I restored a 1965 fastback mustang in 1999. My father bought me it in 1985. I still have it today. I was way over my head. Took me almost a year do it. Much longer than I anticipated. I spent every weekend in every night in the garage working on it. I showed it in the World of Wheels in Boston. Took best of Paint. Got a 60 inch trophy. I will never sell it. I miss you Dad.
Very few would take on a project like this, fewer still would see it to the end. The dedication to authenticity is truly commendable. My hat is off to you sir, subscribed.
I couldn't even imagine what this must have done to this very fine craftsman's head not to fix all the little boo boo's. After just watching I feel the need to medicate, Bravo for staying true even when it hurts.
Authenticity? They were annually changed one offs even before they retired. Some of them had different trim and handle configurations to show off possible mass production options!
When a car has a history of being repainted, repurposed, and hacked about like that, it must be a nightmare deciding what moment in its history is to be enshrined in a restoration. Beautiful and incredibly thorough work!
Superb craftsmanship and dedication. And it took a lot of willpower to leave the poor fitting panels ! I live in the UK and 54 years ago as a 15 year old l was offered a very early Corvette with the grille headlights for £100 ! I turned it down because the seller (a local scrapman) told me the V8 had been taken out and replaced with a Ford straight 6. Of course , years later it's pretty obvious it was probably the "blue flame " unit ! I thought it was a very attractive car and was , and still remain , frustrated that l never bought it. I did see the Corvette in a custom magazine a number of years later with a huge V8 ! Once again , fabulous work . Thankyou
What a great restrained interview style - asking the right questions and then respectfully keeping quiet to let the man explain, great filming and editing too!
Thank you for noticing what I try my best to do, and that is to ask the right questions and then shut up and record people that have a great story to tell. I learned this through thousands of interviews that I recorded and transcribed researching magazine articles and now to making videos for UA-cam.
It really shows! I was reminded of some of the best interviews, for example Dave Allen of 'Great British Eccentrics'. Thank you for taking the time to reply@@thewriter2549
This was absolutely amazing. As a Corvette admirer since a child, I really enjoyed watching this video. Billy Jay is an artist. An amazing artist. And the history on this car. I love the fact that you can trace the lineage of this car from the 50's to 2022. Thank you for making this video. And thank you Billy Jay for keeping this amazing piece of automobile history alive.
Classic cars are works of art. I always prided myself in what I know but after watching this guy….THIS gentleman (and I have seen others similar to him)… they take it to such another level.
I knew of this car and it had became legend. I thought those couple of black and white photos where all that was left. I am so glad it was found and appreciated for what it was, a part of automotive history.
@@thewriter2549 I only knew about this car from those b/w photos. For years, what happened to it was a mystery. I never knew that this was the yellow Motorama car. Glad that it was kept as a concept car with the differences on each side and the traces of it's yellow origins. Do you know if any of the others Motorama Corvettes still exist ?
WoW! What a remarkable job of research, investigation, documentation and preservation--all within a full (but sensitive to originality) restoration. Thanks for both refreshing and conserving this bit of Corvette history! And thanks to the videographer for recording this commentary!
The way you researched and documented that car through its long journey I found to be amazing and very satisfying.I love to see elite excellence in action.Kudos to you sir.
I thoroughly enjoyed that what a great story and truly a one-of-a-kind ride I can only imagine the hours an hours of work you put into that car great job.
@@thewriter2549.... Fantastic Documentation & Restoration, Jerry. Where is the "Vette" now?.... Just asking as the video shows you loading it into the trailer at the end. I had a 61 (w/rag & removable hard top) in the mid 60s until I went into the service in 67, then a 63 roadster (rag top) after coming home from VN (3 "tours") the last time, which a buddy of mine sold me for the coast of the new HP long block (4 bolt mains,etc) from Chevrolet ($375.00!!), which I built, sold and bought a 63 "Split window" with the Rochester FI for $1,500.!! If my "foresight" was 1/50th of my "hindsight".... I would be a multimillionaire today, if I had kept all the 50s & 60s muscle cars that I owned years ago (coupled with nearly 20 years of drag racing FED's! lol)... and All of them were "cherry"! Watching Barrett-Jackson Auctions brings tears to my eyes & bank accounts!! lol I subscribed to your channel, quite some time ago... love your restorations, and look forward to more. God Bless & protect you, and yours.
@@thewriter2549... Thanks So Much for your rapid reply... you now hold the world record for the fastest response time to one of my comment/questions... by a couple of days, so I think you're "safe" for the rest of time. I can relate to Billy Jay being a "stickler" for "doing things right"... I'm the same way. Longevity and reliability is in paying close attention to all the fine details.... I'm a firm believer in doing things Once, even if it takes whatever amount of time, longer than most people... to do it right. In my younger years I got into metal polishing (still have most all of my equipment) "on the side" and have been in many different restoration projects myself, to that end... everything from motorcycles, steam locomotives, 1880's & 90's pullman railroad coaches, hot rods & show cars to musical instruments.. and written up in a half dozen or so (lost track, been a while now) magazines related to those various types of restoration projects. Anyway... thanks for posting and sharing your fabulous work, once again... am an ardent admirer of others who also take great "pains" to do things correctly, and whatever time it takes to "get it there". PS: Interesting that you restored "TV Tommy's" four engined (Buick), four wheel drive dragster. I remember helping lifting him out of it, back in 1978 (or,79?.. it's been a while), after he made his first pass at SIR (Saskatchewan Int'l Raceway - NHRA track) up in Canada, in the "left lane" after I suggested to him Not to use that lane due to a nasty, nearly lane wide frost heave just past the last mph beam. Considering the rigidity and weight of that beast.... I didn't think it would be a wise move for him (knowing how it hammered myself in my own, much more flexible FED - Front Engine Dragster/rail, during qualifying up there) to use it... but, Tommy, being Tommy... ran it anyway, and payed for it with a re-injuring of his lower back, which sadly put him out of commission for a short while that year, while he healed up... again.
