What a great group of people.
I started playing with cars as a kid, with my parents giving me a junker for my 10th birthday. Through high school I worked on pretty much any car I could get my hands on and quickly came to appreciate the superior engineering and design of european cars. Going in to college, I was unsure whether to become a mechanical or electrical engineer - I loved cars and wanted to design them, but had no interest in working for the big 3, so I settled on electrical engineering. Besides, along the way I discovered computers, especially these new things called microcomputers, and thought they were the coolest thing since sliced bread. But not wanting to get too far away from cars, I ran a small repair shop the whole time I was in college and it funded my tuition. Computers stuck and I added a masters in computer science to my education, then went to work for Bell Labs. Suddenly with money for the first time, I set out on a couple of resoration projects. One was a BMW 2002, and the other an E-type. I finished the 2002 and my wife drove that for several years, but the E-type i never quite finished. It was darn close with just the interiar and chrome to re-install, but life and kids prevented me from finishing it. I let big corporate work torture me for about 15 years, during which time I sold the E-type, and stopped looking at cars as anything other than practical transportation. In '96 I ventured into the high tech start-up world, got a taste for it, learned I would never work for a big company again, and made a few bucks along the way, all of which went into kids' tuition. Then in 2001 I started a venture backed company of my own, and over the next 8 years grew it to over 500 people and $125M/yr in revenue. Late 2007 we filed to go public, and literally the day before our road show we closed a deal to sell the company to one of the big computer companies. Having learned my lesson about big companies, I arranged to be "left behind" when the deal closed, and have never looked back. Now, two years later (almost to the day), I'm recently turned 50 and have returned to my early passion of cars. I always wanted a Pagoda but could never afford one, and for my 50'th my darling wife sent me on my way to get one. So I might be the sortest time owning a Pagoda here with less than 1 month of ownership.