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Between 705 & 1200 SQ/FT New home and 3 car garage in Melbourne, Australia

Workspaces between 705 and 1200 squarefeet.
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Geoff289

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Got it that your Club Permits rules vary by state, just as they do here. In 1973 the state of Wisconsin started the Collector Car registration and licensing scheme where you would register yourself as a Collector, pay a one-time fee (I recall it was $75), be issued a Collector Number (mine is 157) and then pay a one-time registration fee ($50 at the time) to register a car 20 years old or older. That was the year I purchased my 1953 MG TD so it qualified. I moved out of state for about three years and when I returned to WI, I registered it again by paying the $50 registration fee and could use the same plate number. Now it is 53 years later, and that $175 has allowed me to drive that TD for all those years. A few years later WI restricted driving a collector car to any month other than January. It allowed driving in January if you paid a $5 per day fee for any day you drove it in January! They also increased the registration fee to double the standard rate that is currently $85 per year.
I think I previously mentioned we lived in Manitoba, Canada for a while. We have travelled to all of the Canadian Provinces except Newfoundland. We have stayed in Canmore a few times and have good friends near Calgary at Okotoks. We have only been in Queensland and New South Wales in Australia but hope to travel more in your beautiful country.
I'll be following along with you and your useful mods to the Mustang.
Mike in WI
That's interesting, Mike. Our Club Permit Scheme gives you either a 45 day or 90 permit. If you get the former and use up the days before the year is up, you can pay for the second 45 and keep using it. I always get 90 days and always use more than 45 but so far I haven't been able to use all 90. Most years I get into the 70's or 80's.

A 90 day permit is about $180 and the 45 day one half that. This compares with the full registration we have on the daily drive cars which runs to the best part of a grand. Both the permit and full registration include cover under our no fault third party insurance system.

You should definitely come back down here.
 
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Geoff289

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I opened up the air con kit boxes to verify all the bits were there, then couldn't help myself having a bit of a tinker and fitting the brackets and drier to the condensor. That'll be it for a while, though.

CONDENSOR.jpg
 
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Geoff289

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For context about this apparently random post readers should refer to the suggestion from Kitdoctor on Hewey's thread https://www.garagejournal.com/forum/threads/heweys-1950s-single-garage-cottage.325444/post-11611790

Unfortunately, I have no magnificent photo archive like Bob Heine regularly shares with us and can't provide a photo of the actual car that was mine. However, this one is pretty close to the same, the only visual differences being that mine didn't have the optional water leak, marketed by Ford as a sunroof, or those Globe mags. Mine was built in October 1971 and those Globes didn't become an option until the next year. Mine was the same colour, Electric Blue, with the same black interior.

ford-xy-falcon-gt-6.jpg


Mine came with the five slot wheels Ford used for several years.

five slot.jpg


I should stress that mine and the one in the pic above are just garden variety XY Falcon GT's, not the super desirable XY Falcon GTHO Phase 3, but nonetheless a pretty special car both then and now. Visually the only exterior differences were that the latter had a boot (trunk) lid spoiler and the front spoiler was a bit different. Mechanically, the Phase 3 had solid lifters, a different cam, a 780 cfm carb rather than 600, proper extractors and higher compression on the 351 Clevelands both had. From the factory, the GT was said to have 300 horsepower and the Phase 3 380 but both figures are considered to have been understated by Ford. The Phase 3 was the fastest four door car in the world at the time.

Like Kitdoctor and Hewey, I had coveted one of these since way before I had a licence. Via a large dose of good fortune early in my career, and a disciplined approach to personal financial management and saving that I've always had, I found myself in the remarkable position of being able to buy this outright, no loan, in February 1975 at the age of 19 years and 8 months. It was my second car.

To buy it new in 1971 you would have had to hand over $4,250 AUD to a Ford dealer. I think my memory is correct that I paid a used car dealer $3,195 for it. It had about 35,000 miles on the clock. I recall it revealed a bit of a rattly water pump not long after I got it but otherwise no issues.

It had the standard Top Loader and 9 inch rear end with the standard 3.25 final drive ratio. No power steering or anything else, no aircon, AM radio. They did come with boosted discs on the front but just drums on the back.

