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2024 Jeep Grand Cherokee L Limited Velvet Red over Wicker Beige
2024 Audi Q5 Premium Plus Daytona Gray over Beige
2017 BMW X1 Jet Black over Mocha
I'll point out ... agreed upon value.
Neither (soon to be 3) of the cars I have with Hagerty are worth $5k in the real world. But when adding a car, they ask you for an agreed upon value. You can enter $2k and it just stops you right then and there and says "Hagerty does not insure for less than $5k." So you change the number to $5k. Approved!
'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
So then, for kicks, I got a quote for a 1962 Cadillac Sedan DeVille, with a $6K value, and the quote came in cheaper, at $37! So whatever algorithm they're using takes more into account than just the agreed-upon value of the car.
...and my (censored) brother bought her back in 1957. That's when your new cars came out in September.
Almost forgot the A/C works, it just needs a charge!
2025 Ram 1500 Laramie 4x4 / 2023 Mercedes EQE 350 4Matic / 2022 Icon I6L Golf Cart
Everybody can relax, I found the car. Needs some suspension work and shocks. Brakes, brake pads, lining, steering box, transmission, rear-end.
How much?
Only $4800.
Also new rings, mufflers, a little wiring.
75 Mark IV
2025 Ram 1500 Laramie 4x4 / 2023 Mercedes EQE 350 4Matic / 2022 Icon I6L Golf Cart
My friend had one of those in San Francisco of all places---if he wanted to park, he'd just squeeze as much of the car as could get in, and then just PUSH. We lived in a junky neighborhood, so no harm done.
Crunch!
This is probably why all these commercials, with cars racing, spinning, swimming, etc., have disclaimers plastered on the bottom.
You can also save $24 by skipping the tow coverage.
What would you guys pay for this one?
The wise man would bid no more than $2500, which he could recoup in parts (perhaps).
Rust? Bondo? Amateur repaint? Yikes!
PS: Actually I would take it if you gave it to me, but I wouldn't do anything to it. I'd just flip it. I don't much like to drive around in rusted cars. It depresses me.
I have always had a sense of stewardship about old cars. I feel that what I drive reflects upon my respect for what it is.
I'd have to see how it looks in person, to really make a decision. It actually looks okay in that one picture that was posted, but that could be an old pic. And I'd have to see how big the dent is on the other side. If I could just pound it out with my fist or a big mallet and a block of wood, it might not be too bad. Just drive it, have fun with it, and if something major breaks on it, try to sell it for parts.
The UI is a little clunky but it let's you perform searches on Craigs over multiple cities within 250 miles of your location
Craigslist Pro Reader works a lot better.
Well that settles that! Quick download and set up. Now this CL Reader does everything better than my old search tempest utility.
Searching around for 1970 Boss Mustang:
Colorado Boss with replacement motor. Hmmm.
Texas 1970 clone wearing 1969 stripes.
I'd choose this one in Toledo but seller listed just the one pic.
last saturday, i brought my 25 years old lawn-boy mower in to get freshened.
same place i bought it from in 1985 and always got it serviced.
when i asked the guy, same one i had talked to every time i brought it in, when can i expect to get it back he said, 'things are a little slow, so tomorrow or monday'.
on thursday i called and the phone just rang and rang.
this morning, same thing.
this afternoon, i drove over there and someone else got there just before me.
they were tugging on the door, surprised that it wouldn't open.
the place was dark and the lower part of the glass front front door had been kicked in and covered over with duct tape.
it looks like they are out of business and i am out a lawn mower.
when i got home, i went through my paperwork and don't have anything with a serial number on it, so i can't prove it is mine even if i could get access to the place.
here is my little tribute to my 8125
Maybe the guy is sick or something.
you better hope the 'maximum overdrive' scenario doesn't happen, or it may be coming after you.
btw the engine had 2 speeds, turtle or rabbit. i am not kidding!
those high rpm's usually happened just before it ran out of fuel.
2016 Audi A7 3.0T S Line, 2021 Subaru WRX
That says everything you need to know. You'll never be done with this car. It'll be like painting the Golden Gate Bridge. When you get to the end, you'll start all over on the other side.
1. Top rips from bolts in top bows---cure is to pad replacement top in critical areas with sewn-in barriers
2. A-arms crack if you back up too fast and jam on the brakes. Inspect every oil change
3. Transmissions are weak (goes without saying).
4. Numerous electrical failures such as dash lighting, power windows.
5. Eats front tires for breakfast. Figure 10,000 miles a set. Rotate often, buy very hard rubber compounds
6. Head gaskets can blow at any time.
-mathias
If I'm WRONG (and we all know that happens) then you DO buy the car, and are delightfully surprised, relieved and can lord a sense of superiority over me.
So really , either way I've got you covered here. :shades:
Actually I was just thinking about Saab convertibles the other day, 'bout how I might like to have a "cheap convertible"----but then that night I had a dream about putting a plastic funnel in the oil cap hole of a car engine---only I was pouring quarters in, not oil.
What could that mean? :confuse:
I have soooo owned that car. 1967 Austin Healy Sprite. I was trying to use it as a daily driver, and, instead, used it as a lesson well learned. That lesson being why the English drive their cars on the left hand side of the road. Because that's where most of the auto repair shops are located. :P
Depends. Was there a claw hanging over the car?
Let's see... I have tires and brakes on hand now. Struts, springs, exhaust, and all tune-up bits are in transit. I installed a homemade cold air intake yesterday. Only thing left to be ordered are the swaybars, which I will do today.
Tally:
$2k purchase price
$130 clutch kit
$90 exhaust
$200 springs
$140 struts
$110 tuneup
$110 brakes
$300 swaybars
$420 tires
$100 fluids and intake
Total: $3800
Not too bad for a prepped STS car, I don't think. If I was prepping for stock class, it would only be like $650 cheaper, anyway, but then I'd have to purchase R comp tires, which would have run me a couple hundred bucks more. So, all in all, STS over ES is only running me around $500 for starters.
If it works out and holds up, I'd probably be looking at dropping $800-$1k on wheels and tires next year.
'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
In the end, I feel like it may have been easier to pull the engine and trans at once and take them apart out of the car, but we didn't do it that way. It was the reassembly that proved difficult. Trying to muscle the darned thing back in place, while trying to delicately align the shaft, and all while "twisting" it in place past the various mounts (would you believe it has 3 trans mounts and 2 engine mounts!).
I did snap one of the pressure plate bolts, so that was like a 20-minute delay to drill it and extract it. But, other than that, the actual changing of the clutch was quite easy and trouble free.
I think it was around 2 hours to disconnect everything. Another half hour to wiggle the trans out. 1 hour replacement time (cleaning, resurfacing the flywheel, etc). Then like 4 hours to get it back together.
Alldata says it's a 5.5-hour job. Ah well.
'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
Saab Turbo Convertible -- having owned a couple of these, I'd say my biggest shock was not the lack of reliability, which, back in the late 80s/early 90s, was well known with Saab and defensible by keeping an eye on known problems----the real surprise was how shoddily built the car was. I believe the convertible bodies were assembled in Finland, probably by blind men in a rehab program, near as I could tell.
Not sure why Swedish cows had such lousy coats, either---must have shopped at Wal-Mart.