Lachance139
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Hi there. I'm new to this site as well as the world of old trucks and military vehicles. I've found a pretty good looking 84 Chevy K5 Blazer M1009 for sale. It's got 91k miles on it, drove pretty smoothly on the test drive, only took about 5 seconds for the plugs to warm before it started right up, first time in a few days. Thing is, I know next to nothing about cars, let alone a 34 year old diesel truck. Just really worried that I'll buy it and then not be able to fix it. I really want to learn how to work on the vehicle, and this one could be a great way to start, I'm just worried about the cash too. Am I going to be sinking a bunch of money into this thing just to get it to drive around? I'll only be driving it 10 or 20 miles a day, just around town. Am I just crazy? Or could this be a good project to learn to work on a truck that'll still just work as an around town daily driver?

Classic's are a hobby & labor of love. Trying to get quality work done on such a vehicle at a modern repair shop is nearly impossible, and/or expensive..... That being said, if you want to dip your toes into the hobby CUCV's are a pretty good start. They have a habit of running and driving even when they're broken
and parts are relatively cheap & easy to find/trade. However In my opinion the easiest classic car to build is the VW bug