Very intriguing story Jerry! So much detective work went into getting everything right on this car. It turned out fabulous. Your presentation of the subject was very well done as usual - one of the reasons why I subscribe to your channel. Keep up the good work!
My hat is off as I bough deeply to your incredible workmanship Sir Billy of J. Just incredible in every way! It’s a miracle that thing wasn’t lost to a landfill.
This guy is an absolute legend I thought for certain he was doing other stuff Really cool to see him still neck deep in his art. Thanks for the peek inside the workshop Billy Jay!!! And thank you Jerry I find your videos so enthralling
I LOVE how you saved/used everything you could as is - because you should. And I hope people appreciate how much thought and effort you put into the process on every little point. And of course, your work is Stunning! Grand Slam with this project. Totally 100% blown away!
WOW. I was 8 years old when this car was built. What lovely restoration and I love the fact you left all the "witness" evidence so it could be seen. I'd love to anything more about this car if you ever make more about it.
Do what you love and love what you do, I can agree that taking your time made this car come out the right way it was meant to. these days people are in a hurry to get things done, I am so happy that you took your time to restore her to her former glory. can tell your a man that love's doing what he does...cheers!
I love this side of American car culture, it is unique to you guys due to the vast size of the country and your rural locations that enable cars to literally vanish for decades and then reappear much further down the line. That and the space/land a lot of folks have that means they can keep or forget about an old car without the need to free up the space and potentially scrap it.
Very true. I am the sixth owner a fiberglass car from the same time period that was never completed and thankfully has remained untouched (butchered) by the various owners. We are in the process of completing the build, but the first 4 1/2 years of having it were spent researching, interviewing, and chasing leads to identify who designed/built it because that was unknown. We solved that mystery, found the designer/builder and his family and now know that he built seven to ten using various engines/chassis between 1953 and 1955. He lived in Wayne, Michigan and built the cars in a garage on in Livonia, Michigan where he was a teacher and coach. The car I have is the only currently known example, but we continue to search for other examples and the owners/former owners of them, so that we can capture and share their stories too.
Do you mean a 1954 Corvette, or this EXACT car? If you mean this exact car, maybe you can help us trace its early history. We don't know what happened to this car from 1954 to 1974.
So many of us value this treasure of history that transcends automotive history, so meticulously researched, restored, recreated & preserved! ...in 2022!
WOW!!! Most impressive, restoration bar NONE!!! Love your presentation, look forward to seeing more! Godspeed from The Yakima Valley in Washington STATE 🙏🏽🙌🏽
This car is an amazing piece of history. This guy is a restoration beast especially on the one of a kind type of deals. Youre way of telling these stories is so unique and engaging that even cars that wouldn't normally interest me I can totally enjoy digesting. Hello from Mt. Vernon Ohio, home of the Shelby GT350 that you featured some time ago. Keep the great content coming...
Thank you so much! I try my best to beat the network TV shows that have big staffs and budgets. This video took 150 hours to edit and I flew to Indianapolis twice to film it. So, my appreciation for your comment is directly proportional to the work and money I put into a project and that is very high.
My neighbor had Number 8… He found it in a junkyard in the 70’s. The junkyard has Number 3 as well. He almost bought it for 12k. Later he found out that they never found number 1 or 2. He just passed away a few months ago. Rip Bill. He was a good man.
I was 5 when I saw the first Corvette displayed at the 1953 GM Autorama. My dad was a foreman at GM then, so we got a special viewing, and I was thrilled to see the debut of America's original popular sports car! That's likely the event that made me a car nut and eventually a Mechanical Engineer. I recall getting to drive a scaled-down, battery-powered Corvette at that Motorama which I took off through the crowds, my mom scrambling after her naughty five-year-old! I got a ticket.
what a great story, what city? Also, would you look at the phone of the yellow EX-129 on display at the show in this video - you can see Allison signs in background, and discern which Motorama this was - WHERE and possibly WHEN? Please send me an email - jerryheasley@gmail.com
@@thewriter2549 It was the '53 Motorama, one year before the featured 'Vette in this video was used for display. I didn't pay much attention to signs because I was enamored with the shiny 'Vette! That car was and is an amazing American phenomenon. It's weird to know that I was seeing that debut when all that was brand-new, and now it's the resurrection of an historical ghost! Anyway, we attended the Motorama either in our home-town of Grand Rapids or in Flint, as I recall. It wasn't a long drive. Sorry, I don't have email.
