1967 Corvette: the quintessential American muscle car that defined the top end of style, technology, and power of the 1960s
1968 Datsun 2000 Roadster: Represents the emergence of the Japanese manufacturers; stylish, light weight, fun, and competitive on the racing circuits.
1986 Porsche Turbo: The car that defined the 1980's supercar style. It also was the outcome of 1970-1980's emissions requirements: Turbo-charging was the answer to getting power and good emissions from smaller engines.
2007 Aston Martin Vantage: represents the best of design of a new century's era of power and style.
2007 Porsche Cayman S: Representing the best technology of the time: mid-engine, small, high revving engine in a car with perfect balance. The perfect race track toy.
2006 Fisker Latigo CS: Mainly in the collection because of its rarity. But it also reminds me that a certain cross section of buyers started thinking that their cars should be more politically correct, so they didn't buy many of these, which started Fisker on the path to an electric car.
2012 Fisker Karma: represents the beginning of a new era of electric cars. An era where the driver does not have to compromise style and beauty in order to use less gasoline.
Come visit some time. Cars are meant to be driven, and shared!
Updates from the 2011 initial post:
Found the perfect 1985 Ninja ZX600
These are hard to find, but I was constantly on the lookout for a clean, "unmolested" example of the bike I loved so much back in 1985. I had watched ads for several years before one came up for sale somewhere in the Midwest. Thatr's pretty much the only place to go for older bikes, because here in California they get ridden year your and they wear out before they get too many years old. This one I found with less than 13,000 miles on it. A true unicorn. I bought it and spent a good 6 moths getting it running properly, repairing some areas of ewear and tear, and generally shining her up. I only rode it a few times, partly because I promised my wife and partly because now that I was no longer 20 years old... motorcycles are a heckuva lot scarier. Riding down the freeway at 70 MPH with cars everywhere around you is nerve-wracking. I can't believe I used to drive around in shorts an flip flops. Sheesh, what an idiot. But damn it looked good in the garage, and I loved seeing it and remembering some good times on my old one. After about 4 years of ownership, I decided that someone else should ride it and enjoy it, so I put it up for sale and found a great buyer in Sacramento that had been searching for this exact type of bike for years. He tried to be all cool and detached when we spoke, but when he saw it in person, he just had to have it. No negotiating, he paid full asking price. There really aren't many of these around any more.
Green Gator
I wrapped the Cayman S ad continued to upgrade it. New engine at one point, building it up into a 3.8 liter track monster that could keep up with Porsche 911s, some GT3s, and many more exotic cars. See my blog post here on the wrap:
http://davecarguy.blogspot.com/2013/08/green-car-movement-gator-gets-new-skin.html
McLaren MP4-12C
One thing missing in the garage after the Ferrari went away was a piece of garage art and there was nothing in the "exotic" category. I spent a long time considering the Superformance GT40 replica, which to me is one of the greatest pieces of garage art one could ever own. But after test driving one, I realized it would spend time in the garage and I wouldn't drive it much (not too comfy nor user friendly). While looking at one, I ran across a McLaren MP4-12C for sale at a similar price point. I did my research and eventually bought a used 2012 model in 2014 for less than half it's original price and thought I'd done pretty well. It turns out they keep depreciating. Oh well, it has become one of my favorite cars for road strips. We've taken it everywhere from Palm Springs to Mendocino, Santa Barbara, Lake Tahoe, Mammoth Mountain, Yosemite, Carmel, Paso Robles, Pismo Beach, Napa/Sonoma, Healdsburg, Amador Wine country, and all points in between. It has great visibility for viewing things while driving, is smooth, and has very useable, friendly power.

