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-   -   Why oh Why do they let them rot?? (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/porsche-911-technical-forum/842218-why-oh-why-do-they-let-them-rot.html)

Tippy 12-11-2014 06:56 PM

Quote:

For as many cars are out there rotting away...there are stories to tell.<br>
My friend and I saw an ad one time for a 1954 Chevrolet...for $50...this was in 1971.<br>
We figured we might as well look at it.<br>
When we got there...the old lady told us it was in the barn (very dangerous looking structure)...but we had a look...and found a 1954 Chevrolet...Corvette!<br>
The old lady didn't want to pay for another line in the ad...so she just put down the basic name.<br>
My friend bought the car...with the provision...from the lady...to make the barn safe (pull it down).<br>
It took most of the day...with a big old tractor and several crawls into the barn to pull it down...he still has the car.<br>
The reason the car was there....nephew parked it...went away...never came back...not sure why.<br>
So in the end...the lady wanted the barn down more than she wanted to sell the car....BTW...she was asking $50 !<br>
We gave her a lot more than that...and a flat barn so the kids in the area would be safe.<br>
He still has the car...very pretty...white with red interior....6 cylinder.....2 carbs on the side of the block.<br>
Bob
That's a great story

CCM911 12-12-2014 10:50 AM

OK, after all this back and forth, did the OP make an offer on the car?

karguy 12-12-2014 11:06 AM

Still waiting on an answer if she will sell it. She is leaning that way and I don't want to push too hard and have the door slammed in my face. ;)

KTL 12-12-2014 12:42 PM

Good luck to you and hopefully you can get it for a fair price and do some good with it. I too can't stand it when people do this.

There's a guy in my old town that has an '88 red Corvette that sits in the driveway next to some paver bricks and hasn't moved in at least 15 years. I used to go running by there all the time and just shake my head thinking what a waste, still hasn't moved & hasn't even washed the damn thing off, EVER. :mad: . Yeah, an '88 Corvette isn't worth diddly nowadays, nor is it that great of a car in general, nor was it worth a bunch of money 15 years ago. Just the fact that somebody parks it, with some far-fetched intention of "fixing it up" but never even attempts to do so, really irks me. Get real or get rid of it why don't you? Having something like that hanging over my head & staring me in the face on a daily basis would drive me nuts. It drives me bonkers enough when I see other people doing it!!!

In that same neighborhood not too far away was another guy with a '78 or '79 white 930. Thing just sat on the guy's horseshoe driveway never going anywhere for years, almost as long as the POS 'Vette. I didn't think much of it because at the time I didn't know jack about Porsche 911s. Then my great friend Mark bought an '86 911 and we learned a lot about the cars. He would drive by the 930 on occasion because it was right on the way to his in-laws house and he'd mention it pretty often.

Finally Mark couldn't stand it anymore and he suggested we go over to the guy's house and make him an offer on the car. Now, this car was pretty rough. Always outside, never moved, probably a major basketcase. I mean, hell, the car had moss & weeds growing on it in some places!!! So we thought we could get it for a song and either part it out or fix it up enough to make it sale-able and make a little money on it.

Well we made the first mistake of showing up in Mark's ultra clean & shiny black '86 911. The guy was a complete knucklehead and could clearly see we knew a bit about the 911 based on what we had to say and what we were driving. Oops............. I think we offended him, even though we weren't rude or disrespectful in any way whatsoever, and right then and there he decided he was going to keep it. Mark is a nice guy until people start dicking him around. "HUH? It hasn't moved in forever. Do you know if it even runs or can be started?" Mark said. Yeah, i've decided i'm going to keep it says the guy. I could tell right away, uh oh, now Mark's pissed. That's not good. This could get ugly, fast...........

Well as luck would have it his wife happened to be listening to our conversation inside the house and said, "What????? You're going to keep it?!" He said yeah, I should finally get around to fixing it up like i've been meaning to & I just decided that's what i'm gonna do. He said this looking right at both of us. If she wasn't so pissed, I think Mark would have flipped out on the guy. She was pissed, we were pissed (what a wanker, just tell us nope not interested in getting lowballed by dudes like you) and within a week we never saw the car again. Wife probably threatened to kill him if he didn't finally get the dang car off the driveway, especially after two guys showed up at their door basically offering to take it off their hands no questions asked. People are just plain morons sometimes when it comes to "project cars"

karguy 12-12-2014 05:13 PM

I have been fortunate to have been able to purchase many cars over the years that were "not for sale" to everyone else. It is a weird formulae I've worked out where you can't be too pushy but can't be too disinterested. If it can be bought, I should be able to do it. I am turning the heat up a little bit now and hope that there is a need for cash right before the holidays.