@@thewriter2549 I really do appreciate this video and story, it's a shame that after the 70s the American automotive industry just didn't care about capturing the character and attitude of cars anymore. For me cars before 1974 had beauty, character, attitude, an almost spiritual effect when you drive them. It truly was and is a full body and mind experience, you and the car become as one. I was born 30 years to late because the 40s, 50s, 60s, and 70s were the most amazing time for cars. Thank you again.
I'm a retired master mechanic your research and dedication really makes the restoration great My parents lived next door to a neighbor who had a complete 54 when I got back from Vietnam I tried to buy it but he wouldn't sell it because he said his son was going to restore it but his son died in Vietnam. I never knew what happened to it.
Great video, just shows that the electrics in newer cars can be a very large headache even for some specialists. The Turbo R can have a few electric niggles as well that can be very expensive to put right. Glad you found the right part and fixer!
What I appreciate about this guy is his research and attention to detail. One can only imagine what the owner went through to obtain a title for a car that never had a title when constructed, no salvage certificate or any paper trail.
Wow, stunning, the mans an artist, great restoration, great story of an iconic car in the making, how they used to decide what they wanted on the actual car, these days all done on computer. Another great video Jerry.
This range of car designs from the 50's are truly amazing. It's great to see this type of painstaking restoration on what must be one of the most beautiful body designs of the period. It certainly gave the Italian's a run for their money! Great work
I didn't know maybe free style pin striper's but in about 1977 i owned a '76 trans am 455 and i wanted it pin striped and i was introduced to a guy on long Island called little John, i think might've been little Joe but he did the entire car, free hand in a 2 tone burgundy and white, it was just beautiful! You guys are a rare breed!
Fascinating story about this rare car! I love how you go into the weeds! Great story, but even better, great explanation about the restoration of this vehicle! Thank you all for sharing!
One of the best restorations I've ever seen and hope one day I grow my small business to a fraction of this. My favorite Enhancement I've done was to a red 1964. I was very light with the pressure and used a very light polish just to bring back the original color and shine a bit. There was a lot I left alone vs go deeper and my client to this day thanks me. I wanted to go farther but knew I shouldn't in it's condition. It now sits in front of a small business outside Kingman AZ. He had me do it for his girl. And I've enhanced a green boat from the same year. One day I hope to be able to get a hold of a 1950's it's my dream job. Don't care the make I just want to learn what it takes to bring back something that is beyond fixable but able to at least give it some of its original shine back and color. Big ups to you and your passion I'm jelly beyond words. 👏👏👏
Jerry - I met you and spent some time with you years ago during a photo shoot at a friend's shop. Life changed for me and I'm no longer active in the hobby, but really happy that you still are. We need the quality research and in depth coverage you've always done. And finally, an absolute jewel from the era restored exactly as it should have been.
Awesome car! Great story. Bought my 75 vette in 77. Still have it 45 years later. Still cherry with 80,000 miles. Get a lot of thumbs up. Must be the bright orange original paint.😎🇺🇸
A veritable work of art! That you did not change fittings, screws, bolts, to maintain it's originality bodes well for the car. I hope you are sharing your knowledge for others to follow in your footsteps as you rightfully list your name among the professionals who gave us this car.
Wow! What an AMAZING video. The story, the car and the restoration were just incredible. This was like watching a documentary about automobile archeology. Simply loved the whole video, from beginning to end. So cool how he kept the fit and finish the same and how he kept the left side of the car different/same as it was originally. I was a little confused about the ending. I was under the impression that the guy who restored the car, ended up becoming the owner. Am I mistaken. Was he giving it back to the owner at the end?
@@thewriter2549 The painstaking restoration of this museum piece 53//54 CorVette is beyond description. The devotion & attention to this project is phenomenal. Perhaps I missed the explanation during the video...BUT...why was it painted Bermuda Green...rather than yellow; as it was first presented at Motorama? I mean the 1 piece body began life as a "yellow" 1953 "Chevrolet"//Corvette. OK, the '53 body was reused, restyled & mounted on a 1954 frame. But I didn't hear any mention or see a color photo of the 1954 "restyled" CorVette. ...not complaining just wondering. Respectfully, Ben
@@duygukayhanisaskank4915 A large group of GM photos, passed down from GM to George Campbell through the famous author Noland Adams - and you will see these photos spread out over the trunk of S.O.2151, all are black and white. None were color. However, there is no question Harley Earl's Art & Colour Section painted S.O.2151 Bermuda Green. As we said, there is a lot of documentation of Shop Order 2151. Although not necessary, Billy Jay actually photographed Bermuda Green in black and white and compared his photos to the original black and whites and they looked the same. In other words, a black and white of a yellow car looks different than a black and white of a green car.
That is not just a car, it's a piece of History, just think how much the World has changed since that car was first built?, it belongs in a museum. The work that went into rebuilding it is beyond unbelievable, I am so glad someone took the time and effort to do this.
Great coverage of an amazing restoration! Nice work! So it was literally done and being shipped to the owner? Amazing you got to capture it doing that as part of that story. I was a bit surprised to see it not painted yellow until all those factory photos came out showing the green car.
As a kid in at my uncle's gas station I worked on old cars in the mid-70s. It was always fun to work on 50s and 60s vehicles sometimes twenties and thirties and even some model A and T Ford's. Looking at such an iconic machine of Chevrolet ingenuity and iconic piece of machinery and Design restored to its former glory for its prospective iconic history the Corvette name in its infancy is just amazing what a fantastic job artwork and beauty reconstructed in its finest and most respectful way thank you for bringing this to light it made my day!