New Garage at New Home
With the collection having grown sizable, I thought it was time to build a proper garage. So while we were were building our dream house (close by our old house where we raised the family), I opted to build a 70x30 2100sf garage, basically three cars wide and 3 cars deep, with room for storage and working on my cars.
http://davecarguy.blogspot.com/2012/12/new-garage-complete.html


Black and Blue
After a few years enjoying the McLaren as a black car, and having a good experience vinyl-wrapping the Cayman S and my daughter's Mini Cooper, I had the McLaren wrapped a nice vibrant blue. I like to share that car with others and have let dozens of people drive it so they can appreciate what a marvel it is. Getting on the gas to enter the freeway onramp and finding yourself at 100 MPH in just a few seconds is an eye opening experience *also sometimes an underwear-changing experience). We continue to use this car anytime we go to the mountains, the beach, wherever. In it, you're rarely late for anything. I have a blog post from a day I let some other car geeks drive it:
http://davecarguy.blogspot.com/2017/08/a-nice-drive-on-highway-35-and-highway.html
Fisker Latigo Gets Sold
With the garage being pretty full, and starting to worry about how to maintain the one-in-the-world Fisker Latigo (parts availability, etc), I decided to test the waters and try to sell the car on the website bringatrailer.com. I figured that if I could see it for more than I had purchased it, I'd feel pretty good about a "free" 8-year ownership experience. The car ultimately sold for a very nice bump over what I paid and the new owner was a guy with a couple other Fisker cars, so it's now in a nice collection.
Here is a link to the auction when I sold it:
https://bringatrailer.com/listing/2006-fisker-latigo/
Jaguar E Type - a Childhood hero
Next in my long line of car obsession was the Jaguar E Type. Still one of the greatest car designs of all time, in my opinion, which is shared by many (once called the most beautiful car ever designed by a famous Italian car manufacturer with the first name Enzo). I always loved the design, but after I bought it, I also fell in love with how it drives. Turns out that Jaguar has always known how to build an engaging car and at one time, it's XK120, XK140, XK150 and the E-Type (aka the "XKE") were in their times some of the fastest cars in the world. The Jaguar 1-2-3-4, 6 top finish at the 24-Hour of Le Mans in 1957 is the stuff of racing legends. The Jaguar D Type beat out everyone that year, leaving Porsche, Mercedes, Aston Martin, Maserati scratching their heads on how to beat Jaguar. The D Type became the prototype for the road-going E-Type that was introduced to the public in 1961.
I bought it at auction, specifically at the Barrett Jackson auction in Scottsdale (which, BTW, is a great event just for people watching... put in on your list of to-do items). I had gone to look at a Jaguar XK140, but didn't get that car as it went far higher in price than I wanted. I wrote a blog post about getting this car and "meeting a childhood hero car":
http://davecarguy.blogspot.com/2017/07/jaguar-e-type-meeting-your-childhood.html
I guess you could also say that the jaguar had now completed by "Red & Black" Collection.
Sold the 1967 Corvette (Gasp!!)
With now three convertibles (the Datsun Roadster, the Corvette, and the Jag, I had too many cars that basically fit the same purpose. I had to decide what to get rid of. I decided to sell the corvette as it was the one I found myself leaving in the garage when it cane to take a drive. The handling of the other cars was better. The Corvette is great to look at and fun to drive in a straight line, but couldn't match the Jaguar for winding road fun. So I sold it to a guy in my town and he is ecstatic to have it, and I sometimes see him around at car shows and fun drives. I truly loved owning and driving that car, but it was time to let someone else enjoy it. I had "scratched that itch" as a few of my car friends would says and that is just sometimes what you have to do: get it out of your system and move on to the next thing.
