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uh, cuz I am cheap and don't want to spend $150 + shipping...
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But it's also easy to do yourself. They come apart and you put them back together will the barrels spun to whatever miles you set them to. Takes minutes. |
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There are many other resources that show the How-To's if you Google them |
It's an old Vanagon. Why bother?
JR |
thx!
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My 30K Carrera was a factory Turbo Look (M491). It was a perfect condition car, it could have easily passed for a 5,000 mile car. The factory Cosmoline on it was still clean. I put it up for sale and there was huge interest in it and it was gone within days. |
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Wanna come over and watch? JR |
A quick look on eBay just now found a few decent looking candidates in the SC and Carrera years.
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You're too late. I already have the fender off. I think you need to take a few of these shiny things apart and see what they really look like underneath. You'd probably be shocked.
And, it isn't that they are not cared for. This car lived in a dry climate. How did it get rusty? Maybe the owner washed it to death... every time it got washed, water got in these cracks and stayed there for a long time. I'm not making this up. It's reality. JR |
Sigh.....
I think someone needs to start their own thread if they are going to be nothing but negative and confrontational. |
I've always been willing to pay a slight premium for a low-mileage car. The last 997S I bought had only 2,500 miles on it and was five years old. The history of the car convinced me that this was just fine - as it turned out to be - and for a small premium I got a car that still smelled new and had factory stickers here and there. What's not to like? Also there is an intangible satisfaction I get from buying and driving a car with say, less than 10,000 miles, that has a value to me at least equal to the premium I pay for this. Irrational perhaps, but then car ownership almost always is. I feel the same way about women BTW.
On the new Porsches you can request a full DMI readout as part of the PPI. These are very revealing. You can tell exactly how the car was previously driven. I looked at one car with 10,000 miles for example that had obviously only been driven in stop and go traffic, and only on drives of 7 or 8 minutes each. A commuter car that was never warmed up properly and never taken out of third gear. Despite the low mileage this is a car I wouldn't willingly buy when there are alternatives available. You can also tell if a car has been over-reved repeatedly etc. Extremely useful info. |
I like low-mileage women as well. Small world.
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Human bodies have a service life just like machines do. So all things being reasonably equal, younger is better. :)
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I wasn't aware of the possibility to request DMI data as part of a PPI. How far back does this go? Cheers, George |
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Got the model right now...
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