Now this presentation of a historic car is raw gear head style “just the facts Mam”. So informative I have to watch it again. I own a 1964 Ermine white original all numbers matching corvette coupe that has 32K miles on the clock, and which has been in the family since 1967, with a total of three previous owners before me; I have the documentation. I rely heavily on my copies of Nolan’s Adam’s corvette restoration books when working on my baby. Great video my friend 👍🏼
An unbelievable amount of time went into this car and it shows through beautifully! Very few restorers would be capable or interested in completing a job like this, even for themselves. Curious that the Hemmings ad in the '70s said "rebuilt 6 cylinder". Seems like it still needs a little mechanical attention, its a booger to start...
When you let a car sit for a long time, it is hard to start because you have to fill the float bowls on the carb(s), all the worse if you have more than one carburetor.
Lol, historic rare example of the marquis of the Chevrolet brand, with teething marks, nay birthmarks from it's time in the womb, showing the process of the designs evolution... And "it sounds like a Ford tractor". The balls on this one. 😉
@@AJNpa80 What? It's a very similar design and layout. You would expect it to. That it does, has nothing to do with me. It was made long before I was born. I have only had influence on how a dozen or so motors sound that I have changed induction or exhaust on. What's ballsy about that?
Oh man, I could not have done this, but I am so happy you did. You respected the original intent and function of the car, in all its imperfection and unholy gaps included :) Great work!
This was not just a restoration, this was an archeological restoration! Absolutely beautiful!
I restored a 1965 fastback mustang in 1999. My father bought me it in 1985. I still have it today. I was way over my head. Took me almost a year do it. Much longer than I anticipated. I spent every weekend in every night in the garage working on it. I showed it in the World of Wheels in Boston. Took best of Paint. Got a 60 inch trophy. I will never sell it. I miss you Dad.
Great comment, I miss my dad too although we worked on tractors more than fastbacks, cheers.
I miss my Dad too, he bought me a 3000gt vr4 30 years ago and I still have it.
Great tribute to your dad. I miss my dad too.
What motor is in it
My dad sucked and I dont miss him
Very few would take on a project like this, fewer still would see it to the end. The dedication to authenticity is truly commendable. My hat is off to you sir, subscribed.
I couldn't even imagine what this must have done to this very fine craftsman's head not to fix all the little boo boo's. After just watching I feel the need to medicate, Bravo for staying true even when it hurts.
imagine the dollar signs if it ever goes to auction
Authenticity? They were annually changed one offs even before they retired. Some of them had different trim and handle configurations to show off possible mass production options!
Well you’re subscribing to the narrator not the builder
Its a prototype vette, many people would kill to get the opportunity
When a car has a history of being repainted, repurposed, and hacked about like that, it must be a nightmare deciding what moment in its history is to be enshrined in a restoration. Beautiful and incredibly thorough work!
Motorola showcase duhh.. Pollyanna best of everything like SEMA
Soon as I heard the narration voice, I clicked thumbs down and navigated away. So ridiculously annoying.
I didn't see anything hacked up on it lol just basic decay
@@crazypeoplearoundtheworld304 then you missed a great video. You must not be a corvette guy.
@@chadwickalexanderjr1758 just can't stand the guy. He's really got a horrific personality
That restoration job was a work of art. What amazing talent!
Superb craftsmanship and dedication. And it took a lot of willpower to leave the poor fitting panels ! I live in the UK and 54 years ago as a 15 year old l was offered a very early Corvette with the grille headlights for £100 ! I turned it down because the seller (a local scrapman) told me the V8 had been taken out and replaced with a Ford straight 6. Of course , years later it's pretty obvious it was probably the "blue flame " unit ! I thought it was a very attractive car and was , and still remain , frustrated that l never bought it. I did see the Corvette in a custom magazine a number of years later with a huge V8 ! Once again , fabulous work . Thankyou
Basically this is a holy grail of corvettes. Beautiful restoration
What a great restrained interview style - asking the right questions and then respectfully keeping quiet to let the man explain, great filming and editing too!
Thank you for noticing what I try my best to do, and that is to ask the right questions and then shut up and record people that have a great story to tell. I learned this through thousands of interviews that I recorded and transcribed researching magazine articles and now to making videos for UA-cam.
It really shows! I was reminded of some of the best interviews, for example Dave Allen of 'Great British Eccentrics'. Thank you for taking the time to reply@@thewriter2549
This was absolutely amazing. As a Corvette admirer since a child, I really enjoyed watching this video. Billy Jay is an artist. An amazing artist. And the history on this car. I love the fact that you can trace the lineage of this car from the 50's to 2022. Thank you for making this video. And thank you Billy Jay for keeping this amazing piece of automobile history alive.
Just incredible! I'm speechless about all the research that went into this masterpiece!
Absolute labour of love, stunning. The blues and greens of the 50's really epitomised that era.
Most custom work on cars goes way over actual value. But this being a Harley Earl mock up has to be priceless.
Probably the rarest vett of all time glad it gets its Debye finally after 60+ tears
This is my favorite story of yours so far. The lengths he went to in order to keep as much originality as possible is outstanding.