targa80 12-12-2014 08:07 PM

For the majority of the human species we live in a throw away society, when things start to loose its luster it gets tossed. My older brother has been collecting Ford Model A's and Woody Wagons since the mid 1960's. He has three daily drivable Model A's. He maintains the drive train on them but has no intentions of ever restoring them. All the other cars are in a multitude of disrepair. To me it was always rusting junk but to him it is a gold mine of parts that he has collected and periodically sells for a descent profit. I remember in the early 80's he sold four brake drums to a guy who needed them for his woody wagon project. My brother did a one for one swap on the 4 drums plus $800 bucks. When the guy left very happy my brother laughed and said do you know I paid $25 buck for the entire car that those drums came off of. $775 dollars in profit and all he did was park it in his yard.

In my own case, I have a passion for Porsche cars but I am limited by what I can afford or store. My 80SC will be with me as long as I am on this earth and If I can afford it eventually I would like buy and restore several other makes and models i.e. 1970 VW bug, 1952 Chevy pickup, 1967 Camero SS convertible. I am a realist and realize that these are my wish list and these other cars would be projects and would eventually be sold. Only time will tell if I ever get to do them.

island911 12-13-2014 07:51 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jonesy78 (Post 8390438)
Wow, Italian specs, too. Do save it!

:confused:

Because the side mirror is torn off? :cool:

Daves911L 12-13-2014 08:16 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by KTL (Post 8393615)
Then my great friend Mark bought an '86 911 and we learned a lot about the cars. He would drive by the 930 on occasion because it was right on the way to his in-laws house and he'd mention it pretty often.

The guy was a complete knucklehead and could clearly see we knew a bit about the 911 based on what we had to say and what we were driving. Oops............. I think we offended him, even though we weren't rude or disrespectful in any way whatsoever, and right then and there he decided he was going to keep it. Mark is a nice guy until people start dicking him around. "HUH? It hasn't moved in forever. Do you know if it even runs or can be started?" Mark said. Yeah, i've decided i'm going to keep it says the guy. I could tell right away, uh oh, now Mark's pissed. That's not good. This could get ugly, fast...........

People are just plain morons sometimes when it comes to "project cars"

Your friend Mark is exactly the sort I was talking about. I'm not offended by a polite inquiry. But then there are those who act like they have a right to buy your car. They've already decided in their heads that its their car, and when you say its not for sale, they think something is wrong with YOU. So Mark was going to "go off" on the guy because he wouldn't sell? After he shows up uninvited and makes an unsolicited offer? And Mark thinks he's the guy being d***** around? That's priceless!

Maybe the guy just moved it around back afterwards, so clowns would stop bugging him about it (I doubt Mark was the first). Might be sitting there still, donating parts to another 930 under the cover in the garage. You never know why people do what they do, and sometimes the reasons aren't what you think they are.

Jerome74911S 12-13-2014 11:16 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Daves911L (Post 8394523)
Your friend Mark is exactly the sort I was talking about. I'm not offended by a polite inquiry. But then there are those who act like they have a right to buy your car. They've already decided in their heads that its their car, and when you say its not for sale, they think something is wrong with YOU. So Mark was going to "go off" on the guy because he wouldn't sell? After he shows up uninvited and makes an unsolicited offer? And Mark thinks he's the guy being d***** around? That's priceless!

Maybe the guy just moved it around back afterwards, so clowns would stop bugging him about it (I doubt Mark was the first). Might be sitting there still, donating parts to another 930 under the cover in the garage. You never know why people do what they do, and sometimes the reasons aren't what you think they are.

Excellent perspective.

karguy 12-13-2014 11:35 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Daves911L (Post 8394523)
Your friend Mark is exactly the sort I was talking about. I'm not offended by a polite inquiry. But then there are those who act like they have a right to buy your car. They've already decided in their heads that its their car, and when you say its not for sale, they think something is wrong with YOU. So Mark was going to "go off" on the guy because he wouldn't sell? After he shows up uninvited and makes an unsolicited offer? And Mark thinks he's the guy being d***** around? That's priceless!

Maybe the guy just moved it around back afterwards, so clowns would stop bugging him about it (I doubt Mark was the first). Might be sitting there still, donating parts to another 930 under the cover in the garage. You never know why people do what they do, and sometimes the reasons aren't what you think they are.