Changed the Color on the Aston Martin
When people ask "what's your favorite car in the garage, I usually say something along the lines of "you can't pick one, you love them all for different reasons". But if you ask me which one I'll never sell? That would be the Aston. So to add a little spice to my relationship with my favorite car in the garage, I opted for a color change to "cool yellow". Maybe next time it'll be another color, or back to Tungsten Silver. Who knows. But for now, it's easier to find in the grocery store parking lot among a sea of grey, silver, and black SUVs.
http://davecarguy.blogspot.com/2018/06/aston-martin-vinyl-wrap-cool-yellow.html
Sold the Datsun Roadster
With growing enjoyment of the Jaguar E Type as I fixed various things and made it even more fun (new exhaust, etc), I was driving the Datsun Roadster less and less. I decided to sell it to another Datsun Roadster fan who was in the midst of rebuilding a Roadster with his daughter helping. They were stuck in some areas of the restoration and wanted a good example to use as. a template and to drive while they were building theirs. So, off it went to a new owner in Oregon to help a Dad and daughter bond more over cars. I liked that. I also sold that car for what I paid for it, too it was a good ownership experience. And now the Jaguar was the only car fitting my need/desire for a both a fun convertible and a 1960's vintage car of my youth. As a car I find very easy to work on, it fits that spot nicely as a car I like to fiddle with. There's always something to make a little better when all the other cars' maintenance has ben brought up to date.
Bought a 2017 Jeep Wrangler Rubicon
My first Jeep drive was with my friend Brian, and I had never forgotten the open-road feeling of driving it with the doors off on a warm summer evening. He had hounded me for a number of years to get one, and I was looking for a 4-door, 4-seat convertible that I could take to the beach and enjoy the mountain roads. I also decided I wanted to get some more fly-fishing and camping in, and my wife said she'd do more of that all with me if I'd just quit going to the track to race and drive fast. I also wanted to try some of the famous trails in the Sierra Nevada, so I got the most capable vehicle I could: the Jeep Wrangler Rubicon Unlimited. It did not disappoint. We took it on many trails, my favorites being Slickrock Trail near Lake Alpine, and the Niagra Rim Trail near Strawberry, CA. There's nothing like a Jeep, so Dave, Car Guy, morphed into Dave, Jeep Guy and I spent months planning and executing all the upgrades and updates I wanted. These really are like big lego toys: you can add anything to them that you can imagine.
http://davecarguy.blogspot.com/2017/07/jeep-wrangler-unlimited-rubicon-gobi.html
My First Ford: a GT350R For Track Days
Since I started racing and tracking cars, I had become pretty involved with a track organization called Hooked on Driving. I had even become a high-performance driving coach for them. Additionally, I had been running my Cayman S in the Time Trial track days with NASA (National Auto Sport Association). I met another track-guy named Rick who brought me into a club he was part of called the Turn One Club at Sonoma Raceway. I met lots of guys with much farther advanced "car problems" than me. But among them were several that owned Ford Mustang Shelby GT350Rs. A car from Ford that can tempt track guys away from their Porsches and Ferraris? I had to find out more. After researching and test driving, I jumped in and social ordered one. I love this car. Well balanced, amazing brakes, a screaming high-rev flat-plane-crank V8, and lap times that embarrass most exotic car guys. And to be honest, I chose to order it in "Orange Fury" color in honor of my first car and because I wanted an orange car to fill out my "Skittles" collection of car colors.
http://davecarguy.blogspot.com/2018/08/my-first-ford-make-it-2018-shelby-gt350r.html
I Bought a 1977 911S on Bringatrailer.com
I had become quite enamored with watching cars for sale on BringaTrailer.com. It brings together the community of car enthusiast that can comment on and provide valuable information for buyers during the course of a one-week auction. It has become the go-to place for certain collectable or highly desired car-enthusiast cars. Having had a positive experience as a seller of the Fisker Latigo, I found myself often out on the site, commenting on cars where I had some insights (Aston Martins for sale, for example). I like to throw in bids once in awhile on cars I don't think are getting bids in the right value range, on the off chance of "if I get it at that price, I"m happy". I've probably bid on 40+ cars at this point, some that I really would have loved to own, and others where I just figured it was worth trying a low bid. It was one of the latter situations that bought me the ext car. I really didn't think I'd win this 1977 Porsche 911S modified "outlaw", but I did. That morning when my understanding wife woke up, I had to admit "Honey, I think I just bought another car" (then I ran...). You can read about that in my blog post here:
http://davecarguy.blogspot.com/2019/05/i-bought-1977-porsche-911-on-bring.html
Sold the 1986 Porsche Turbo (Gasp #2!!)
