About Finding Aero
Some things are worth preserving long before they become valuable.
Finding Aero is a personal journal about Saab, engineering, stewardship, and the value we assign to the things that accompany us through life.
Why Finding Aero
Car enthusiasts spend enormous amounts of time talking about resale value, auction prices, appreciation, and collectibility.
Those things matter, but they are not the only ways a car becomes valuable. A car can matter because it carried a family, made a long commute bearable, taught someone how to repair something, or simply remained dependable while the rest of life changed around it.
Finding Aero is interested in that kind of value: memory, utility, gratitude, companionship, identity, and shared history.
Why α

In aerodynamics, the Greek letter alpha represents angle of attack: the angle between a wing and the oncoming airflow.
Small changes in that angle can transform how something performs. Finding Aero uses α as a symbol for perspective, balance, and the act of looking again at something others may have dismissed.
Stewardship
These cars have outlived their warranties, their dealerships, and in many cases the company that built them. What remains are the people willing to care for them.
Stewardship is not about treating every car as an investment. It is about recognizing when something deserves patience, attention, and another chapter.
Not everything worth preserving is worth a fortune.
A Personal Journal
Finding Aero is not a news site, a traditional magazine, or a marketplace pretending to be one. It is one person's journal: essays, photographs, road trips, market observations, buyer's guides, and carefully chosen cars.
The subjects are often Saab. The themes are stewardship, engineering, gratitude, and the unexpected value of the things that accompany us through life.