Shows why you shouldn’t be a cheapskate and buy a knackered one for 8k.
If he’d spent 17 on a lovely one he’d be in for the same money as he is now with one nice working car rather than two wrecks and a headache. By the time he’s paid for a mechanic to do an engine swap he’ll be deep in a hole that he’ll realistically never dig himself out of by becoming a parts dealer on the side.
The advice should generally be - if you can only afford a a dog - don’t bother / there is no such thing as a cheap Porsche / literally a case of buy cheap buy twice
GG. wrote: Sat May 06, 2023 8:35 pm
Shows why you shouldn’t be a cheapskate and buy a knackered one for 8k.
If he’d spent 17 on a lovely one he’d be in for the same money as he is now with one nice working car rather than two wrecks and a headache. By the time he’s paid for a mechanic to do an engine swap he’ll be deep in a hole that he’ll realistically never dig himself out of by becoming a parts dealer on the side.
The advice should generally be - if you can only afford a a dog - don’t bother / there is no such thing as a cheap Porsche / literally a case of buy cheap buy twice
I don't think he'd expected to win it when he bought it, but bid 8008.13 (I think) and lady luck smiled upon him (or not, depending on your point of view).
The silver one's paintwork was hilarious - 50 shades of silver (at least). Are all the crappy bodywork repairs hidden by all those different spray jobs coming to the surface now?
integrale_evo wrote: Sat May 06, 2023 10:40 pm
Yep, was a pretty harsh statement.
Spending more than twice as much also wouldn’t guarantee a totally rust free car and a promise that you won’t get any big bills.
This times a million.
I’ve seen some very shiny cars with a lovely service history that have driven the same salty roads as everything else. Also the prices for 911s has gone silly in the last 3 years so what was a 10k car in 2020 is now closer to 20k now, same car same problems.
integrale_evo wrote: Sat May 06, 2023 10:40 pm
Yep, was a pretty harsh statement.
Spending more than twice as much also wouldn’t guarantee a totally rust free car and a promise that you won’t get any big bills.
Based on used prices going up, spending twice as much would get him a 50-shades of silver 996 with cracked heads in 2023. So maybe he’s actually done ok
The correct course of action would have been to part out the original 996. Take the non crusty 996 and LS swap it. Sell on Collecting cars for £80,000. Buy 996 GT3.
The very best would have been more than the £17k I mentioned - which would have bought a decent example with say a £2,500 contingency fund and a PPI for a couple of hundred quid.
My point is that he bought a 'cheap' Porsche for £8,000, immediately rounded that up to £12,500 for a fixed one (so immediately it was a gamble that didn't pay off) and has ended up a couple of years later with something that has such bad rust it is essentially a parts car. He's now bought another and surely cannot come out of that series of questionable decisions with one working car (non matching numbers to the extent that even makes a difference at this level) for less than £20,000.
The aforementioned nice example with low mileage and the car would not be worth north of £20k comfortably. He'll now be in for £20,000 with a car that will be worth substantially less than that (£12k maybe), in Zenith (purple blue) which is perhaps the least desirable 996 colour.
Everyone pays their money and takes their choice but its just a good example that scraping the barrel nearly always costs you more not less (unless you're Hoovie and make Yootube revenue on the side).
GG. wrote: Sun May 07, 2023 2:47 pm
The very best would have been more than the £17k I mentioned - which would have bought a decent example with say a £2,500 contingency fund and a PPI for a couple of hundred quid.
My point is that he bought a 'cheap' Porsche for £8,000, immediately rounded that up to £12,500 for a fixed one (so immediately it was a gamble that didn't pay off) and has ended up a couple of years later with something that has such bad rust it is essentially a parts car. He's now bought another and surely cannot come out of that series of questionable decisions with one working car (non matching numbers to the extent that even makes a difference at this level) for less than £20,000.
The aforementioned nice example with low mileage and the car would not be worth north of £20k comfortably. He'll now be in for £20,000 with a car that will be worth substantially less than that (£12k maybe), in Zenith (purple blue) which is perhaps the least desirable 996 colour.
Everyone pays their money and takes their choice but its just a good example that scraping the barrel nearly always costs you more not less (unless you're Hoovie and make Yootube revenue on the side).
I'm with you on this one. Buying one car with a broken engine and crappy bodywork and letting it die should have been the warning that you haven't got the talent of Harry or Sunday jumper.
No not really - i don’t have any particular animosity to Rev. I think SJ and him had a falling out.
Maybe my comments came across as harsh - but I really only meant that these gambles rarely pay off.
The ‘cheapskate’ comment was tongue in cheek but was just aimed at the fact that he’s had enough in reserve to have a play around with an (also knackered) early 90s Camero and the Macan etc so it clearly wasn’t outside his means to have paid more and got something nicer.