I had been working after school and on Saturdays pumping fuel in the days before self service at a local servo (gas station) since I was about 15. While I gave it away after I finished school I still hung around there a lot and sometimes got pressed into service if they were really busy. One of the mechanics there I was friendly with had an XW GT and drag raced it a bit and eventually became a bit sought after as a performance engine builder, unfortunately succumbing to the big C in his late 40's. He helped me boost the engine's performance a bit with some head work, extractors and a bigger carb. I also put the standard 6 inch wide 5 slot wheels in the corner of Dad's garage and replaced them with 7 inch wide ROH mags (which very slightly rubbed on the guards over bumps if I had back seat passengers).

This car was my only car until October 1980 when I traded it on a brand new XD Fairmont wagon with 351 Clevo and FMX auto. Why did I do this? Good question, to which I don't have a good answer. I think I was just wanting to update my ride but I was married by then and, while kids didn't come along until 1984 we were planning a 12 month trip around Australia towing a caravan. At that stage it hadn't really started to become apparent how valuable and desirable these cars were going to become. I think Ford's discontinuation of the availability of cars with the correct number of cylinders, i.e. 8, in 1982 was a bit of a catalyst for this. I can't recall exactly what trade in I got on the XY but have the feeling it was about $2,500. The full price of the Fairmont was something like $12 K.

XD FAIRMONT.jpg
Because a Ford could no longer be had with 8 cylinders I ended up keeping the XD until 1990.

I mentioned that the XY was my second car. Surprisingly enough my first was a Ford too. This was a 1967 XR Fairmont with the 289 that I bought from my Dad a few months before I got my licence when he updated to a new XA. By the time I had a licence the C4 auto in that car had been replaced by a top loader manual because no self-respecting young man would be seen dead driving an auto in those days. Again, my mechanic mate at the servo around the corner from home helped me considerably with that. I was very lucky to chance upon one of the beautiful curved chrome shifters with the reverse lock out used in the XR GT. Over the time I had that car the 2 barrel carb was replaced by a four barrel and extractors added, and some wider chrome steel wheels. Again, not the actual car, but it was like this, colour and all.

16845828458_dd961aed6b_z.jpg

When I bought the XY I sold the XR privately for about the same as I'd paid Dad for it a couple of years earlier, but i didn't tell him that.

Anyway, Kitdoctor, that's my XY GT story. For everyone else, you know where the delete key is.
 

hewey

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Blue Mountains, Australia
Geoff those are some beautiful old Falcons (yes not your actual cars, but I bet you kept them looking that clean all the time). Yes, no one would have foreseen the current values of the cars these days, particularly the GTs. Less so XD wagons :ROFLMAO: (too soon?). I can see how that was the sensible decision at the time though. Thanks for taking the time to share.

Great to hear you got the towball issues sorted on the Beemer. My dailies have been nothing but wagons for the practicality reasons you're experiencing. Even compared to a twincab ute I can fold down the back seats and fit in even longer items. Which combined with our trailer sorts us out for almost everything we want to move.
 

kitdoctor

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Sunshine Coast, Australia
@Geoff289 thanks for coming through. Like wow, that would have been a very nice XY GT and the best of the blues colours. Who can forget Chris Christou's burnout which he's reinacted many times at Summernats.

I had a panel beater friend from Mackay in the early '80s and one of the cars he had was an XY GT replica that he'd painted in the XC colour, Satin Brown.

When I Iived in Rockhampton, there was a Yellow Glow replica in the street I lived in and we used to watch the owner cruise home from work each afternoon.

They were the car to have, so 10-15 years after they appeared young blokes were already building replicas. Fast forward 55 years and replicas are still being built.
 
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Geoff289

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@Geoff289 thanks for coming through. Like wow, that would have been a very nice XY GT and the best of the blues colours. Who can forget Chris Christou's burnout which he's reinacted many times at Summernats.

I had a panel beater friend from Mackay in the early '80s and one of the cars he had was an XY GT replica that he'd painted in the XC colour, Satin Brown.

When I Iived in Rockhampton, there was a Yellow Glow replica in the street I lived in and we used to watch the owner cruise home from work each afternoon.

