My 66 Mustang is in the garage at home. It has lots of dust on the outside, but you can eat off the engine and wear a grooms tux in the interior and not worry about getting it dirty.
My 99 Dodge 4x4 is home in the driveway. I do need to clean the wheels and give it a wax job, but still wouldn't be ashamed to pick up mom for church with it.
My 72 Chev 4x4 is parked in the back with my flatbed trailer attached. The bed is clean, but I have some tools on the passenger side of the floor. Still has dust on the dash and interior (probably mud now) from last hunting trip. There are a few holes in the rubber floor mats and I do have an oil leak on the right valve cover. But, I don't care.
I bought that 72 Chev 10 years ago for hunting. It has been everywhere, 198,000 miles, starts when I turn the key and gets me there and back. That 99 Dodge has just over 100,000 miles, has a dash light of some kind come on every other month, and needs constant care and attention. The 66 mustang would take me half hour to ready to show it in a car show.
Each of my vehicles, just like each of my guns, has it's own place. You can't do anything to hurt that 72. Wont looking any better or worse. Put a dent in my 99 dodge, I may swear at you and make you pay to fix it. Put a little scratch on my mustang and i will rip your....out and ....throw ......and beat.....to....
My Superblack was purchased to shoot. It looks it. My Buckeye 32-20 is in a box in the safe and I have never chambered a round in it. It is new and looks new.
So....if your Super Blackhawk is to you, like my mustang is to me, I humbly appologize, again, for teasing you.
If your Super Blackhawk is to you, like mine is to me, lets grab a few hundred rounds of ammo, jump in the old 72, and head out to the range to bang some caps.
Again, sorry if I teased on the wrong subject.
Steve
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