Hey Dan, I totally understand. My Dad gave me an appreciation for old and quirky vehicles. I also like to have things that are unique and collectable. A barndoor fits both of those, and it fits my love of Buses as well. Many don't like them once they have one, but I'm pretty sure I know what I'm getting in to, so I'll enjoy it by getting it back on the road for the first time in ~35 years and then go from there. I look forward to seeing you two one of these days, Peter -----Original Message----- From: tcb-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:tcb-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Dan Martin Sent: Thursday, March 08, 2007 2:54 PM To: tcb@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [tcb] Re: Available Buses? I appreciate you letting us know. The only split bus I really want is a flip seat camper. I would love to buy yours. The problem I have is the only way I can budget my hobby is with little money and lots of time. I would not offend you with a offer of less than we both know it is worth. Therefore the only way I will ever have a flip seat or any other split bus is if I find someone who does not know what they have or in a field or barn and drag it back to life myself. I would also love to see them stay in Texas or around here somewhere, but we all know that most of the good ones go overseas these days. What is so dang cool about a barndoor anyway? On Mar 8, 2007, at 1:31 PM, Peter Albarian wrote: > Sorry guys, I just thought it best that I make all of you aware of > them instead of assuming that nobody would be interested. It would > be nice to see both stay in Tejas. > > BlackBerry service provided by Nextel > > -----Original Message----- > From: Mark Sawyer <mechmark@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> > Date: Thu, 08 Mar 2007 08:18:15 > To:tcb@xxxxxxxxxxxxx > Subject: [tcb] Re: Available Buses? > > Well, if that's the case, I'll go $675.00 American. > > Peter Albarian <pcalbar@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: Thanks for the offers. > They both are fully operational. > > BlackBerry service provided by Nextel