[ QUOTE ]
Reid I hope you are enjoying this.
[/ QUOTE ]
Yes, thanks, I am. I think that it's a discussion worth having, and a subject worth thinking about.
I am leaning towards concluding that the labels are not very meaningful. Professionals can do wonderful or awful jobs of restoring cars. So can amateurs. The "professional" restorations seen at Barrett-Jackson are very nice cars, and would indeed probably achieve "Gold" in Austin-Healey Concours judging, but they do vary slightly, presumably for the sake of attracting and more and richer bidders. That's completely understandable.
And if a Healey had shiny dash pots and chrome wire wheels, I hardly think that throws it into the category of over-restored or non-concours. A Healey can have all kinds of deviations from the Concours Guidelines and still achieve Gold certification. "Gold" does not mean perfect or even "completely original." It means at least 95 percent original/perfect, and I estimate that most of the Healeys at the auction fell into that category.
How about you? Enjoying the discussion?
/ubbthreads/images/graemlins/cheers.gif