Well cash for clunkers happened in the summer of 2009. The program called that traded in cars be could not be older than 25 years. That means no 80-83 Eagles were crushed. Those were also the highest production years. So this means that of the 197,449 Eagles produced, 138,461 were safe. The remaining were eligible to be traded, but we know that many Eagles have rusted out and been scrapped over the last 30 years, and many are in the hands of people who care about them. So the odds of a lot getting crushed is pretty slim. Being from Chicago, I never saw Eagles, before and after cash for clunkers. In the last 5-10 years, I have only seen 2 Eagles in the area, as most cars rust away here with the humidity in the summer and the salt in the winter.