The Super Bowl of Auctions Barrett-Jackson vs Mecum January 2014
By Rick Tavel© November17, 2013 All Rights Reserved
Barrett-Jackson Scottsdale 2013 (Photo: Barrett-Jackson) |
outstanding
Corvettes, is taking place
on opposite sides of the country between the two
giants of collector cars, Mecum® and Barrett-Jackson®. As in
prior years both auction companies will pull out all the stops to present their
spectacular display of exceptional collector cars, several of which are
significant, important parts of automobile history. As in the past, Corvettes will be key players
contributing to the success of the January auction season. Both Mecum® and Barrett-Jackson® will be
auctioning hundreds of Corvettes and both are featuring historically important
Corvettes as their “headline” cars of the auction.
Mecum Kissimmee 2013 (Photo: Mecum) |
Barrett-Jackson® kicks off their January spectacular in a
brand new auction facility, still located at West World in Scottsdale, Arizona,
January 12th through the 19th. Once again they will offer their Salon
collection, a special group of the most important and historically significant
cars consigned and which make up the centerpiece of their Scottsdale event. Last year Barrett-Jackson designated 53 cars
as a part of their Salon collection and their combined sales exceeded
$29M. This year the Salon collection, which
consists of pre war classics, exotics, sports cars, muscle cars and of course
Corvettes, will cross the block on Saturday, January 18th, the day
the very best cars of the eight day event are scheduled to sell.
Dana Mecum will kick off the largest of his twelve annual collector
car auctions 2100 miles to the east in Kissimmee, Florida, January 17th
through the 26th, , just as Barrett-Jackson® will be wrapping up
their event in the west. And while
neither company’s consignments are finalized at this point, both already have a
sizeable and impressive offering of Corvettes consigned. Mecum, which has offered an amazing array of
Corvettes at each of his twelve major automobile auctions during 2013, is
offering some important historically significant Corvettes as the highlight of
the ten-day, 3000 car event. Mecum will
be offering two Corvette collections: thirteen Corvettes from the Roger Judski
Collection and eight Callaway Corvettes, including the renowned “Sledgehammer”
C4 and a Callaway powered Corvette speed boat from Richard Berry’s collection
will help anchor the hundreds of other Corvettes which will cross the block.
Record Setting 1967 L88 $3.2M (Photo: Mecum) |
Throughout 2014, Corvettes auction prices have been red hot
and outpaced the collector car market overall.
In September a 1967 L88 Marlboro Maroon convertible from the prestigious
Buddy Herin collection set a world’s record price for a Corvette at auction
selling for $3.2M ($3.5M including fees) in Mecum’s Dallas auction. Though prices have been strong for most
restored Corvettes, the hottest segment of the Corvette market was undoubtedly
first, second and third generation documented cars in impeccable condition with
high horsepower engines. Blue chip
Corvettes that also had a documented racing heritage saw prices that often
topped a million dollars. The three
hottest categories of Corvettes during 2013 were: (1) all Corvettes with
documented racing heritage, especially 1963 Z06s, 1967 through 1969 L88s, and
1970 ZR1s and 1971 ZR1s and ZR2s (2) early
generation historically important Corvettes with rare or unique production
options, such as big brake, big tank or “airbox” cars and (3) numbers matching, big
block, high horsepower C2’s and C3”s.
Restored or survivor, numbers matching, second generation cars in
exceptional condition and those which received NCRS or Bloomington Gold awards were
highly sought, especially those with big blocks and typically brought in excess
of $100K while small blocks sold in excess of $50K. It will be these categories that
Barrett-Jackson® and Mecum® will feature in their 2014 auction previews and
schedule for the best auction days.
Though consignments will still be open through December, both
Barrett-Jackson® and Mecum® already have several important Corvettes already
consigned to the January events. Here is an abbreviated look at some of the
most important.
"Asteroid" by George Barris (Photo: Barrett-Jackson) |
Last year Barrett-Jackson® offered over 125 Corvettes as a
part of the 1200 cars auctioned during their January event and by the time
consignments close for 2014 that number will likely be exceeded. As is customary for Craig Jackson’s January
extravaganza, expect Corvettes representative of every segment of the collector
hobby, from celebrity owned or
customized, to state of the art restomods, as well as a full assortment of
impeccably restored Corvettes from every generation. One of the feature cars will be “King of the
Kustomizers,” George Barris’s famous
“Astroid” 1963 Corvette coupe. The
dazzling metallic copper Corvette was fully restored earlier this year and is
jointly owned by Lance Miller of Corvettes
at Carlisle® fame and Randy Koettel owner of Desert Autosport® . As Barris customized creations go, the
Corvette would be considered “tame” and was built for the successful business
entrepreneur and offshore powerboat champion Bob Nordskog to serve as a street
car, a race car, and show car.
