July 4, 2024

1982 DeLorean DMC-12

“As-Is” Project Car

Vin # SCEDT26T3CD011180

Location: Huntington Beach, CA

23,899 Miles

Third Owner





I was (and still am) completely obsessed with this car.   The film came out when I was just 4 years old, and my parents tell me I was enamored by the movie (even before I had the ability to understand the plot — I was just drawn to the car!). 

Growing up, I’d express my obsession by building models of the DeLorean, painting my Matchbook cars silver, and even filming car commercials for the DeLorean with the family camcorder.   Every weekend trip to my grandparent’s house was a scouting mission for me, as I would scan out the backseat window, looking for a DeLorean on the road (I only spotted one once).



When I was about 15, I was in the Barnes and Noble with my Dad.  I was looking through the local Pennysaver (as I always did) to see if any were for sale in the classifieds.  And I found one.  I ran to my Dad to show him, but my excitement was quickly met with disappointment as I realized we would never be able to afford one.


A month later my Dad told me to get in the car, because we had to “help a family friend with some yard work.”  After an hour’s drive, we pulled up to a stranger’s house, My dad shook hands with him.  He told me to open the garage door, and there it was.  Confused, I looked to my dad, and he said, “It’s yours.”



The day we bought it.


Our ownership history

1996

We got the car in November of 1996 with 22,212 miles on it.  We continuously put basic work into it, replacing the door lift struts, and a couple thousand dollars of other minor mechanical maintenance.    Most maintenance was organized thought PJ Grady, which was/is the east coast resource for everything DeLorean.   It was a very different time in 1996 — the internet wasn’t really a thing, so to gain knowledge you would have to make friends with other owners through the DeLorean Owner’s Association.  It was a network of owners that would call each other constantly to ask for advice on things.   Nowadays, it’s completely different, as all the information, parts, and advice you would ever need is readily available on the internet.



1997-1998

We would enjoy it out on the weekends (it was never a daily driver for any of us).  In 1998, I took my date to the senior prom in it (click here), which was the talk of the town — our photo was in the newspaper!



1998-2004

I left to go to college in Florida, but my dad continue to tinker with it and keep it up-to-date.   When I would come home on holidays, I would take it for a spin.



2004-2007

We kept it registered, but at this point, it was just basic maintenance.



2007-2024

Somewhere around 2007, the battery was removed and the pause button was hit. My parents were getting older, I was living my life in LA, and the car just sat there, frozen in time.   It never left the garage again.


General Information:

Model

This model is the most desirable model - the one from the movie (manual transmission with grey leather, with leather door loops, no gas flap on hood).   

Originality

The passenger door and hood is OEM but from a different car. I’m not sure about the radio.

Mileage

We got the car with 22,212 miles.  It now has 23,899 miles.   We only put 1,687 miles on it in 28 years.

Storage

The vehicle has spent the past 28 years in our garage, and has never spent a night outside.   We live in a raised ranch home, so the garage is part of the home.  I would never call it “temperature controlled”, but the garage is part of the home, so it doesn’t suffer any extremes in temperatures.

Mechanical

The fuel/fluids were not removed.  It still has fuel in it from 2007To be clear, we have not turned the key, nor has the car run, in 17 years.

There is now a HUGE online community, and all parts are easily available.  It’s a common misconception that parts are not available for this car.  Many third party parts work, and original and reproduction body pieces are readily available.


One last thing…

Owning this is the pleasure of a lifetime.  The thing about this car is, it never stops exciting you.  No matter how many times I look at it, the thing still thrills me, and still feels like a vision of the future.   It really is a feat of engineering and design.

I hate to let it go, but, out of respect to the vehicle, it deserves someone who is going to put the effort into it — and the world deserves to see it! 

Under the hood

Complete parts manual

 

John DeLorean’s notes to the design team. “It must be a car that you would be really proud to own