I started picking through my extras and found these thoughts running through my head.

There is where you are wrong.. you don't buy new parts FOR the beater... but you buy new parts for the good ones that just happen to have the lesser quality parts the beater needsJimbo302 wrote:I know I have seen several others go this route. Gather up all the spares and second string parts you have and create a runner. My question is, just how effective is that? I can see myself ordering a ton of new parts to build a beater that never was and spending too much in the end.
I started picking through my extras and found these thoughts running through my head.
This is what I was thinking.RC10th wrote:You end up spending lots more then buying something complete. I have come to realize if it needs a tranny, shocks or any major parts it's not going to end up cheap.
I don't know... I would probably say 'when you have to buy a part to replace a perfectly serviceable part just to make it look better would be more of a money pit'... If you bust your last a arm and have to buy new ones just to run it is not really a restorctenracer wrote:I have built up beaters using scrap parts . Bent tubs , stripped out threads on the nylon parts , and all that other scrap the should go in the trash. When you have to buy a part for a beater they become resto projects or money pits. Beaters are fun to run .
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