Diamonds in the
Rust
For Max Davis, $150 bought the car that got him to Bonita Springs less than four years ago. It was a white, aging Nissan that did the trick. That car and the $80 in his pocket were all he had when he arrived.
He's not rich now, but he's doing pretty good. The Nissan is long gone. In its place has been a stream of automotive classics that he and neighbor Dick Campbell have reincarnated from worn-out heaps into shining models from car history. Last month, Davis finished work on a 1969 Corvette Stingray convertible for a client. That car has a long, sloping hood shaped for acceleration. It's the type of car that rumbles a deep bass in a simple idle.
The garage of Davis' Bonita Springs home also held a reconditioned 1979 Corvette
that he recently sold. Now there's a 1937 GMC truck that he and Campbell tore
down to its base in the past month. Soon it will sparkle in coats of
$150-per-pint paint.
Predictably, his first car, a 1980 Ford Thunderbird, needed some paint and a little help with the power windows. "Before I came here, I could barely afford to pay rent, and that was in LaBelle," Davis said. "Now I come over here and I can buy a $200,000 house."
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