They were the car to have, so 10-15 years after they appeared young blokes were already building replicas. Fast forward 55 years and replicas are still being built.
Even replicas are commanding stupid money these days.

https://www.seven82motors.com.au/lot/march-29th-2026/xy-gt-replica/
 

Coolabah

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Even replicas are commanding stupid money these days.

https://www.seven82motors.com.au/lot/march-29th-2026/xy-gt-replica/
I would love to show my wife these posts to prove I should never have sold some of my cars that were " taking up too much space, you don't drive them much ".


But, I am actually not that stupid !

Yeh , the stuff you sell at the time is what it is, who knows if you didn't sell at the time the market could have gone way south. Or a plane crashed in your driveway 🤷

Anyway, have you tried to buy parts for some of these cars ? Sheesh !!!
 
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Geoff289

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I would love to show my wife these posts to prove I should never have sold some of my cars that were " taking up too much space, you don't drive them much ".


But, I am actually not that stupid !

Yeh , the stuff you sell at the time is what it is, who knows if you didn't sell at the time the market could have gone way south. Or a plane crashed in your driveway 🤷

Anyway, have you tried to buy parts for some of these cars ? Sheesh !!!
Yeah, I agree with all that.

I don't recall being particularly fussed about moving the GT on at the time. I'd enjoyed it for more than five years and it felt like time to update and we had reasons why a wagon was a good idea. I do remember being a bit tortured about moving into an automatic but there had to be some compromise. A manual Fairmont just couldn't be had. A lower spec Falcon GL wagon could have come with a manual (but they'd gone to weaker single rail gearboxes even behind the Clevos by then).

At the time my wife had one of the last Datsun 1600's (manual) which was a surprisingly good little car for the time, with basically a BMW OHC engine and independent rear suspension. We tickled it up a bit with a single Weber, some pipes and wider wheels. Once the kids came along she used the Fairmont mostly and I used to drive the Datto quite a bit. When we moved to Canberra in 1985 I used to drive it from O'Connor to work in Woden around the very nice route around the lake and it was quite a bit of fun on a road like that.

The Fairmont was the main family car until 1990 when the third child decided to be twins and with four in total something else was needed and we had a couple of Patrols in succession. By that time I had employer provided cars, although initially they were pretty boring ones. It wasn't until i got my first Mustang in 2006 that the fun returned.

I've never had a plane crash in my driveway.
 
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Geoff289

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Just a pic of some boxes of parts but the hydraulic clutch conversion parts covered back in post 1037 have arrived. Always fun opening a delivery.

Leaving aside the shipping cost, this was eight business days since placing the order, from Idaho to suburban Melbourne, It went from Idaho to LA to Japan to Melbourne. Hard to understand why it can take longer than this for something to come from the next suburb.

MDL DELIVERY.jpg
 
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Lyndon

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Geoff

Parts haul looks good (and the logistics business is a mysterious black art - I could educate you, but there are people out there who wouldn't be happy with me).

But what's those ribbons hanging down in the top of the pic (obviously above your work bench).

Lyndon
 
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Geoff289

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Geoff

Parts haul looks good (and the logistics business is a mysterious black art - I could educate you, but there are people out there who wouldn't be happy with me).

But what's those ribbons hanging down in the top of the pic (obviously above your work bench).

Lyndon
About 20 years worth of Mustang Owners Club lanyards from which we hang our membership card around our necks. A new colour is issued each financial year when we renew our membership.

LANYARD 1.jpgLANYARD 3.jpg
 
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Coolabah

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About 20 years worth of Mustang Owners Club lanyards from which we hang our membership card around our necks. A new colour is issued each financial year when we renew our membership.

LANYARD 1.jpgLANYARD 3.jpg
Oh, my bad I thought you must have aced all those cognitive tests ! You know, man , woman, camera....
Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA)
 

hardtop5000

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Ngunnawal country
When we moved to Canberra in 1986 I used to drive it from O'Connor to work in Woden around the very nice route around the lake and it was quite a bit of fun on a road like that.

We might have been near-neighbours. I’m a native of the People’s Republic of O’Connor and lived there for yonks.
 
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Geoff289

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We might have been near-neighbours. I’m a native of the People’s Republic of O’Connor and lived there for yonks.
How 'bout that!

We lived there from mid '85 until the end of '89. My second child was born in Canberra. We rented a place in Dryandra Street opposite Black Mountain reserve which was pretty nice.
 
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