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Itza,
I recently purchased an ‘88 coupe after searching for over a year. I found it through a mechanic I called to ask to preform a PPI on a different car in his area. Through our conversation I realized I would pay him close to $900 to go through a car that would likely need another 10-15k in repairs. Why not buy a known entity instead? He mentioned that he may have a customer interested in selling a nice 911 and kindly called to ask them. The rest is history. Perhaps you would consider looking through old posts here to find trusted p-car shops. You can call and ask any of them if they have customers looking to part with any of their little beauties. You may find the proverbial needle in the haystack. All this will take much time, effort and energy. I have family like many here, so my time is valuable. It’s a trade off however you look at it. |
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+1 to this comment. I'm in the UK and a lot of these duds are shipped over here with the "service history being lost in transit", and then sold. Lots of people have the cash too, and make it their job to buy cheap cars - OP will be competing with these. |
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Thanks for the input and suggestions. |
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I'll keep the search alive. |
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Anyone see the 1984 911 with a Mitsubishi EVO 4G63 swap in it the guy was selling to pay for his daughters wedding? It was posted in Philly craigslist for an hour before getting deleted by the author. I tried calling and texting the seller but he kept dropping my call after a couple rings. Fishy but for $9500 it looked too good to be true. Drop that 4G63 and sell it and have a decent (looking) roller ready for a swap. |
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The true hype is the nonsense that you sometimes see where people claim that 911s are low maintenance and bullet proof (true of garage art 911s, only). |
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ItzaMe,
Most people will agree that deals are rare, in any market. So, don't expect one. But you certainly wait and hope for one. As you said, they are out there. The reason you're getting no support here is that you're asking for a free lunch. Getting a deal is something you do in isolation. It's an ad you chase down before anyone else. People find deals for a living. That is their day job. You don't get a deal just because you deserve one. Everyone wants a deal. But, very few actually get the great deal since it involves luck, persistence, and timing. If you think someone's going to post a clean driver 911 for $20k so you can have your deal, you're wrong. No one will be posting any deal here. They are doing the work. It's like romancing a woman for weeks, then letting you step in at the last minute and getting the sex. Not. If someone is bothering to find a deal, that means they will buy the car themselves, and flip it for the difference. It's just not going to be handed over to you for nothing. If you want a deal, by all means, go find one. Set up your email alerts, have the $20k in cash in your house, and call in sick when the deal arrives in your mailbox. Because that's what all the other deal seekers are doing. |
Damn Sugar, harshing itza’s melon. He’s been showing us cars for a couple years learning his way around. He’s not asking for a free lunch.
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I am there with Sugar. It is just the facts.
Great deals are snapped up in moments from listing, even if a sympathetic Pelican put Itza in touch with the smoking deal ad it will already be gone by the time he gets to it. And if some one contacts me with a car and wants to sell it for 2/3 of the market price, and that's what itza wants, I would advice them to sell it for more and not leave money on the table. If they insisted on giving away $10,000 in value on a car, I am afraid I would tell a closer friend about it than some random stranger on the internet or buy it myself. Sorry itza, no help from me other than my opinion on market correct price's or potential problems in cars you find. |
Itza,
Have you looked into this one? May need some DIY, a few dollars and elbow grease to get right. This forum is a great resource! Your quest may take a village. Btw where are you located? https://www.autotrader.com/cars-for-sale/vehicledetails.xhtml?listingId=475445405&zip=18411 &referrer=%2Fcars-for-sale%2Fsearchresults.xhtml%3Fzip%3D18411%26startYe ar%3D1981%26sortBy%3DderivedpriceDESC%26maxPrice%3 D30000%26incremental%3Dall%26firstRecord%3D0%26end Year%3D1985%26modelCodeList%3D911%26makeCodeList%3 DPOR%26searchRadius%3D0&startYear=1981&numRecords= 25&maxPrice=30000&firstRecord=0&endYear=1985&model CodeList=911&makeCodeList=POR&searchRadius=0&makeC ode1=POR&modelCode1=911 |
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"Update as of Jan 21 2018: SOLD! Porsche have been sold already. Thanks!" |
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Orig Poster,
I don't know if anyone has mentioned this, but for under $20k you can get a very nice 914 that's ready to drive and enjoy....and you'll still be in a classic air cooled Porsche, and prices will only go up. |
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Well said. That same thought is what's in the back of my mind every time I'm searching for one, glad you brought it more to light. Thanks. |
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I got lucky with my first 912 but had to sell it and got lucky to make a few bucks being a somewhat noob to the aircooled club. |
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Thanks for the link, that's exactly what I'm looking for. Over the years there were exact same cars as that one for 18-20k and some with zero issues (according to seller) but they sold quick. Quote:
I just can't see myself getting any other car besides a 911 to hold on to for a long period of time. I've had many cool cars that I've put work into and sold later to pay for my tuition over the years so since I'm finally done with school and steady job, I want to find something to build on and enjoy. |
The 911 is 'the' car to go for, if you can afford it.
Keep up the work, it looks like you're doing everything 'right' to get something lucky, just need to be patient! |
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