e-mail:
password:
register
|
login
› BRIGHTON
SEARCH YOUR HUB:
GO
advanced search
Loading Ad
STORIES
EVENTS
BLOGS
FOR SALE
YELLOW PAGES
PHOTOS
Local Info ›
Home ›
Help ›
Visit Other Hubs:
YourHub.com
Arvada
Aurora
Boulder
Brighton
Broomfield
Castle Pines
Castle Rock
Centennial
Cherry Hills Village
Commerce City
Conifer
Denver
Denver North
Denver South
Edgewater
Englewood
Erie
Evergreen
Federal Heights
Franktown
Glendale
Golden
Green Valley Ranch
Greenwood Village
Highlands Ranch
Lafayette
Lakewood
Littleton
Lone Tree
Longmont
Louisville and Superior
Montbello
Morrison
nights
Niwot
Northglenn
Parker
Roxborough
Sheridan
Thornton
TriTowns
Westminster
Wheat Ridge
ADVERTISEMENT
Loading Tower
RECENT STORIES
Exploring CO: Summer fun tips for fathers and kids
(
Be There for Your Kids
)
The RMYC help families have safer homes
(
The Rocky Mountain Youth Clinics
)
Give Blood this Summer, It's Already Inside You
(
Reggie Tomac
)
Refuge bursts onto social media scene
(
Claire Haupt
)
Dickinson voted 2009 Indulge for CASA Art Winner
(
CASA of Adams and Broomfield Counties
)
share a story
|
more postings
»
YourHub.com
\\
Brighton
\\
Stories
\\
Education
\\
School News
Cobra kit car donated to BHS auto shop
e-mail to a friend
|
print this
|
link to this
NEXT ›
‹ PREVIOUS
Contributed by:
District 27J
on 11/9/2007
A 1967 Cobra 427: It can be the stuff a high school boy's dreams are made of ... even if it arrives as a kit car still in need of a few essential ingredients. And even if the final product won't be his.
Brighton High School students who are working to build the car see the vision.
Volunteering on their own time before and after school and between other extra-curricular activities, a handful of BHS auto shop students are putting the '67 Cobra 427 together.
The goal: To sell the completed car to buy another kit that the auto-shop students can build to sell to buy another kit to build to sell ... and so on and so on. Bottom line: All the while, providing an exceptional learning opportunity to the students.
The unexpected project is the result of a gift from Peggy Schmidt, said shop teacher Phill Kehl. Peggy said she inherited the kit from her brother, Larry Reynolds, who passed away in August.
A post office maintenance mechanic by day, automotive mechanics was her brother's passion. He invested a lot of time and money in automotive parts, she said. The Cobra was to be his first complete car.
When it became time to decide what to do with the inherited kit, Peggy said she and her husband, David, debated about storing it or selling it - but asked themselves, "what if the buyer doesn't finish it either?"
They decided to donate it to Brighton High School so the students would have something more to work on than just old cars that needed to be repaired. "I know Larry would be glad the students are building the car," Peggy said.
The Schmidts' daughter, son and now a granddaughter are BHS graduates, so the gift to the high school seems natural.
"The family thought it would be neat if BHS students would finish the project," said teacher Kehl. As he has its course planned, it's a legacy that will keep on giving.
"With a current value of around $18,000, the kit is an unfinished body and frame," Kehl said. "The value of a completed Cobra kit car varies on options and details and the original kit maker." On the low side, he estimates the completed value at just over $25,000 -- on the high side it could be around $60,000.
There's a lot to be done - and to be donated - to get the car from Point A to Built.
Parts that are still needed include wheels, a 460 or 429 Ford engine, transmission adapter and shifter, bumpers, steering wheel, and some trim pieces, Kehl said.
The students will be looking for donations from local and national companies to complete the car. And the help has already started coming in, he said. Truck Parts Specialists has donated labor and parts for a posi-traction rear differential and will build the custom drive shaft.
"To complete the car body," Kehl said, "pieces need to be fitted and trimmed, the body fitted to the chassis, assembly and installation of an engine and transmission, and complete electrical wiring installed."
"It is a great opportunity for these students (who are members of SkillsUSA) to learn and be involved in the building of this vehicle," Kehl said.
On an October afternoon, two students gingerly scraped and cleaned a gasket in place on the chassis. Asked what they thought when they learned of the gift to the school, both said, "Sweet!"
Ryan Krizmanic, who is a senior, said he doesn't think he will see the finished Cobra. "But he'll see it finished," Krizmanic said of junior Derin Wood, who was the other student on duty that day.
"Sometimes I think this will take quite a while to complete," Kehl said. "Other times, I think it will go fairly quickly."
Time will tell.
Stay tuned for '67 Cobra 427 updates as they become available!
Editor's Note: To learn more about the Cobra kit car project and/or to donate, contact Kehl at
pkehl@sd27j.org
.
[Report this as objectionable content.]
SUBMIT COMMENT
Rate the above story
Talk Back :
submit comments to the story
*Note: you need to
log-in
to add a comment or rating.
Thank you! Your comment has been updated.
*A comment must be between 1 and 1000 characters.
*Please refrain from using explicit language.
CONTRIBUTOR INFORMATION
John Eisel
Denver
, COLORADO
John Eisel has posted
2868
stories and
12
comments since joining on
9/14/2005
. John Eisel's average story rating is
4.39
.
view profile »
view other postings from John Eisel »
SAVE AND SHARE THIS STORY
STORY RSS FEEDS
All stories
All stories in Brighton
All stories by John Eisel
WANT TO WRITE FOR YOURHUB.COM?
Want to see the stories you write and the photos you shoot featured in the YourHub.com Thursday print section available
all over the Front Range
and with home subscriptions of the
The Denver Post?
All you have to do is
register
, then post a
story or column
,
start a blog
or
tell everyone
what events are happening in town. We will print the best stories, columns, event listings, photos and blog entries in our print sections.
ADVERTISEMENT
Loading Ad
Loading Ad
ADVERTISEMENT
Loading Ad