to be able to make a living doing it or else nobody will do it. Besides, I have yet to meet anyone who is getting rich by sandblasting rusty parts or re-chroming bumpers. They’re not overcharging—in fact, they’re probably undercharging.

Well, nowadays we watch these shows where they restore a car in a weekend, literally, and it seems so easy. The sparks are flying and guys are trying to ram a big-screen TV into the dash, and after a couple of commercial breaks and some pounding music, the car is done. It gives people an unrealistic picture of what it takes to restore a car—the thousands of hours, many of which are never billed. Just the amount of research a restorer has to do, figuring out how things go together and what is supposed to be original, is huge.

These days, Amazon will drop a package on your doorstep the same day you order it, so we’re also losing touch with how long things take in the real world. A very famous country western star called me not long ago and said, “It’s my husband’s birthday, he’s always wanted a 1953 Ford F-100, a red one, and I want to get one for his birthday. Can you get me one?” I said I couldn’t promise it would be red, but I would look around. Then I asked when his birthday is. She said, “Thursday.” I said, “This is Tuesday! I’m not going to find a car in two days. It takes awhile!” She didn’t get it.

Next time you’re walking a car show, before you judge some guy because his paint isn’t perfect, think about how much of the work you do yourself. Unlike everything else we buy these days, there’s nothing quick, easy, or cheap about old cars. And while few of us will ever climb Mount Everest, restoring a classic
 
Good write-up. Thanks for sharing, Randy.

I'm building us a small house right now. It's been a ton of learning, taking a builder's license course (not necessary, but very helpful), dozens-upon-dozens of hours studying the code book, scrimping/saving/budgeting, and a lot of hard, hands-on work. I also grew up in a trades-based family (dad & brother both worked in HVAC, and have built multiple houses, as well), poured concrete for three summers during my college years, and have done woodworking from an early age. I'm building it myself for multiple reasons - financial, learning/fun, personal accomplishment, a serious shortage of quality contractors, etc. We have lived very rustic in the process...out of a cargo van & cargo trailer for a good portion of the time, with a composting toilet, and no kitchen (only a microwave). Thank goodness for a YMCA membership, where we can shower regularly, and feel a little civilized (relatively-speaking) while we grind through this build. :ROFLMAO:

Our new neighbors (very nice-but-naive twenty-somethings) are starting a 640 sq. ft. off-grid house, and thought they'd build it in 3 months. They're "book smart", but they've never swung a hammer...never used a post hole digger (literally had no idea how to operate one). Their goal was to build a complete house on a slab for $25K. They don't have a code book, and don't think it's important to get one. They think Google and YouTube have all the answers they need. 9 months later, they are just breaking ground, and still don't know the basics about construction. In fact, the footers they just dug are on several feet of recently added fill dirt (not undisturbed soil) and despite me mentioning that to them a couple times, they just move forward. They get an "A" for ambition, but all I can say at this point is...

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They have said more than once, "YouTube makes it look so easy." They may some hard lessons/learnings, if they even complete it.
 
Imo, they show how 'easy' it is to build a custom car, or a rock buggy, or an off grid home in a half hour or even a couple half hours is so extremely misleading it's ridiculous.

Also imo, a man has to know his limitations. But, also don't be afraid to push yourself once in a while. It's pretty easy to tear into a project but it's a lot harder to actually finish the project, especially to a high level.

Great insight by Jay. 👍
 
I saw it on a forum less than a year ago, or something from Leno himself. Seemed longer than that also
 
Great article. It's taken me 3 years to get mine done. Before this, I've never done more than changed brakes level stuff.

There were many neighbors walking their dogs by my garage over the years that questioned if I would finish it. I had my doubts a few times too. The research time is often not considered and was good to see him call that out.
 
Along these lines ….

I had to learn to enjoy what I have versus always trying for perfection. The number of Jeeps and classic cars I have owned / built / restored that I rarely used due to constant work made me sick to my stomach. Over the years I missed out on a lot of fun due to “ what if someone sees that imperfection in my work?” And kept the vehicle in the garage and tinkered with it.

I made the hard decision to sell a number of vehicles over the past 1.5 years, some I’ve never mentioned here, to focus on the ones that matter. My ’83 Scrambler isn’t the best product out of my garage but you know what??? I am driving the hell out of it, making memories with my family, and enjoying life. It still turns heads and gets compliments every time it goes out. It needs a bath more often than not. In the past I’d never leave my driveway without it shining like a ring. I realized my constant degrading of myself and my work was so much a waste of time.

I also build / modify to MY liking now. These are my vehicles to do as I so please. Others aren’t footing the bill or spending hours building it for me so why should I care what they like or don’t? Brace yourself - I’m getting ready to install a snorkel on my Gladiator. I love the look and it’s my Jeep so it’s getting done.

to sum my rant up - keep your projects manageable, keep your best interests at heart, and enjoy this hobby we’re all passionate about. Do it for YOU
 
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Life can be really short for some. Enjoy it and drive them like they are made to. I have a snorkel in the attic also that may get used someday on the right project. :headbang: :cheers:
 
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