Classic cars are works of art. I always prided myself in what I know but after watching this guy….THIS gentleman (and I have seen others similar to him)… they take it to such another level.
I knew of this car and it had became legend. I thought those couple of black and white photos where all that was left. I am so glad it was found and appreciated for what it was, a part of automotive history.
Do you know provenance or any clues prior to 1975?
@@thewriter2549 I only knew about this car from those b/w photos. For years, what happened to it was a mystery. I never knew that this was the yellow Motorama car. Glad that it was kept as a concept car with the differences on each side and the traces of it's yellow origins. Do you know if any of the others Motorama Corvettes still exist ?
@@majorneptunejr I don't know, but i'm checking around.
@@thewriter2549 Maybe the Corvette museum in Bowling Green KY would have some info .
@@majorneptunejr I know where they are. Might do something on them if I can find a good story.
If only cars nowadays were made with such gorgeous lines and beauty. They look like art.
Bmw an Mercedes
Thank you for restoring and saving this wonderful car.
WoW! What a remarkable job of research, investigation, documentation and preservation--all within a full (but sensitive to originality) restoration. Thanks for both refreshing and conserving this bit of Corvette history! And thanks to the videographer for recording this commentary!
As brilliant as the car is I'm as impressed by his work on that old safe.
Agree .... That would be my show peace in my living room.
Just incredible, what you've done with this car. Fantastic job.
The way you researched and documented that car through its long journey I found to be amazing and very satisfying.I love to see elite excellence in action.Kudos to you sir.
I thoroughly enjoyed that what a great story and truly a one-of-a-kind ride I can only imagine the hours an hours of work you put into that car great job.
This is awesome! The find, the restoration, the documentation, the story, your clip. Really awesome!
Thanks, and when you work Billy Jay, well, he is a real stickler for doing things right. He is truly an amazing painter, restorer, researcher.
@@thewriter2549.... Fantastic Documentation & Restoration, Jerry. Where is the "Vette" now?.... Just asking as the video shows you loading it into the trailer at the end. I had a 61 (w/rag & removable hard top) in the mid 60s until I went into the service in 67, then a 63 roadster (rag top) after coming home from VN (3 "tours") the last time, which a buddy of mine sold me for the coast of the new HP long block (4 bolt mains,etc) from Chevrolet ($375.00!!), which I built, sold and bought a 63 "Split window" with the Rochester FI for $1,500.!!
If my "foresight" was 1/50th of my "hindsight".... I would be a multimillionaire today, if I had kept all the 50s & 60s muscle cars that I owned years ago (coupled with nearly 20 years of drag racing FED's! lol)... and All of them were "cherry"!
Watching Barrett-Jackson Auctions brings tears to my eyes & bank accounts!! lol
I subscribed to your channel, quite some time ago... love your restorations, and look forward to more. God Bless & protect you, and yours.
@@Romans--bo7br Thanks, and I know how you feel. I sold some too soon, as well. Billy Jay owns the car.
@@thewriter2549... Thanks So Much for your rapid reply... you now hold the world record for the fastest response time to one of my comment/questions... by a couple of days, so I think you're "safe" for the rest of time. I can relate to Billy Jay being a "stickler" for "doing things right"... I'm the same way.
Longevity and reliability is in paying close attention to all the fine details.... I'm a firm believer in doing things Once, even if it takes whatever amount of time, longer than most people... to do it right.
In my younger years I got into metal polishing (still have most all of my equipment) "on the side" and have been in many different restoration projects myself, to that end... everything from motorcycles, steam locomotives, 1880's & 90's pullman railroad coaches, hot rods & show cars to musical instruments.. and written up in a half dozen or so (lost track, been a while now) magazines related to those various types of restoration projects.
Anyway... thanks for posting and sharing your fabulous work, once again... am an ardent admirer of others who also take great "pains" to do things correctly, and whatever time it takes to "get it there".
PS: Interesting that you restored "TV Tommy's" four engined (Buick), four wheel drive dragster.
I remember helping lifting him out of it, back in 1978 (or,79?.. it's been a while), after he made his first pass at SIR (Saskatchewan Int'l Raceway - NHRA track) up in Canada, in the "left lane" after I suggested to him Not to use that lane due to a nasty, nearly lane wide frost heave just past the last mph beam.
Considering the rigidity and weight of that beast.... I didn't think it would be a wise move for him (knowing how it hammered myself in my own, much more flexible FED - Front Engine Dragster/rail, during qualifying up there) to use it... but, Tommy, being Tommy... ran it anyway, and payed for it with a re-injuring of his lower back, which sadly put him out of commission for a short while that year, while he healed up... again.
Very intriguing story Jerry! So much detective work went into getting everything right on this car. It turned out fabulous. Your presentation of the subject was very well done as usual - one of the reasons why I subscribe to your channel. Keep up the good work!
Somebody stole my name.
@@TheFirstStater I'm kind of fond of it! Lol
@@billking772 ‘we wuz kangz’ 😁
I’m really proud of my brother in law!
@@jacquelynkheasley8614 I'm not impressed with my brother's wife.
My hat is off as I bough deeply to your incredible workmanship Sir Billy of J.
Just incredible in every way!
It’s a miracle that thing wasn’t lost to a landfill.
Billy Jay is a living legend in the automotive world. He is trusted with the most valuable cars.
