Thats over $2,000 worth of damage right there

thats over $2,000 worth of damage right there

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americancarsauction.com/salvage-cars-sale/45429176-2000-ferrari-360-GA-Cartersville
copart.com/lot/45429176
twitter.com/NSFWRedditVideo

Is that site legit? $30k for a used ferrari is insanely cheap

I guess

its an auction though

A. it's a 30k bid, not buy it now
2. it went off the road or hit a curb hard, look at the bend in the LF wheel
Thirdly. F1 360s with 50k miles are not worth a lot of money

How much did you pick it up for?
Did it have anywhere near $50K when you did?

>$2,000 worth of damage
I fucked mine up on a bad road, although just the bumper, not the wheel as well.
Not looking forward to the estimate.

its an auction. thats the current bid.

>ferrari fag can't read

It's also a Modena, they're not particularly valuable Ferrari's in the first place.

It's like the cheapest sorta-modern Ferrari you can buy to curry favor with the Italian overlords so that you can be allowed to eventually buy a new one.

yep
americancarsauction.com/salvage-cars-sale/45429176-2000-ferrari-360-GA-Cartersville
>Actual Cash Value: $71,907 USD
>Repair Cost: $32,614 USD
basically the estimate is it'll cost $32K to fix the car and it's currently at a bid of $30,250 USD, or repair + bid = $62,864. that's obviously ~$9,000 lower than the "cash value" price but that's with a vehicle that would be substantially rebuilt and a savage title on its head.

>can't read
I know, life sucks.
Here I was, thinking I bought a "Perrari".

>$32K
Hard to believe bumper/wheel/alignment would be that much.
Makes me wonder how bad that crash really was, and what else got ruined.

If it's 30K of repairs, then possibly the engine cradle. That could happen if that low slung car was parked in a parking lot with those concrete curbs at each space. Someone might not be in the space in front, so he thinks he will cooly drive forward thru the space to get out forgetting there is a curb stop that forces all cars to reverse out.

All these low slung cars have expensive injuries we never used to see.

>possibly the engine cradle
You mean, like he was dumb enough to keep going as the curb stop wrecked the entire length of his car?
Because that's disability grade stupidity.

He only has to rev forward up to the front wheel which is actually a pretty short distance. At that point, the curb stop has hit the bottom of the engine, the cradle, and the left front suspension thus making the wheel look bent outwards.

>At that point, the curb stop has hit the bottom of the engine
Not really.
The 360 is a mid engine, not front.

kek
did a ferrari run over your cat, or something?

Nah m8, that's how Ferrari works. It's half auto manufacturer, half exclusive social club where you have to work your way up to the best models. I think there's also a bit of hazing involved too where you go into a dealership blindfolded and they all get to paddle your ass before you move up to something above the California.

I heard shit like this before I bought one (they train their people to be dicks, etc.), but I never believed it. After attempting to buy from two different dealerships and getting blown off both times, I'm starting to believe there's something to what you say.
They do get nicer once you have one, but if I had to make a guess, I'd say it has something to do with trying to appear as exclusive as possible. Kind of like how they produce far fewer cars than demand allows, in order to keep the attention of the most moneyed buyers.

Super cars are in a league of their own when it comes to parts and maintenance.

It really is all about the image and prestige for Ferrari.

I have to get new tires soon. I'm betting on $600 for each back, $300 for each front. With balancing and labor, I'm betting I don't get out of there for less than $2200.

The people I've talked to so far have been nice, but we'll see. Kind of terse too, like they have better things to do, like sell cars to people who will pay $400K.

>buying a gayrarri
how does it feel to be gay you homo?

Pretty good.
Mpg is low, but I'm sure you knew that.

>not hitting your ferrari with the ol' drift stitch treatment

>Super cars are in a league of their own when it comes to parts and maintenance.
An OEM tail light cover is $688 before shipping. So the prices are higher than what it costs to replace the cover on my Chevrolet Cavalier.

old BMW parts are pretty reasonable unless its a S38 (E28/E34 M5 and E24 M6) or a S14 (E30 M3)

then its rape

>the prices are higher than what it costs to replace my entire chevy cavalier

ftfy

Such is life. My car gets me around. I cannot afford the insurance payments on a ferrari anyways. At least I work and pay taxes.

>ftfy
You can mock other people who work. Would you rather have me pretend to be autistic and collect welfare the rest of my life like other people do?

>accidentally crack bumper on curb
What's annoying is there are some plaza malls that have concrete tire stops made to the old days standards. They are so tall that they would hit my front fascia if I tried to let my nose go over them. They aren't the only place. Even one branch of the public library has those car stops being too tall for new cars although those old cars would be fine.

But parking in those spots means the car's rear sticks out more because I cannot let my car's nose near that thing or crunch, crack, mangle, snap, crackle, pop.

because they only get complaints from "those kids in their sporty cars" and not all the soccer moms in Escalades who forget the difference between the gas and brake

Don't even try to park in those spaces if you can help it. One day, you might accidentally go too far forward and chip your nose or crack it. Or someone bumps into your car as they are backing out and that pushes your car forward into the obstacle. So now you have damage in both front and back from the parking lot hit and run.

>copart.com/lot/45429176
>2000
>flappy paddles

In the trash it goes.

Many store managers ignore complaints. The more a store costs, the less bonus the manager gets. So he or she has negative incentive to spend money on improving parking spaces.

The only time they seem to do anything is if some news reporter starts nosing around and mentions they may write up the store's problem in an overall review article about the shopping experience in that whole area.