{"id":261846,"date":"2015-07-20T04:06:21","date_gmt":"2015-07-20T11:06:21","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/bangshift.com\/?p=261846"},"modified":"2015-07-20T04:06:21","modified_gmt":"2015-07-20T11:06:21","slug":"summer-of-roadster-love-another-pile-of-great-roadster-photos-for-you-to-comb-through","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/bangshift.com\/bangshift-galleries\/summer-of-roadster-love-another-pile-of-great-roadster-photos-for-you-to-comb-through\/","title":{"rendered":"Summer Of Roadster Love: Another Pile Of Great Roadster Photos For You To Comb Through!"},"content":{"rendered":"

Ah yes, the BangShift summer of roadster love continues on rolling right here, right now. We’re back with more photos of cars that really span the roadster gamut from the classic look of the pickup in the image below to the more neo-classic look of the square headlight t-bucket below. It is funny to think about the fact that 100 years ago, roadsters were the cheap option when you bought a car. Saving money by foregoing a fixed roof meant that you had the hassle of a top, a very cold car in the winter, and something that probably leaked like a sieve in the rain but it meant that you could actually afford a car. Damn the luxuries, roofs were for people who made the big bucks.<\/p>\n

Some of the cars in this gallery are steel and many of them are likely ‘glass and while we can really appreciate the steel cars for what they are, we aren’t snobs either. If something is well built and finished, we’re not going to take anything away from it because the body is made from the “wrong” material. That’s just us though and we know opinions vary wildly on this topic. There is something really neat about considering how a steel body was actually touched by the hands of the guys on the assembly line all of those decades ago, right? The stories they could tell would be amazing for sure.<\/p>\n

CLICK ON THE IMAGES BELOW TO EXPAND THEM!<\/h2>\n

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