I agree with you Darryl, which is why my message stated that 20K was a lot to spend on the car, and not that I did not think the conversion was a "rip off". I dont think the conversion is a rip off, I do however question how many conversions will be done with a 20K price tag. It would seem to me that someone who spend the time engineering and developing such a conversion would be looking to recoup some of the investment. It is for that reason I question why this vendor does not sell the conversion in a DIY kit form. I'd love to be able to pay someone to "just do it" for me, but Colorado is a long way from New Jersey- and I dont mind doing the work myself and buy the kit from someone else has already done the engineering and testing. The claim is that this northstar conversion does not require any modification to the car, that would lead me to believe that the custom parts needed could be put in a box and shipped to me at a fair price. I guess as more detail emerge about this conversion, it may make more sense to me... I hope so because I really want to replace my PRV-6 with something more powerful. A little fire scared the c**p out of me this weekend so I need to do something (Good thing I had a fire extinguisher) but that is another story. So Darryl, any plans to sell your conversion as a DIY kit?! :) Darryl Tinnerstet wrote: > > Regarding the comments on the cost of the Northstar conversion, yes it > sounds like a lot. But if you think its too high, try doing the designing, > engineering, developing, sourcing of parts, construction, plumbing, wiring, > trouble shooting, etc. yourself. The price is for a complete, finished, > out-the-door conversion. People with the skill and talent to do this type > of work earn their compensation, just as those who can afford to pay it earn > theirs. Besides, if it was $1995, every DeLorean would be converted, and > who would ever want that? > > For the record, my supercharged Chevy-powered DeLorean cost around $10,000 > to build for everything including the car itself, excluding labor. Figure > in another 5 years of work at, what, maybe a low $35/hour - do the math, it > would have been just as high or higher. Point is, if you want something > like that you have two choices - do it yourself, or pay someone who can.