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'Ups and downs' in dream auto-painting business

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Dave York and his wife, Jenny, work on a 1968 G8 Shelby GT 500 convertible and a 1966 Ford Mustang in the KDX Autopainting shop in Lakemoor. (H. Rick Bamman - hbamman@shawmedia.com)

LAKEMOOR – Dave York will tell you a story, and he thinks it's a good one. He just needs time to know for sure.

A couple months ago, on separate occasions in the span of a workday, York met 1986 Indianapolis 500 winner Bobby Rahal, and a couple representatives from a racing team in the American Le Mans Series. Since York's niche includes doing auto painting and body work for high-end race cars, these were two huge contacts.

After work, the owner of the one-man shop KDX Autopainting went home to his wife and three kids. The kids wanted to go get Slurpees from 7-eleven – a family thing the Yorks do together from time-to-time.

And that's when York realized – he'd had one of the greatest days of his professional career, and yet couldn't spare the money for Slurpees.

Is it a good story? If he's still struggling like this in a couple years, York figures he won't want to tell it anymore.

"There's ups and downs," York said. "But everything comes full circle."

York believes it's just a stone on his path, a path that started back when York's best friend died two days before high school graduation, not much more than a year after he'd handed York a paint gun.

* * *

That paint gun just felt right, York said, leaning against the counter of his Lakemoor office on a cool Thursday afternoon.

Ryan Ruschke's father had given Ruschke and York a free pass to spend spring break 1994 painting his car.

York recalled Ruschke's side needed repainting, but his didn't. He was a natural.

Ruschke was in the middle of repairs to his own car the next year when he died in a motorcycle accident. York and his friends worked over night on Ruschke's car, rebuilding the motor in time to drive it to the funeral the next day.

York, who'd been contemplating joining the Marines, reached a level of clarity with regard to his future.

"That spring break changed my life," he said. "I bought paint to do my own car, I dropped the Marine idea, and I signed up for a trade school in Nashville."

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