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Comments
Bigger pics:
http://www.vh45de.com/images/18353VH45DE.jpg
http://www.vh45de.com/images/DSCF0005.JPG
http://www.vh45de.com/images/DSCF0004.JPG
Unique car but it sounds like this one is shot
Unmolested Monte SS
Hard to tell what this is worth
Weird to see a V6 in this All that work is money wasted on a V6 car
Highly doubt that this is running 12s with a 305
This seems reasonably priced
I guess that the parts could be worth a grand
500 + 500 = 2150??? While he's seeking the one guy on Earth that wants to drag 2 crappo concordes out of his yard, he can take it easy on the attitude
Wonder if he would trade for two concordes
Nice car with optimistic price
If the engine, diff, and tranny all had to be rebuilt, those 45K miles must have been done at Daytona, Talladaga, and Texas Motor Speedway. I always throw a flag when I see very low mileage on an older car with everything in the drivetrain rebuilt.
Unless, of course, it was rebuilt to remove all the seaweed. :lemon:
my '87 325 has been doing very well. We've already put on around 6k miles without a hitch (almost 120k total now). I was going to visit the dealer and let them give it an oil change and once over ... but they wanted over $100! So I changed the oil myself. Wife says its running better than ever.
'11 GMC Sierra 1500; '98 Alfa 156 2.0TS; '08 Maser QP; '67 Coronet R/T; '13 Fiat 500c; '20 S90 T6; '22 MB Sprinter 2500 4x4 diesel; '97 Suzuki R Wagon; '96 Opel Astra; '11 Mini Cooper S
'11 GMC Sierra 1500; '98 Alfa 156 2.0TS; '08 Maser QP; '67 Coronet R/T; '13 Fiat 500c; '20 S90 T6; '22 MB Sprinter 2500 4x4 diesel; '97 Suzuki R Wagon; '96 Opel Astra; '11 Mini Cooper S
btw: I have nothing against 70 Vettes. Someone else previously referred to them as Crapvettes so I just kept it going. They are what they are.
Ah, thanks for reminding me; the transmission is the SVX's greatest point of weakness. And, yes, it really is a pity. It's also why, since the tranny is a main component, that you see so few SVXs today. Even taking into account that they were a relatively low volume production car, if the tranny had been durable there'd be more of them on the road today. The SVX strikes me as the kind of car that owners would want to keep, because of its uniqueness, and the fact that its more than a basic commuter car.
I'm surprised to find that at the auction, it might actually bring close to $5... I think you'd have to be seriously insane to buy one of these.
-Mathias
I don't know if the new style A8 is any better, but they do depreciate swiftly.
All of this is of course assuming you have a competent VW dealer near by that can handle a Phaeton.
must...bite...tongue......
A co-worker of mine has a Jetta...it had a steering column noise, so it went in for a warranty repair....when he got it back, they didn't bother to replace the lower dash panels. It also took him 3 visits to fix a seat rattle.
I imagine a 10 year old Phaeton will be a scarier proposition than the competition of similar ages, just due to rarity and dealership support.
Shifty, I saw you were discussing older BMW 7-Series and other Bimmers a few posts back. I've got a decent alternative for you when it comes to older European luxury cars- how about a late '80s Volvo 760? I don't know what scares most people away from them but I always loved the feel and look to them. And I wouldn't be fazed by the PRV V-6 engines, as they had almost all the bugs worked out of them by '89, I believe. Of course, the turbo four from the 740 would help reliability a lot.
I do not have a very high opinion of Volvos except for the 120 and 240 series and that's it.
The main bugaboos of these cars are the almost for-sure failure of the radiator, the thermostat, the water pump and the control arm bushings. Other than that, it's just the usual high cost of maintenance and repair as might be required, depending on your amount of use and your good luck, or lack thereof.
I'd say realistically, averaged out over time, one should plan to spend about $150 a month in normal repair and maintenance per year for a 5 series, not including gas, insurance etc.
If you have bad luck, and have to fix something REALLY BIG, you are screwed. BMW 6 cylinder engines are pretty bullet proof. Aside from the cooling system defects, the only other thing that might be of concern to me is the typical German electronic glitches.
Right now I have a '98 E36 convertible with 77K. In a year of ownership, I've had no mechanical issues at all (but the convertible top motor gave out - $820). I suspect I am lucky so far and just living on borrowed time.
That one you posted is considerably overpriced IMO. More like $6,500 is all the money for that one.
Send me an e-mail. Car's in San Francisco area, drive it home.
Yeah I use up cars at a fast clip is my problem. I'd have that Bimmer miled up in no time flat.
I bought that rebuilt '97 Subaru on 2/21 and I have put over 5,000 miles on it already. (trouble free I might add). And that's not using it everyday, when I ride my bike.
"Project car"
The wheels make the car (so does the upholstery)
Not many of these around anymore
Slow to sell
Were these ever actually made in a 4x4?
I like the vintage Polaroid quality pics and the "russo" color name and the ad copy that screams "I can't sell it on ebay"
Ferrari -- he's making all the classic mistakes. No mileage, no detailed record of service. A Ferrari with 60, 000 on it is a parts car.
From your fleet for instance, I love your '57 DeSoto and '67 Catalina. I have some nostalgia regarding the '76 LeMans, because it's a kissin' cousin of the '73 Monte Carlo that my mother once owned. But the rest...meh!
As for my current fleet, well yeah I guess it takes a special kind of masochism to love a Chrysler R-body! I did like those things when I was little though, back when they were new, so that might be part of it. I just always thought they had a sleek, lowered, almost customized look compared to their Ford/GM competition of the time.
I do love a lot of the stuff from the 50's and 60's, but most of it's just so expensive these days, that it's more than I'd want to pay. I bought that DeSoto way back in 1990, when I was still in college, and the Catalina in 1994, about two months after I got hired full-time. Probably a good thing I bought them back then when I was young and foolish, because I'd probably be too hesitant to do it nowadays. Even if I am better off financially than I was when I was, say, 20, I guess I'm also more conservative.
I disagree.
Testarossa.
Not -rosso...
-Mathias
Superbeetle!!!
Cheap (branded) Vette, to pick up cheap babes :P
Gray-market 280SL
parade car (you can't afford to drive it fast or far)
1968 Plymouth, with canopy??
1963 Bonney - cool, but not cheap
Here's a much more aesthetically challenged example
I remember back in the day people would want huge money for those late Beetle convertibles.
The Bonnie isn't cheap indeed...but might not be hugely far off base.
ConvertIble.
They all look great in "burgandy". Sheesh.
-Mathias
What a maroon! :P
'63 Bonnie -- price is right on the money for a nice clean driver with no major issues. The price is right.
Euro 280SL -- beware of the tin worm. If you get stuck with severe rust under a 280SL, you just as well might throw the car away.
But the seller says the "breaks" are good, and that it "drives like butter". So no idling in traffic on a hot day, please!
Yeah, isn't it actually 1967 where the prices start to really drop off on big Pontiac convertibles? At least, I remember looking in a classic car guide years ago and it seemed like around 60-62 were the priciest, and they slowly dropped from there, but then took a big drop in '67, and went south from there. Could be different nowadays though.
I guess it's only natural that '67 is where the value would drop off, since that's what I ended up buying.