5 % remains; I need my pinstripes re-done.
white - green - orange - black
It's a miracle the car ended up in your hands , great job on the restoration my friend.
This guy is an absolute legend
I thought for certain he was doing other stuff
Really cool to see him still neck deep in his art.
Thanks for the peek inside the workshop Billy Jay!!!
And thank you Jerry
I find your videos so enthralling
Another resurrection of automotive cornerstone of the most famous car ever built. Very nice video.
And well said, one of the cornerstones.
I LOVE how you saved/used everything you could as is - because you should. And I hope people appreciate how much thought and effort you put into the process on every little point. And of course, your work is Stunning! Grand Slam with this project. Totally 100% blown away!
Easily a $1,000,000 ++ Corvette!
Incredible Craftsmanship on this Magnificent Restoration!
Wow, what a car, what a story. I was 3 yrs old in Detroit in those days.
WOW. I was 8 years old when this car was built. What lovely restoration and I love the fact you left all the "witness" evidence so it could be seen. I'd love to anything more about this car if you ever make more about it.
Do what you love and love what you do, I can agree that taking your time made this car come out the right way it was meant to. these days people are in a hurry to get things done, I am so happy that you took your time to restore her to her former glory. can tell your a man that love's doing what he does...cheers!
I love this side of American car culture, it is unique to you guys due to the vast size of the country and your rural locations that enable cars to literally vanish for decades and then reappear much further down the line. That and the space/land a lot of folks have that means they can keep or forget about an old car without the need to free up the space and potentially scrap it.
Not many cars can change hands that many times and make it to restoration. That’s great this car was kept alive to get it to this point.
Very true. I am the sixth owner a fiberglass car from the same time period that was never completed and thankfully has remained untouched (butchered) by the various owners. We are in the process of completing the build, but the first 4 1/2 years of having it were spent researching, interviewing, and chasing leads to identify who designed/built it because that was unknown.
We solved that mystery, found the designer/builder and his family and now know that he built seven to ten using various engines/chassis between 1953 and 1955. He lived in Wayne, Michigan and built the cars in a garage on in Livonia, Michigan where he was a teacher and coach. The car I have is the only currently known example, but we continue to search for other examples and the owners/former owners of them, so that we can capture and share their stories too.
@@ward7voter111 that’s nice. I’d love to see the progress of your build.
Thanks again Jerry for bringing the stories to us. Absolutely gem here. Much appreciated!
Fastback corvair was a really beautiful car.
I like the index you left in the trunk.
No one will deny it roots thanks to you
I do too and think other such restorations should do this. Makes the car so much more interesting.
Fascinating story! Thanks for posting! Great looking Vette-Love the gills and hood scoop and other differences in the body...
My mom rode in that car as homecoming queen in 1955 in a homecoming parade :) ...thank you Jerry, what an awesome car story
Do you mean a 1954 Corvette, or this EXACT car? If you mean this exact car, maybe you can help us trace its early history. We don't know what happened to this car from 1954 to 1974.
Great story , and Greater Restoration ! 👌
So many of us value this treasure of history that transcends automotive history, so meticulously researched, restored, recreated & preserved! ...in 2022!
What a story!! What an exhaust note!! That would make a wonderful display at the National Roadster Show. Great job on the restoration.
Good job, really nice to see a car that is not over restored. This is tastefully restored and respects the original history
WOW!!! Most impressive, restoration bar NONE!!! Love your presentation, look forward to seeing more! Godspeed from The Yakima Valley in Washington STATE 🙏🏽🙌🏽
Totally Awesome Rebuild, ONE IN A MILLION , Thanks for Sharing, this man is a True ARTIST!!!!
Totally Rad Man! My favorite part was seeing your artistic application to bring back original features, even when Tracer sneezed 🐶.
yes, we had to bless the little doggie
I have never really liked the early Corvettes, but his level of enthusiasm and depth of knowledge brought the car to life, and it became beautiful.
OMG, I can imagine the stress of Not "fixing" the imperfections. 👍
I commend him for that, as he restored that car to exactly how it was made, not how many would say it SHOULD have been made.
I like where you kept the inconsistencies on each side, it is a wonderful artifact thank you, Bob Ordewald, Staunton Virginia
This car is an amazing piece of history. This guy is a restoration beast especially on the one of a kind type of deals. Youre way of telling these stories is so unique and engaging that even cars that wouldn't normally interest me I can totally enjoy digesting. Hello from Mt. Vernon Ohio, home of the Shelby GT350 that you featured some time ago. Keep the great content coming...
I absolutely love your videos and editing style and voiceovers! These videos are my comfort content when I feel like crap.
Thank you so much! I try my best to beat the network TV shows that have big staffs and budgets. This video took 150 hours to edit and I flew to Indianapolis twice to film it. So, my appreciation for your comment is directly proportional to the work and money I put into a project and that is very high.
My neighbor had Number 8…
He found it in a junkyard in the 70’s. The junkyard has Number 3 as well. He almost bought it for 12k. Later he found out that they never found number 1 or 2. He just passed away a few months ago. Rip Bill. He was a good man.
#1 was in the GM Museum in Bowling Green KY and #2 was owned by the then CEO
Wow! How lucky. Sorry he passed away though. I hope we will be able to drive in heaven!
