The body is very solid. I put the top in the shed since I won't be using it much, but the bows are nice. Unfortunately, the previous owner didn't take good care of the car. The engine had about a quart of oil it when I looked at the car, and the seller said, "I just drove it last week" when I asked the last time he used it. When I let him know the oil was seriously low, he just shrugged. Not surprisingly, it has a main bearing knock, but the rods sound good and the engine doesn't smoke. I wish it were the rods knocking and not the mains. I threw in some 20W50 for now until I rebuild the engine. It helped some, but I should have used rear end grease

The spark advance and throttle linkage were all bent out of whack, so I straightened them and timed the engine. The carburetor float was set too high, so I went through that. The radiator drain petcock was leaking badly, so I flushed the coolant system and replaced the petcock. The clutch linkage was out of adjustment resulting in some difficult pedal operation, but I dialed it in. The brakes work pretty well. Of course, nothing on the suspension/drivetrain was greased well.
The wiring system was scary. Someone added a cheap 20amp universal starter push-button switch and wired it with 14AWG speaker wire--no relay setup--with full amps through the switch. The wire insulation was melted pretty well, but the switch surprisingly still worked. At some point, someone reversed the ammeter wires and ran the generator hot straight to the ammeter, so the gauge was reading backwards and the battery was never being charged by the generator. No wonder the seller said he had to replace the battery several times the last couple years.

The kingpins are worn out with a good 3/16" slop each, and the replacement oak spokes have a lot of slop in them. Anything above 25 mph with bumps results in death wobbles. It was a hairy drive 14 miles round trip to the inspection station to have the chassis numbers verified for DMV to get the title in my name (required in Colo for out of state titles), so I'll not be making that long of a journey again anytime soon. The car ran great, but there were a few tense moments when I couldn't avoid manholes/potholes. Until I get around to starting on this project, it'll be a 15 mph cruiser through the neighborhood a couple blocks over to the local burger joint for dinner and Friday cruise nights once COVID-19 settles down. It's our first Roadster and is a hoot. I have a 1940 Ford coupe that is taking my current attention and funding, and the '27 coupe still has a couple things needing attention. We might sell the '27 to fund the Roadster, though. I ran across this Roadster and couldn't pass up on the deal for its condition.