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#31
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#32
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The search
Being from New England, I agree 100% with the rust. I spend 6 months looking for a suitable canidate. I found mine was from central TX. Sure there is the other issues like a/c, cruise and the locks that I have to deal with but, I can always justify working on a solid shell. I gotta say that I was lucky as I only spend $1900 and I'm sure that I'll spend at least 3k getting things the way they ought to be. But she drives smooth and solid. It helps if you can find a good parts car if you can swing the storage.
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#33
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Thats the way to do it, its worth fixing up a solid car because when your done you will have something. But a rust bucket will always be a rust bucket.
__________________
2016 Corvette Stingray 2LT 1969 280SE 2023 Ram 1500 2007 Tiara 3200 |
#34
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I am no expert (and maybe I am just defending my rust bucket a little bit), but vanity issues aside, if a body has a little rust on it and the buyer realizes that and doesn't have a problem with it, what's the big deal? I am not talking about structural issues, I am just talking about body rust.
Rust is one of the few issues a newbie car buyer can actually identify (if they know where to look) and make a judgement on, vs. other internal problems which may not be as apparent (ie: what is the reason this car shifts weird). Personally, I'd take a rusty/ugly car with everything else in good shape (solid drive, everything in order under the hood) versus the opposite. A rusty body isn't going to leave you stranded on the side of the road or unable to get to work.
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1979 240D w/4 Speed Manual, Light Blue Estimated 225-275K Miles - "Lil' Chugs"
Sold but fondly remembered: 1981 300TD Turbo Tan 235K miles, 1983 300SD Astral Silver 224K miles |
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