That Boss engine was amazing. Your devotion to this project is amazing.
I was 5 when I saw the first Corvette displayed at the 1953 GM Autorama. My dad was a foreman at GM then, so we got a special viewing, and I was thrilled to see the debut of America's original popular sports car! That's likely the event that made me a car nut and eventually a Mechanical Engineer. I recall getting to drive a scaled-down, battery-powered Corvette at that Motorama which I took off through the crowds, my mom scrambling after her naughty five-year-old! I got a ticket.
what a great story, what city? Also, would you look at the phone of the yellow EX-129 on display at the show in this video - you can see Allison signs in background, and discern which Motorama this was - WHERE and possibly WHEN? Please send me an email - jerryheasley@gmail.com
@@thewriter2549 It was the '53 Motorama, one year before the featured 'Vette in this video was used for display. I didn't pay much attention to signs because I was enamored with the shiny 'Vette! That car was and is an amazing American phenomenon. It's weird to know that I was seeing that debut when all that was brand-new, and now it's the resurrection of an historical ghost!
Anyway, we attended the Motorama either in our home-town of Grand Rapids or in Flint, as I recall. It wasn't a long drive. Sorry, I don't have email.
@@SIMKINETICS but you need an email for a UA-cam account 🙃
Thank you for the forensic examination. A thing of beauty
Thanks for bringing this up. I think more history cars should be restored this way. I bet you would agree.
what an amazing story and amazing car. the start of American Sports cars, love it. Thank you for the journey.
now that you mention it, yes, the start for America
@@thewriter2549 I really do appreciate this video and story, it's a shame that after the 70s the American automotive industry just didn't care about capturing the character and attitude of cars anymore. For me cars before 1974 had beauty, character, attitude, an almost spiritual effect when you drive them. It truly was and is a full body and mind experience, you and the car become as one. I was born 30 years to late because the 40s, 50s, 60s, and 70s were the most amazing time for cars. Thank you again.
Great video.
I have never been a fan of Corvette, will never be.
True American automotive history and an absolute treasure.
Love it Jerry. Another fantastic story. Thank you!
Glad you enjoyed it - from Down Under!
I'm a retired master mechanic your research and dedication really makes the restoration great My parents lived next door to a neighbor who had a complete 54 when I got back from Vietnam I tried to buy it but he wouldn't sell it because he said his son was going to restore it but his son died in Vietnam. I never knew what happened to it.
Lots of good and hard work went into this car you are one lucky guy , to me this car is priceless 👌
Thanks 👍
I really appreciate that Billy, as much as he wanted to do a super clean resto, he kept as much of the original dna as possible.
Great video, just shows that the electrics in newer cars can be a very large headache even for some specialists.
The Turbo R can have a few electric niggles as well that can be very expensive to put right.
Glad you found the right part and fixer!
What I appreciate about this guy is his research and attention to detail. One can only imagine what the owner went through to obtain a title for a car that never had a title when constructed, no salvage certificate or any paper trail.
Wow, stunning, the mans an artist, great restoration, great story of an iconic car in the making, how they used to decide what they wanted on the actual car, these days all done on computer. Another great video Jerry.
Talent like Billy Jay needs to be recognized nationally, thanks, yes.
Great presentation. The slow reveal was charming.
Thank you kindly!
This range of car designs from the 50's are truly amazing. It's great to see this type of painstaking restoration on what must be one of the most beautiful body designs of the period. It certainly gave the Italian's a run for their money! Great work
I didn't know maybe free style pin striper's but in about 1977 i owned a '76 trans am 455 and i wanted it pin striped and i was introduced to a guy on long Island called little John, i think might've been little Joe but he did the entire car, free hand in a 2 tone burgundy and white, it was just beautiful! You guys are a rare breed!
Fascinating story about this rare car! I love how you go into the weeds! Great story, but even better, great explanation about the restoration of this vehicle! Thank you all for sharing!
Thanks again Pete
One of the best restorations I've ever seen and hope one day I grow my small business to a fraction of this. My favorite Enhancement I've done was to a red 1964. I was very light with the pressure and used a very light polish just to bring back the original color and shine a bit. There was a lot I left alone vs go deeper and my client to this day thanks me. I wanted to go farther but knew I shouldn't in it's condition. It now sits in front of a small business outside Kingman AZ. He had me do it for his girl. And I've enhanced a green boat from the same year. One day I hope to be able to get a hold of a 1950's it's my dream job. Don't care the make I just want to learn what it takes to bring back something that is beyond fixable but able to at least give it some of its original shine back and color. Big ups to you and your passion I'm jelly beyond words. 👏👏👏
Amazing that it didn't get hot rodded all those years. Bravo!
Jerry - I met you and spent some time with you years ago during a photo shoot at a friend's shop. Life changed for me and I'm no longer active in the hobby, but really happy that you still are. We need the quality research and in depth coverage you've always done. And finally, an absolute jewel from the era restored exactly as it should have been.
What car was that? I'm sure I would recall the shoot and the people.
Those corvette prototypes look awesome.
Awesome car! Great story. Bought my 75 vette in 77. Still have it 45 years later. Still cherry with 80,000 miles. Get a lot of thumbs up. Must be the bright orange original paint.😎🇺🇸
Great story. Great history on the car. It definitely went to the right man. Job well done.