I agree 100%. Very often when I inquire about a cool car sitting, I run into the owner with the negative attitude due to people just like the Mark in the above story. It sometimes takes me months and even years to break through that tough exterior built up after time and again dealing with people that don't respect the owners of these cars.

sugarwood 12-13-2014 04:50 PM

Anyone keeping a car on blocks for 10 years will have major issues in parting with it
Hoarding is a subtype of Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD), and is a mental disorder.

KTL 12-15-2014 11:04 AM

Well I certainly appreciate your perspective on what I shared. I know the type you describe and that was not Mark or I. So with all due respect you're way off base in our case. I was actually there (obviously) and witnessed the way it played out. Tried to share it as concisely as I could without writing a novel on it. We didn't arrive with a right-to-buy-the-car attitude. We approached the owner as two friendly DIY guys who knew what the car was and what it was worth in its existing state.

I gathered very quickly that the owner was feeling like we were there to criticize the car and insult him with a lowball offer. However we never even got to talk price because he instantly prejudged us based on what we were driving and what knowledge we were armed with. Apparently the car we drove and the simple questions we asked:
>Does it run? Nope, battery is dead he said. Not surprising whatsoever.

>When was the last time you drove it? A few weeks ago he claimed. I didn't say anything but that felt a lie to me, considering how it sat in the exact spot on the driveway I would see it, every time I ran by there- at least 3 times/week. Plus it ALWAYS had a flat tire.

>What sort of work does he believe it needs? Story then changes when he said the engine doesn't want to run. How'd you drive it if it doesn't want to run? We didn't call him out on that. Just asked him to further elaborate- it turns over but won't start.

>Has the gas tank ever been checked for stale gas or have you ever flushed it? No, he said. He put premium unleaded in it last time he drove it.
were more than enough to rub him the wrong way and send us packing.

Just keep in mind that we didn't just arrive out of the blue knocking on the guy's door like a couple of jerks. Mark's mother in law lives nearby, knows of the people simply from living in the neighborhood for many years and asked if it would be OK for her son in law to give them a call about looking at the car. Owner was apparently OK with that, because we got a phone #, and Mark set up a time that worked best for the owner at his convenience. I tend to think that if the owner wasn't interested in speaking with anyone about the car, he would have simply declined the request. Instead he welcomed the visit on his terms.

Upon actually visiting the car up close it confirmed my beliefs that it was immobile for years. Same flat tire, bunch of debris collecting underneath, dirt residue piling up at 6 o'clock on the wheels, cobwebs inside the wheels, massive rust buildup on the brake rotors, etc. etc. blah blah blah the list goes on. It had moss growing on top of the door sills, at the bottom of the rear window and on the rear spoiler. Might have been some weeds growing out of the dirt buildup in the vents on the spoiler if i'm not mistaken? White paint was dirt stained & oxidized from just sitting outside uncovered and baking in the sun all day every day.

No, sorry, wrong answer Dave. The guy didn't just "move it around back afterwards so clowns would stop bugging him about it." Where we live is dense suburbia with semi-small lots and people aren't allowed to park cars in their backyards. Plus his yard is wide open and I would have seen it in the yard on my run route.

Forgive me if I come across as being defensive. Well that's because I don't appreciate being labeled as some "clown" by simply inquiring if someone would like to sell their car that hasn't moved, or changed in any way, for years on end. We didn't approach the guy like some used car lot a-holes putting the pressure on to snag the car for pennies just so he could be rid of it. The owner chose to prejudge us based on the car we showed up in, based on the knowledge we had and probably based on our physical appearance (both of us physically fit back then) and he not so fit, all of which apparently rubbed him the wrong way?

Too bad for you seller guy if you got a bad impression of us. It certainly wasn't on account of our behavior. We were friendly, not holier-than-thou and were prepared to make a decent offer given the condition of the car and how much work would be involved to make it road worthy again- a LARGE amount of work. But we never even got to talk price because he'd already decided we were not going to get the car for the aforementioned assumptions he'd apparently made about us.

His home was rife with issues that supported the car's condition. Garage a complete disorganized mess packed with stuff, exterior of house in considerable disrepair, poorly maintained lawn and landscaping, wife flabbergasted that he wasn't willing to sell the car anymore, etc. etc. blah blah blah. I don't expect everybody's house to be a showpiece & everything to be in fantastic condition. Everybody's got their priorities, their own way of doing things and their own issues to deal with. I recognize that about people. For many years I have on a daily basis I dealt with numerous people in-person, whom i've never before met. They typically have an issue(s) they are required to deal with or be cited for code violations & be fined. They are always treated w/respect, regardless of their circumstances. Back then we treated this guy with that same respectful approach on our visit. Yet this guy chose to blow us off because he didn't like something about us and it was obvious to Mark & I. So we're somehow priceless/wrong for feeling we were treated unfairly after being allowed to look over his car? I strongly disagree.