The Rebel (Photo:Barrett-Jackson Bill Erdman) |
Magnificent 1967 L88 Coupe Duntov Mark of Excellence Award Winner (Photo: Barrett-Jackson) |
The third star and perhaps the most precious jewel of the
Barrett-Jackson® Corvette offerings is a 1967 L88 coupe which has a history of
drag racing on Detroit’s drag strips and restored almost fifteen years ago by
the famous Nabers Brothers Corvette restorers of Houston. Only twenty 1967 L88 Corvettes were ever
produced and this is the only red on red one.
In addition to being inducted into the Bloomington Gold Hall of Fame and
appearing in the Bloomington Gold Special Collection, it has also received an
NCRS Top Flight Award and Performance Verification, and is the only L88 on
record to have achieved the coveted Duntov Mark of Excellence. Ray Sinor,
well-known, recently-retired National Corvette Restorers Society national
judging chairman and one of the experts Barrett-Jackson uses for Corvette
consultations, believes this may be the finest of the nineteen 1967 L88’s known
to exist.
Legendary L88 engine (Photo: Barrett-Jackson) |
Mecum sold Harley Earl's Personal Corvette in October for $1.5 (Photo: Mecum) |
By the time consignments close you can expect Mecum® to
offer have almost 400 Corvettes consigned and even at this early date they are
well on their way. Traditionally Mecum’s®
Kissimmee event has more than double the number of Corvettes consigned to Barrett-Jackson’s®
Scottsdale event. This is proportional
to the auction overall where Mecum® traditionally offers almost double the
number of cars offered by Barrett-Jackson®.
Mainly this is due to the large number of entry level cars offered at
Mecum’s® Kissimmee auction. This fact is
supported by the fact that Barrett-Jackson’s® average selling price for all
cars is almost double Mecum’s® (B-J’s Salon collection also impacts the average
selling price). Though the Corvette
market is red hot, “good buys” can still be found during the initial days of
Mecum’s® ten day event. So even though
Mecum® has several “blue chip” Corvettes being sold, there are Corvettes
available for every budget and every level of collecting in Kissimmee.
The Corvette that saved the Corvette Brand 1956 SR Prototype (Photo: Mecum) |
The main attraction of this year’s Mecum® Kissimmee
extravaganza is one of the most important cars in Corvette’s sixty year
history, the car that was virtually responsible for saving the brand from
extinction. The car has become known as
“The Real McCoy” as a result of a 1956 advertisement celebrating it’s Sebring
class win and helping promote the car’s performance credentials. The
The Real McCoy Ad 1956 (Photo: GM) |
details and exciting history of this car
are too long to adequately cover in this article but suffice it to say that
Zora Arkus-Duntov built this car in an effort to demonstrate the Corvette’s
performance credentials. There is little
dispute that the initial Corvettes were not performance-based cars, nor did
they offer many comfort and convenience amenities. In 1954 and 1955 sales fell so drastically
that GM seriously had the Corvette on the chopping block. When Ford® introduced the well-appointed Thunderbird
in 1955 Corvette’s fate was virtually sealed.
But Duntov convinced GM executives to not give up on the car, but rather
transform it into a true performance car, a real sports car but with added amenities. Duntov built a prototype 1956 Corvette with a
special bored-out 307 cubic inch engine with dual Carter 4-barrel carburetors
and a special grind camshaft which has become known as the “Duntov cam.” Duntov set a “Flying Mile” speed record at
Daytona averaging 150.582 MPH in his prototype Corvette and then after further
preparation by Smokey Yunick, John Fitch and Walt Hansgen drove it to a class
win in the 1956 Sebring race, helping establish the Corvette as a legitimate
performance sports car. As a result the
Corvette brand was saved from extinction.
The 1956 SR prototype has been inducted into the Bloomington Gold Great
Hall and will cross the block in Kissimmee on Saturday, January 25th.
