5 Project Cars Reserved for the Brave
Undertaking any project car is not for the faint of heart. Generally speaking, being the sole funding and labor to keeping an aging vehicle in safe operating condition will take everything you are willing to give. However, that doesn’t mean there isn’t a hierarchy of craziness to projects.
Starting an old Ford tractor is one end of the spectrum. Far, far way, on the other end, money disappears quickly, parts often don’t exist, and any task requires a mix of jeweler’s precision and brute force. These are the project cars only undertaken by people who have motivations that might not always make sense to the average person. These are not projects that have high monetary ROI, but in a world where restoring cars is done by people who are not in it for the money anyway, these are the cars that require only the bravest DIYers.
Aston Martin Lagonda
With only 645 built over a span of 14 years, the Lagonda is a rare example of a long-running yet low-production car. The Lagonda is also a notoriously complex machine. All cars are complex at some level, but Aston really outdid itself here. The dashboard on the later production cars switched from LED lighting to cathode ray tubes, which was a sizable step backwards at a time in production when bugs are usually getting worked out of models rather than being added. Complicated beyond words and low volume? DIY only if you dare.
Maserati BiTurbo
Project cars often stem from those looking to take an affordable version of a desirable or interesting car and bring it back to life. Deferred maintenance is very common in this segment. If there was ever a car to highlight what happens when maintenance is ignored, it is the BiTurbo. It was a model made to be the affordable option for the marque and thus many went to buyers unprepared for the complications and needs that come with a twin-turbocharged Italian luxury car. Well maintained, these cars thrived, but those that have reached project-car status likely have issues stemming from the empty maintenance log. Catching up on multiple line items at once adds up quickly any way you total it.
Citroën SM
It takes a car so intriguing as the SM for anyone to tolerate a suspension that required coining new terms just to produce it. The hydropneumatic suspension that makes the ride quality unlike anything else requires “suspension spheres,” which function similar to an accumulator and a spring combined. It’s luxury, it’s French, it’s complicated. It’s a perfect storm, and some people just love to chase tornados. Kudos if you are one of them.
Audi Allroad
Before the Safari movement, there was the Audi Allroad; an all-wheel-drive wagon with adjustable air suspension to maximize ground clearance, along with a wider track for good measure. It’s not a true off-roader, but it sure was a lot more than anyone needed just for the street. From its 1999 introduction, the Allroad gained a cult following that continues today. The presence of such loyalty stems from an enthusiastic community of people willing to sort out what seems like near-constant issues in even well-maintained examples. All that work done in the confines of an engineer’s dream—and a mechanic’s nightmare.
Fisker Karma
It’s late-model, it’s a complicated hybrid, and the company has gone bankrupt twice in less than two decades. A Karma might just be the most difficult car to work on—that I’m aware of anyhow. One was once donated to a museum and put on display for six months, only for the battery to die, leaving the car stranded exactly where it was, as there was was no way to disengage the electric parking brake. The museum staff consulted the owners manual but all that amounted to was being told “consult a dealer,” which at the time hadn’t been around for years. The last effort was to try to locate and contact a technician who worked at the dealership before it closed. There is hard-to-find information, and then there is becoming a private investigator just to be able to do even the bare minimum of work on your car.
If you notice a theme on these, it’s that the cars themselves aren’t what makes them bad projects, but rather the other factors that are common to the cars we love but are lacking here: support and knowledge, and parts and their availability. That’s why it takes someone ready for a challenge to take these on. Those who are willing just get to experience more and greater lows, but also the accompanying highs. Kudos to them.
I respect anyone who has a passion, particularly one without a profit motive. Most of these cars don’t speak to me but I have my own demons. If we knew why the cars bring us so much joy and frustration, we might all just get Camaros( arguably my cheapest restoration).
I totally get it…..but man, that Fisker Karma just looks like it should have a screaming V12 in it.
and as a youngster wearing out the latest Car&Driver I always that the Lagonda was super cool.
i never thought the lagonda looked good – bad lines – amazing it was built for over a decade. the maserati was another meh design. never seen the audi wagon. the fisker was always crap – it’s an EV.
the citroen on the other hand is a beauty and wonderfully quirky. I still want one even if they aren’t the easiest to maintain
I might suggest that these cars are reserved for the very brave. The common brave themselves I often encountered in my tenure as a vintage car parts seller. Our shop carried the common and easy to purchase aftermarket goods for Model As, Ts and other vintage Fords as well as tri-five Chevy and streetrod items etc. Many a day I felt bad for the first time customer who walked in telling the tale of the pre-war Dodge, Pontiac, Desoto etc. that they just inherited from Granddad and were pumped up to begin a restoration. Each time I had to give the well practiced speech about a lack of reproduction parts, swap meets and the few items like weatherstrip that might be used as it was fairly universal. A few of these were even more challenging as ours was a Canadian shop and some of these resto warriors had Canada only cars missing emblems etc. Don’t even get me started on the customers reduced nearly to tears regarding replacing the wood in their ’30 Chevy sedan. I have a lot of respect for those that persevered and turned out a beautiful car in the end that stood unique in the line of Model As at the car show. Many wonderful cars of the past were not produced in the volume of the Fords and their designs sometimes lack longevity so not for the first timer.
Do I get a discount if I have one of the cars on the list?
I have 2 lagondas in various states of restoration, the white lhd one runs and drives, the brown RHD is getting its rear axle put back. 😬 My other car was a Citroen DS 20/5 but that was sold before I got into it.
My most unibtanium project has to be restoring the Aston Martin Project Vantage concept and engineering prototype.
Bought not running with black Perspex in place of broken rear 3/4 windows and with the interior in the trunk after being in storage for 18 years.
Everything is bespoke even though it looks like a 4/5 scale version of the vanquish it was productionised into.
Topically I shipped it over to Monterey and showed it at the quail in 2019 😎
Years ago I saw a Lagonda Shooting Brake on BAT. In the comments, someone said they were obsessed with these as a kid.
A fellow commenter replied- “I can understand how you could like one as a kid, it is wild looking, like what Count Dracula would drive if he was a coke dealer…….”
Still one of the funniest things I have ever read.
Head gasket for a ‘72 Vega with 225,000 miles? Scared to even think of it. So far only 1 head bolt came out. Dang.
My wife’s dd and favorite ski hauler is on this list. Kudos to Hardey and Marcel at Hardeys Motorwerks in Parker CO for keeping the Allroad as the favorite in our garage. Words to live by from Hardey- “You’ve got to pay to play” and “it’s cheaper than a new Q7”. It’s actually been pretty reasonable for the bags, etc. Expensive weak link is the Tiptronic…