Great Story and a Happy ending for this one of a kind Corvette! This builder should be Proud of himself!
Soo very cool, an amazing piece of history!!!! Great job on the restoration, thank you for saving her.
Best 1/2 hour I've spent in years lol. My hat off to this gentleman! Very artistic and creative man with phenomenal skills!
Such an amazing car and talented person to put it back together Beautiful car looking forward to seeing more of your work,the safe is outstanding
A veritable work of art! That you did not change fittings, screws, bolts, to maintain it's originality bodes well for the car. I hope you are sharing your knowledge for others to follow in your footsteps as you rightfully list your name among the professionals who gave us this car.
Wow! What an AMAZING video. The story, the car and the restoration were just incredible. This was like watching a documentary about automobile archeology. Simply loved the whole video, from beginning to end. So cool how he kept the fit and finish the same and how he kept the left side of the car different/same as it was originally. I was a little confused about the ending. I was under the impression that the guy who restored the car, ended up becoming the owner. Am I mistaken. Was he giving it back to the owner at the end?
no, you are correct, he became owner
@@thewriter2549 The painstaking restoration of this museum piece 53//54
CorVette is beyond description. The devotion & attention to this project is phenomenal.
Perhaps I missed the explanation during the video...BUT...why was it painted Bermuda Green...rather than yellow; as it was first presented at Motorama?
I mean the 1 piece body began life as a "yellow" 1953 "Chevrolet"//Corvette.
OK, the '53 body was reused, restyled & mounted on a 1954 frame. But I didn't
hear any mention or see a color photo of the 1954 "restyled" CorVette.
...not complaining just wondering.
Respectfully,
Ben
@@duygukayhanisaskank4915 A large group of GM photos, passed down from GM to George Campbell through the famous author Noland Adams - and you will see these photos spread out over the trunk of S.O.2151, all are black and white. None were color. However, there is no question Harley Earl's Art & Colour Section painted S.O.2151 Bermuda Green. As we said, there is a lot of documentation of Shop Order 2151. Although not necessary, Billy Jay actually photographed Bermuda Green in black and white and compared his photos to the original black and whites and they looked the same. In other words, a black and white of a yellow car looks different than a black and white of a green car.
That is not just a car, it's a piece of History, just think how much the World has changed since that car was first built?, it belongs in a museum. The work that went into rebuilding it is beyond unbelievable, I am so glad someone took the time and effort to do this.
Great coverage of an amazing restoration! Nice work! So it was literally done and being shipped to the owner? Amazing you got to capture it doing that as part of that story. I was a bit surprised to see it not painted yellow until all those factory photos came out showing the green car.
Wow! What a big chunk of car history!!! Bravo!
Amazing talent! The car looks great.
I enjoyed watching this episode. Reminds me if hanging out with my Dad watching. classic car shows. Thank you fir sharing. I want fi see more
great history, great documentation, great video, a job well done !
As a kid in at my uncle's gas station I worked on old cars in the mid-70s. It was always fun to work on 50s and 60s vehicles sometimes twenties and thirties and even some model A and T Ford's. Looking at such an iconic machine of Chevrolet ingenuity and iconic piece of machinery and Design restored to its former glory for its prospective iconic history the Corvette name in its infancy is just amazing what a fantastic job artwork and beauty reconstructed in its finest and most respectful way thank you for bringing this to light it made my day!
That shooting break looks sick
Yes it does. They should have made it.
That makes my blood flow like a mad river raging!!! OUT FREAKIN STANDING STORY!!!!
Love it! 👏Bravo!
Thank you! 😊
Now this presentation of a historic car is raw gear head style “just the facts Mam”. So informative I have to watch it again.
I own a 1964 Ermine white original all numbers matching corvette coupe that has 32K miles on the clock, and which has been in the family since 1967, with a total of three previous owners before me; I have the documentation.
I rely heavily on my copies of Nolan’s Adam’s corvette restoration books when working on my baby.
Great video my friend 👍🏼
An unbelievable amount of time went into this car and it shows through beautifully! Very few restorers would be capable or interested in completing a job like this, even for themselves. Curious that the Hemmings ad in the '70s said "rebuilt 6 cylinder". Seems like it still needs a little mechanical attention, its a booger to start...
He probably drives it to empty, clearing varnish before it can form.
When you let a car sit for a long time, it is hard to start because you have to fill the float bowls on the carb(s), all the worse if you have more than one carburetor.
Hey Jerry this was fun to watch. Thanks for rescuing this car and thanks for restoring it
Wow, with that straight 6 it really sounds like an old ford tractor.
That is amazing attention to detail. Incredible.
Lol, historic rare example of the marquis of the Chevrolet brand, with teething marks, nay birthmarks from it's time in the womb, showing the process of the designs evolution... And "it sounds like a Ford tractor". The balls on this one.
😉
@@AJNpa80 What? It's a very similar design and layout. You would expect it to. That it does, has nothing to do with me. It was made long before I was born. I have only had influence on how a dozen or so motors sound that I have changed induction or exhaust on. What's ballsy about that?
Oh man, I could not have done this, but I am so happy you did. You respected the original intent and function of the car, in all its imperfection and unholy gaps included :) Great work!
That car needs to be in a Musium for the public to see. Sell it
What a labor of love. Congratulations on such a fine example of real America style and engineering.