For Sale/Wanted
This page is for club members to post For Sale or Wanted ads. For club members who wish to post an ad, please email photos and description to Ken Bramham at kbramham@shaw.ca along with your contact information. Please note that the ads will be removed after a month unless notified to keep the ad for a specific timeframe. Please contact if ad is no longer valid. Please review warning at the end of this page prior to posting. Ads relate to vehicles and related parts only. Any offensive ads or wording will be not be accepted.
April 18, 2025
For Sale: 1929 Model A Ford open cab pickup. Older restoration, 5 new tires and tubes, new battery and collector license plate for the past 31 years.
$12,000 OBO
Contact: Steve 250-328-4587 or swcsteve@shaw.ca
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April 18, 2025
For Sale: 1928 Model A Ford Phaeton 4 door. We have 90% of all parts, body in great shape for restoration, very little rust. Running and rolling. Some extra used and new parts.
Call for price.
Contact: Steve 250-328-4587 or swcsteve@shaw.ca
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April 18, 2025
For Sale: 1959 Chevrolet Apache long box. 235 and 261 motors and in truck running, brakes done. GMC parts truck and two spare motors, clean glass and most parts required to finish her. Moving and can’t take her.
$5500 OBO – Will look at trades.
Contact: Steve 250-328-4587 or swcsteve@shaw.ca
WANTED:
Top Dash for a 1964 Ford Galaxie 5 door hard top.
Contact: Les at email kihei147@hotmail.com
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WARNING TO ALL MEMBERS
There are many Internet scams going on these days. When you are either buying or selling over the Internet (and in magazines) you can easily fall victim to any one of these unless you are very careful. Buying is obvious, you may be cheated and not get what you have paid for. However, selling is a different matter. We cannot go into detail because there are just too many types of fraud to cover but two of the most common are:
The Refund – In this scam the person who is buying sends you a deposit larger than you asked for. Then they contact you, make up some story and ask for a refund of the overpayment. You send them your cheque or money order only to find that their cheque, Cashiers check, Bank Draft, etc, is a phony. Your money is gone and it is doubtful that you will ever collect it and the person you were dealing with probably doesn’t really exist. Worse, you send your goods thinking that you have been paid and then the phony cheque comes back. Please note that it can take up to two months for a phony cheque to be returned as the bank will process it. The genuine customer may not notice this until they receive their statement in the mail and that could be up to a month from the time it is processed. Bank drafts and Cashiers checks are safer, but they are often forged and can take up to three weeks to be returned.
Phishing For Information – In this scam there is no intention to purchase. The “purchaser” simply wants to steal your goods. Lets say you advertise your car – a 55 400, for sale. There are organized gangs of car thieves out there and, if they are looking for a 55 400 once they see your ad, make contact and find out exactly what you have, your name, address, phone number, etc. they have all the information they need. Do not ever give out this information to anyone you do not know – at least until you are completely satisfied the deal is genuine. But this is very difficult to do because today’s thieves are sophisticated. Example: You make a deal, you receive a deposit in the mail, the cheque or draft is genuine, so you think everything is OK. Sorry, that could be the scam so you will now relax. The “purchaser” completes the deal with a phony cheque or draft and drives away in your car.
The problem is, if you are too guarded, this makes it very difficult to do business and the genuine purchaser now becomes wary thinking you are the phony as you won’t give any info. What to do? One of the ways to protect yourself is to use services such a Pay Pal so you have third party taking the responsibility for the funds. Another in the case of a large transaction, could be to use a lawyer, or Notary, and insist that the funds come from a law office (your lawyer would do this anyway). That way, you are protected by the legal system and your lawyer’s liability insurance. The bottom line is: Not only is it Buyer Beware, as it has always been, it is now Seller Beware!!



