Classified postings do not allow for discussion (replies are not allowed). Direct message the member if you would like to discuss the item.
The Classified section is open to any individual (non-commercial firms) posting of items for sale. Members posting commercial advertisements must be enrolled in a Supporting Merchant program.
Postings without relevant details (PRICE, location, condition, etc.) will be deleted.
Replies sorted oldest to newest
wow!
Very nice nice but not complete, cigarette lighter's missing
Why so cheap? Worth a lot more in today's market right?
Probably have to send the retainer fee to Kenya.....
@sethsaccocio posted:Why so cheap? Worth a lot more in today's market right?
$75K for an unrestored B coupe is cheap, proving that the world is completely upside down right now.
In 2000, when I bought my first Speedster, an unrestored A coupe was about $10K. I didn't buy one.
@LeonChupp posted:Probably have to send the retainer fee to Kenya.....
The 356 Registry closely vets its "members-only" classifieds. I'm sure the car's for real and as it's in Maine, ....no calls to Kenya required!
There's a guy in the New England 356 club (not Paul Householder) that buys and sells antiques (furniture and such) for a living and usually buys estate contents for resale. He seems to come across a good "Barn Find" 356 in New England every year or two.
Looks like it just needs front bumper over-riders and the bumper twisted down.
I hear you Stan. Crazy money nowadays. I guess the B is less desirable or there are more of them around?
I'd buy that, and just refresh it mechanically.
Keep the rest original, as is.
I say all classic cars are realistically priced. If you can sell a rust-bucket original Speedster for $200k - 300k, then that's your reality and it's probably worth every one of today's dollars if you sit on it for twenty years. Is Apple a realistically-priced stock? Only a finite number of original classics built, and that supply can only get smaller with time.
But agreed - this one seems to be a hell of a good deal!
@Jarco posted:I say all classic cars are realistically priced. If you can sell a rust-bucket original Speedster for $200k - 300k, then that's your reality and it's probably worth every one of today's dollars if you sit on it for twenty years. Is Apple a realistically-priced stock? Only a finite number of original classics built, and that supply can only get smaller with time.
But agreed - this one seems to be a hell of a good deal!
I totally agree-- a thing (or service) is worth what the buyer and seller agree it's worth.
It may not be worth it to me (and the price of OG 356s and pre-996 911s is not worth it to me), but that doesn't make them unreasonable. I agree-- in today's market, this is a screamin' deal.