American Pickers - Season 18 -

The smell hit them first: oil, old rubber, and history. Mike’s eyes immediately locked onto a shape draped in a rotting canvas tarp in the corner. He peeled it back, and the air left his lungs. It was a , its deep red paint barely visible under decades of dust, but the chrome was still there, waiting to shine.

Frank just nodded, already looking for the next driveway. "Yeah. But that sign is still going to look better in the shop." American Pickers - Season 18

"You know, Frank," Mike said, "the stuff is great, but it’s the guys like Silas who keep the story of America alive." The smell hit them first: oil, old rubber, and history

Frank smirked, leaning back. "People say a lot of things, Mike. Usually, it’s just a barn full of old newspapers and raccoon nests." It was a , its deep red paint

Should I create a of the items found in this story to see how they would value in today's market?

The white Mercedes Sprinter van hummed along a backroad in rural , the kind of road where the mailboxes are more rust than metal. Inside, Mike Wolfe and Frank Fritz were squinting through the windshield, scanning the horizon for the telltale signs of a "honey hole"—overgrown barns, stacks of weathered wood, or the skeletal remains of a vintage tractor.

"Danielle said there’s a guy named Silas out here," Mike said, checking a crumpled map. "Supposedly he’s got a barn full of and old gas station signage ."