Joshua Keith
Full Access Member
- Joined
- Aug 28, 2019
- Posts
- 380
- Reaction score
- 552
- Location
- Memphis
- First Name
- Joshua
- Truck Year
- 1985
- Truck Model
- K10
- Engine Size
- 350
@Kasey 1977 K10 You guess on mine, I’ll take a shot at yours!
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More than mine@Kasey 1977 K10 You guess on mine, I’ll take a shot at yours!
Maybe $7-8k to the right buyer. Based on how clean it is.Thinking about selling my 87 R10 long bed 2wd in AL. Highly original. My family bought it from the original owner's 92 year old farmer estate sale. Local AL truck with 110,000 miles. I've owned about 4 years and put about 8,000 miles on it. Straight truck with no rust. Great interior. 5.8L TBI. Electric windows and door lock, digital stereo with cassette, carpet door panels. Truck runs and shifts great. Original owner local paperwork and key chain from local dealer. This is what I've done to the truck:
- Complete new air conditioning system
- New tires
- New shocks, belts, hoses, battery, thermostat, carpet, new exhaust system including cat from header back
Known issues:
- Dual tank but only one tank works. Needs sending unit in second tank
- Small oil leak
- Blue puff smoke every once in a while on cold start up
- Paint clear coat on hood, cab, side is gone, but it looks cool
- Crack in middle of dash
WHATS IT WORTH ?
I too appreciate an original paint and disagree with @Grit dog on the point about the paint. Not saying he’s wrong, but I prefer seeing original paint over a new paint job. I don’t care for new paint and place no value on it when looking at old vehicles. What new paint actually does, is make me wonder what they’re hiding. Then I want to get the magnet out and start knocking about on the entire vehicle. Whereas, original paint is honest—if you can, in fact, determine it is original and now just a really old respray.@shinkle I love the oem rough paint job! I’d pay 12k for that
Well it's a decent truck. The worth if you are just asking it's worth, no sentimental value! @Grit dog is pretty on the money. It has a lot going for it, and it has somethings that hurt it.Thinking about selling my 87 R10 long bed 2wd in AL. Highly original. My family bought it from the original owner's 92 year old farmer estate sale. Local AL truck with 110,000 miles. I've owned about 4 years and put about 8,000 miles on it. Straight truck with no rust. Great interior. 5.8L TBI. Electric windows and door lock, digital stereo with cassette, carpet door panels. Truck runs and shifts great. Original owner local paperwork and key chain from local dealer. This is what I've done to the truck:
- Complete new air conditioning system
- New tires
- New shocks, belts, hoses, battery, thermostat, carpet, new exhaust system including cat from header back
Known issues:
- Dual tank but only one tank works. Needs sending unit in second tank
- Small oil leak
- Blue puff smoke every once in a while on cold start up
- Paint clear coat on hood, cab, side is gone, but it looks cool
- Crack in middle of dash
WHATS IT WORTH ?
OP, you should sell it to this guy. He’s offering you considerably more than you’ll reasonably get for it.@shinkle I love the oem rough paint job! I’d pay 12k for that
I agree totally, if one is buying a project/builder, seeing only original paint or what’s left of it is a huge plus.I too appreciate an original paint and disagree with @Grit dog on the point about the paint. Not saying he’s wrong, but I prefer seeing original paint over a new paint job. I don’t care for new paint and place no value on it when looking at old vehicles. What new paint actually does, is make me wonder what they’re hiding. Then I want to get the magnet out and start knocking about on the entire vehicle. Whereas, original paint is honest—if you can, in fact, determine it is original and now just a really old respray.
@shinkle ‘s truck looks to be a very nice, solid truck that most of us would be happy to have, regardless of the fun I had about the 5.8L.
I agree totally, if one is buying a project/builder, seeing only original paint or what’s left of it is a huge plus.
But it’s only going to net you a little more money than something that still needs paint even though it may have been repainted previously, and a heck of a lot less than a truck with a good new(er) paint job.
^^^^THIS^^^It all depends. Most trucks with shiny new paint that pictures well, don't actually have nice paint. Sure, there's trucks that actually DO have really nice paint and bodywork, but they tend to be show trucks and demand 30, 40, 50K or more. But all (well, most) the other trucks can be picked apart, all over the body. If you want to fix it all and have actually nice paint, you are looking at redoing the whole truck usually, and then you uncover all the crap that the PO or hired shop did to it. Why pay more for a truck with newer paint if you won't be happy with it and end up repainting it anyway?
Boy oh boy, thanks for the compliment…
Thanks for the input. I've definitely thought about keeping it. Its just a great running fun truck to drive, go fishing, hunting, haul stuff around. The interior is really nice and its straight and rust free.Well it's a decent truck. The worth if you are just asking it's worth, no sentimental value! @Grit dog is pretty on the money. It has a lot going for it, and it has somethings that hurt it.
First thing not many people care about who has owned in the past anymore.
Second it's a 2wd longbed, everyone that is in the market to buy a Squarebody wants a shortbed, I'm sure you know this.
Third the paint all thou it's original most people that are going to pay top dollar is not going to want to buy it, than turn around and spend 10k on a paint job.
Forth it being all stock that appeals to some people, and some would turn their nose up at it.
Fifth you are in a country state most people looking to buy a truck they will have to fix up wants a 4x4.
Sixth It does seem like it has a nice interior, the dash pad will ding you a few hundred bucks.
Seventh You will have people come over and look at it that will pi$$ you off so bad you want to shot them. They will tell you everything that is wrong with it so they can get it cheaper.
My advice if you can keep it... is keep it. Enjoy the hell out of it, and pass it to one of your kids, or a family member that understands what it is. If you are in need of selling it, sell it up in the N.E. They don't have rust free Squarebodies up there. They pay top dollar for them, and you tell them they arrange the shipping for it. If someone in the N.E. buys it tell them you want half to hold it, and put a time frame on it. Don't give them six months to hold it. The other half when they want to pick it up. If they have a haul company come get it, make sure you have your money before it leaves you.