1963 Z06 originally raced by Dick Lang (Photo: Mecum) |
1963 Corvette Z06 (Photo: Mecum) |
Though the 1963 Lang Z06 is one of the main features of
several outstanding second generation Corvettes, it is not the only choice of a
rare 1963 Z06. Lot S172 is a Sebring
Silver 1963 Z06 coupe with a fully documented history. The car was owned in the 1970s by Eric Gill,
Corvette Z06 historian and restorer.
Like the Lang Z06, this one was also the recipient of an outstanding
body-off restoration by Nabers Brothers.
The car is optioned with the standard Z06 performance options plus the
addition of the N03 “Big Tank” option, N11 off road aluminized exhaust, A01
tinted glass, A 31 power windows and
full wheel covers. In addition to being
the subject of several articles it has received awards including Bloomington
Gold and NCRS Top Flight. The beautiful
Z06 has been displayed at the National Corvette Museum and has won Best of
Class awards at the 2012 Santa Fe Concorso and the 2012 Hilton Head Concours
d'Elegance.
Custom interior of Mrs. Harley Earl's Pink Corvette (Photo: Mecum) |
There will be almost 100 second generation Corvettes
crossing Mecum’s block, encompassing a vast assortment of factory colors and
production options. Several will have
the desirable big block engine. Not a
big block, but a 1963 pink, “styling” coupe specially built for Harley Earl’s
wife is on the docket. And if you want
something a little more aggressive, there is an exciting 1964 Grand Sport resto-mod
replica updated with a LS engine, 6 speed transmission, air conditioning and
updated power and comfort amenities.
1969 L88 (Photo: Mecum) |
The headliner of third generation Corvettes will undoubtedly
be the 1969 Lemans Blue L88 convertible, S163.
This is one of only 116 1969 L88s and one of the total 216 L88
production cars ever produced. This is
unquestionably the most coveted production engine in Corvette history. This Corvette has undergone a recently-completed,
frame-off restoration by Roger Gibson, noted Corvette restorer and took nineteen
months and over 5000 hours at a cost of $242K.
The convertible has the auxiliary black vinyl hardtop and has been
verified by the NCRS Shipping Data Report and Documentation Validation Service
records for the tank sticker. In
addition there is a complete comprehensive photographic record of the
restoration, copies of all receipts and a complete and detailed description of
the work performed by Gibson and his team.
SLEDGEHAMMER Formerly World's Fastest Street Car (Photo: Mecum) |
Frequently in Mecum®
events an entire collection is consigned and at Kissimmee two major Corvette
collections have been consigned with several impressive models. If you are a C4 enthusiast the Richard Berry
Callaway Collection is an outstanding collection of Callaway Corvettes. The cornerstone of the collection is one of
the most famous Corvettes in history, the renowned Sledgehammer. The Sledgehammer was purpose built for speed
and to showcase the abilities of Callaway’s turbocharged engines. The silver Sledgehammer owned the record for the
fastest street-driven car in the world when John Lingenfelter drove it from
Callaway’s headquarters in Connecticut to the 7.5 mile Transportation Research
Center oval track and attained a top speed of 254.76 MPH on October 26, 1988. The C4 has a modified Callaway Aero body and
a 898 HP modified turbocharged Chevrolet engine. Incredibly the car also has air conditioning
and a radio. The Sledgehammer held the
record for world’s fastest street car for 25 years. In 2013 this incredible, historic car was
inducted into the Bloomington Great Hall which recognizes 50 people and 50
Corvettes that significantly influenced the Corvette. The Sledgehammer and its other seven
stable mates will cross the block on Friday, January 24. In addition to Berry’s Callaway collection
there are an additional 16 additional Corvettes that are part of his collection
from other generations that will cross the block over the ten days of
auction.
The Roger Judski collection is a group of thirteen
Corvettes, primarily C4’s, four of which are ZR1s . Except for the two Corvette Challenge race
cars as a part of the collection, all of the rest of the collection are
extremely low mileage cars, most of which have less than 10 original
miles.
Based on the impressive line-up of some of the finest
Corvettes in the world, January’s super bowl auction season is poised to be one
of the most exciting in recent memory.
So if you are in the market for a collectible Corvette you probably want
to make your reservations now for the week of January 12th in
Scottsdale and the following week in Kissimmee.
And if you get any resistance from your “significant other” both Arizona
and Florida are winter vacation destinations so you could always bring them
along. I mean, after all, how could they
resist leaving the cold winter weather behind?
They probably wouldn’t even care if you spent all day checking out beautiful
Corvettes while they basked in the sun.
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