So I drove and enjoyed that 1977 Porsche for a while when I realized it had now taken the place of my beloved Porsche 911 Turbo from 1986. The Turbo was my wife's favorite in all the garage, but it had been rising quite a bit in value and I now found myself less willing to drive it. Particularly because the Silver 1977 911S was fun-louder, more tossable in corners, more fun to shift, and easier to work on. So I decided I'd try again to sell on bringatrailer.com. Figuring once again that if I could get a good price, I'd be happy to let it find a new owner. I had the car for 9 years and put a bit over 10,000 miles on it. In the end, it sold for three times what I paid for it. That was enough to make me feel good about the sale. To own and enjoy a car for 9 years and then sell it for triple your cost is a pretty good day for a car geek like me. That still didn't make my wife happy. She wishes I had kept that beautiful car. I paid a local high school kid who is an aspiring videographer to put together a video for my sale. And I wrote a blog post about saying goodbye to it.
http://davecarguy.blogspot.com/2019/10/1986-porsche-911930-turbo-saying.html
My Friend adopts the Cayman S
After over 9 years of driving, rebuilding, modifying, and tracking my 2007 Caymans S, I was feeling as if I'd taken it about as far as I could. I had done at least 40 track days or Time Trials with it, and after turning probably over 1500 laps, I had gotten my laps times down to where I was now fighting for 10ths of a second to improve my times. The car was able to keep up with far more expensive, more powerful and more exotic cars. With the new Mustang Shelby GT350R now taking me to various track events, I was re-learning my favorite tracks with a car that was specifically built for that purpose. So I decided it was time to let the Cayman go. I have a friend who had participated in some of the same events as I did, and he was looking for his next track vehicle. I was happy to see it go to a good home with a guy who was going to take it to the next level, with a full roll cage, racing seats, harnesses and all the things that would be my "next steps" if I had kept it myself.
Finally Realized My Datsun Dream
Having sold the Datsun Roadster, I was missing having a Datsun in the garage and I thought long and hard about how to best satisfy my desire to keep the brand in my life. I always say that every car in the garage needs a purpose (road trip car, track car, date night car, family of 4 car, camping vehicle, historic "art", etc). I try to stay away from having two cars that effectively serve the same purpose (How many 2-door sports coupes can one drive in a week, anyway?). A Datsun 510 that could act as a track/race car, as "garage art", and as a connection to my automotive past would be a "3-fer". One day at a track event at Thunderhill Raceway, I mentioned this to another racer I know. He told me of a guy who had two historic Datsun 510s in Brock Racing Enterprises livery ("BRE") squirreled away in a race track storage garage. Well, that led to this, which you can read about in my other blog post. Suffice to say this was a long-term dream finally realized for me. I'll be racing this is various historic racing events, so more info to come elsewhere in my blog, but the photo below shows me on track in my first CSRG Race at Sonoma Raceway.
http://davecarguy.blogspot.com/2021/02/datsun-510-historic-race-car-dream.html
Sold the Jeep and Bought a 2021 Chevrolet ZR2 Bison.
Over 4 years, and having tackled a number of roads, fishing trips, camping excursions and rugged trails, I had come to really appreciate just how dang good the Jeep Wrangler is. My only complaint was that it was very loud on the freeway when getting to the wilderness, causing us to shout at each other while driving. The other two less compelling issues were that it had minimal towing capacity and no open bed for hauling. So, the solution was to sell the Jeep and buy a 2021 Chevrolet ZR2 Bison. It has the locking front and rear differentials for rock crawling, and plenty of high-tech under-armor skid plates, etc. So it will serve my purposes as the camping/fishing/offroading vehicle while also being able to tow my new race car. The couple that bought the Jeep are extremely happy with it, and I confirmed once again that Jeeps definitely retain value!