Quote:
Turbo4ever said:
in that case, ANY car could become a classic.
Ummmmm....YEAH, that's often the case!
Typically, it's the people who are not car collectors, who have a real hard time getting their brains wrapped around the notion of seemingly pedestrian cars becoming "classic".... It's more than the original price tag, or the market-demographic, or the rarity..... It's the history, the memories, the significance within the market and within styling/engineering evolution and within civilization overall....
The Ford Model T put the WORLD ON WHEELS.... Yet at the time it was sold new, it was just a common and cheap utensil....
To reserve the word classic only for 6 & 7 figure automotive "royalty" is to miss the entire point of collecting and the entire historic perspective...
Raymond Loewy's 1953 Starlight Coupe mesmerized the automotive world, and forever changed the design direction of modern autos... It was a Studebaker...
The original VW Beetle... I shouldn't have to editorialize that here...
The Ford Mustang, MILLIONS built, and in the top-10 of every classic car list..
Anything that displays what was GOOD at a moment in time, that gives you a window back the past in a positive light, is typically sought and preserved by collectors... The 997 will be remembered as a beauty, and a performance benchmark, making-up ground-kinda-lost with the 996. People will see them 30-40 years from now, and it'll bring back good memories, not bad, nor indifferent...
Furthermore, certain cars that memorialize a NEGATIVE time in automotive history, are also aggressively collected, because it still represents important history, i.e. the Edsel, Tucker, Delorean....
That's all it takes folks... You don't need a flippin' Gullwing Merc or a Duesenberg to own a classic. The 240Z is a classic..., unless your pinky wags prominently...

Think about it, think about ancient clay pots, sitting in museums, PRICELESS, not due to their opulence, but due to their importance and historic tale from that era.
Some of the most historic, invaluable and classic artifacts directly relate to the common man, not the privilaged few...