I bought my first "old car," '41 Plymouth, for $700 in the late eighties. It barely ran. I pulled the engine, took it apart, starting messing around with the interior and gave up. Second car was a '53 Manhattan. I fixed it up well enough to run, pretty well, could have licensed and registered it, but I decided to "restore" it. Again, I was young and really had no idea what a restoration entailed, so I ended up giving that one away in many, many pieces to someone who was going to restore it. Who knows what he did with it in the end? Next, I had a '66 Pontiac. Good runner, rusty body, mediocre upholstery. That one I just kept running and it was a fun driver. I thought about restoring it, but never got around to it--thank goodness! A few years ago I bought a '53 Dragon, decent paint, pretty nice interior, good runner. That one I did right: kept it running, fixed what I needed to, went to shows, took trips, and really enjoyed it. I ended up selling it for almost twice what I bought it for. That was the first time I didn't have any "restoration" plans, and unless I have lots of spare cash lying around I don't know what to do with, I doubt I will ever "restore" another car in the future!