Quote:
Originally Posted by shlobeck
Agreed much too late for the houses at Amelia. Too often the overhead of placing a car in an auction house negates the best value of an average or above average car. Your objective at these auctions is to stimulate interest of non-Porsche buyers, with extremely low mileage, a unique color combo, or rarity. The 930 is surely not rare in the spectrum of these auctions so you better come with a very clean, well preserved example. The Petrol blue/cork interior is a huge advantage. With prices fluctuating it’s unpredictable on the worth at that particular place in time. Are you willing to deal with the contingencies if it doesn’t sell and you find yourself $2-3k into a car you still own? It’s kinda like a good hand of limit poker, the more people you have to call your nut-hand the more money you can potentially make. A unique colored cashmere ‘79 930 used in Seinfeld’s internet show sold well under estimates at Gooding last year. Good luck.
https://www.goodingco.com/vehicle/1979-porsche-930-6/
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Agreed. So basically on that Gooding example above the seller would of net around $105k after all of their fees (10% seller fee plus transport and detailing etc...)