Well, son of a gun, I have not been on Ebay in a while so I missed seeing this one. I see that this sale has ended in a no sale but this was formerly my car from 2004 to 2008. This 1951 Golden Dragon has been owned by various club members since the early 1980s when it was first discovered by Gene Meyer in a barn in Nebraska. He said it was sold new in Broken Bow, NB. The interior is all original and has survived amazingly well. I first saw it in 1999 in Aiken, GA with Ron Meditz who had plans to restore it but it sat for awhile as Ron was dealing with health issues. Then Ray Frazier bought it from Ron and put a new vinyl top on it (note in the pics it is not original dragon vinyl but early 1950s Lincoln Capri vinyl). Ray also got it running and did a nice job on the body work and repaint. He took it to the 2000 KFOCI National Meet where I saw it after Ray restored it. Then Ray sold it back to Gene Meyer, who I got it from in 2004. I had shown it at the big Ypsilanti Orphan car show as well as many local shows and also took it to the big Gilmore Red Barn show where a bunch of KF cars gathered in 2007. I sold it in April of 2008 to a guy in New Jersey but he then had health issues and must have sold it to the guy in PA who apparently listed in on Ebay. I really enjoyed that car and got a lot of looks and admirers locally. Those marks on the drip cap are from a visor which actually came with the car when I got it. I put it in the trunk when I sold it, having never put it on the car, but it was previously on the car when Bruce Feurstein owned it. After I first got the Dragon, I striped down the engine bay and did a repaint and touch-up to improve everything under the hood and also I repainted the yellow instrument cowl and got a nearly new instrument cluster which cost me a lot but made the dash look great. My only periodic issues were the typical ones from a car that sat along time previously and needed a thorough fuel system restoration, which periodically gobbled up fuel pump diaphragms, but for the most part I enjoyed it a lot locally. Too bad that it did not find a buyer because it would not take a lot to make it show quality. Attached is a picture of it in 2005 in front of Saffords general store which opened in 1906. This was on the 2006 KFOCI calendar.