Mark was visibly upset, which he's admitted on occasion that he can sometimes take things too personally & doesn't take kindly to being judged or jerked around. I don't get all jacked up about that kind of behavior because i'm an easygoing guy. And you're exactly right that the owner's the guy with the keys and can decide if he's willing to sell or not- there's no entitlement to a seller regardless of how interested seller may be. But what I did take exception to is how he basically told us to get lost in a direct & cowardly manner. Fine if you don't want to sell it to us for whatever predisposition you've established against us. Oh well. Just say something like, "I don't think you guys are willing to pay what it's worth to me." or something to that effect. He was bold enough to look us both straight in the face and lie by saying he's actually going to restore it. Why not be boldly honest instead?

Whatever. Good luck to ya fella in your "restoration" venture. I had a strong feeling his wifey is the one who truly lost her temper, and that's what got the car off the property (couldn't go in the garage- too much crap in there) once and for all.

And don't worry guys. Pretty soon there'll be one less Mark around to muck with your skillful stroking of people to obtain their cars. Nowadays he's just clowning around on his deathbed with grade 4 inoperable brain cancer, along with the MS that got a strong hold of him ~5 yrs ago, just waiting for his time to be up here on earth. So yeah, I guess you could say i'm a bit defensive about my fellow clown of ~30 years?

So there's the whole story. Aren't you glad I chimed in with my internet forum fed moral superiority & knowledge? :rolleyes:

PooShee 12-15-2014 03:20 PM

Just to play devil's advocate:

I think bc of all the car shows on tv and the "antiques road show" etc...there are a lot of people that think they have some museum Concorse car and have their car valued way too high. It takes the enthusiasm out of being an enthusiast.

fbarrett 12-15-2014 04:57 PM

Move on, and look for another car.

jmpowers 12-15-2014 05:20 PM

In high school I stared out the window across the street and watched a white 356 cabriolet in an alley start to rot for 3 years. Four years after graduation I asked if he would consider selling as I had friends and the resources to restore it and was rudely told NO. Sadly I watched the car deteriorate for another 10 years before moving out of town.

ASD 12-16-2014 05:10 AM

In the early 70s I drove a tow truck for my Dad's service station. I would go out on service calls, pickup cars etc.
One call was for a very attractive flight attendant. She said her car wouldn't start again, and she was very upset about it. The car....a 1957 Jaguar XK140 Cabriolet was buried in the snow.
I dug it out, and tried in vain to get it started.

When I told her the tow charge for the car, I think it was $40; she said give me a hundred and you can have the thing.
So for 100 bucks I bought it right then...of course.
I remember it started up after it sat in the warm shop for a little while.

White with black leather, and all that wood inside, even the top had the bows covered in wood.

Wish I had it now :)

Jerome74911S 12-16-2014 05:43 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ASD (Post 8398428)
In the early 70s I drove a tow truck for my Dad's service station. One call was for a very attractive flight attendant. She said her car wouldn't start again, and she was very upset about it. The car....a 1957 Jaguar XK140 Cabriolet . . .

My ex-wife had an XK-120 Cabriolet. She said it would run too hot in city traffic, so she sold it for $400 to some young guy. Two weeks later he wrapped it around a tree. Did I say she is my EX-wife? ("Cabriolet" = drop-head coupe)

ASD 12-16-2014 05:44 AM

Ha. I bet the flight attendant still missses her 140..
If I had back all the cars I've sold...

Len 911 12-16-2014 05:45 AM

It took 10 years for the owner of these 356's to sell them to me. Two sat outside and one was inside the barn. Sad part was owner had stripped the car in the barn and stored all the doors, trunk and deck lid outside in the weather. We had to dig the cars out of the dirt because they sat there so long.

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1418740604.jpg
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1418740636.jpg
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1418740668.jpg

IS300 12-16-2014 06:16 AM

orange 912
 
I have been driving pasted this orange 912, sitting in a driveway on a main road,
for 30 years... I have witnessed its demise ... rust is falling off ... I have stopped and knock on door over the years..... nobody ever answers


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