1973 bargain?

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Discussion

bergs2

Original Poster:

2,802 posts

249 months

Monday 17th July 2006
quotequote all
Hi All,

I have a mate who is interested in a pre-impact 911 and stumbled over this one

what potential foibles do these oldies have?

anyone know of this particular car?

looks like a good price to me - but then it may well be a bag of nails....

any advice gladly recieved,

BERGS

domster

8,431 posts

271 months

Monday 17th July 2006
quotequote all
RUST!

bergs2

Original Poster:

2,802 posts

249 months

Monday 17th July 2006
quotequote all


already told him that - apparently it was a US import that came over in 2000 and has been waxoiled regularly...

how best to assess the level of corrosion from the dreaded red stuff???

BTW he lives up in manchester - so if the he does buy the car and it has a rust problem it'll probably disintegrate within days of getting there....

Carrera2

8,352 posts

233 months

Monday 17th July 2006
quotequote all
I can offer you no advice. That car is gorgeous though!

ettore

4,144 posts

253 months

Monday 17th July 2006
quotequote all
As someone who has been looking for a decent pre-impact for several months (2.2/2.4S if you know of any!) I will re-iterate the above. They rust (badly). Most have also been buggered about with over the years so finding a genuine original is very hard work.

Having said that, for £12K I guess your mate isn`t too bothered by all of that - the best advice is to get it properly inspected by someone that knows the early cars. The DDk forum www.ddk-online.com/ is the best place to ask specific queries and get recommendations.

timwatsham

230 posts

251 months

Tuesday 18th July 2006
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If it is in as good a condition as it says it is, then I think it's a bit of a bargain. I paid over £14k last year for a similar vehicle, and heartily recomend it. The main thing is get a pre-purchase inspection done and really, really look into the bodywork. It killed my last one.

If you can find one that is solid and secure with the chassis and body, then you can attend to other bits later. And spend as much as you can afford. You won't make any money buying a cheap one and trying to do it up (says he after finding a bargain one the first time round and loosing a lot).

Wonderful, wonderful cars if you have somewhere to keep one. I unfortunatley will loose my parking space at the end of August, so am selling mine in september. If he's still looking then, drop me a PM - although I'm putting mine on for £16,000 (bare metal re-spray recently, new suspension, new seats etc.).

Buy the right one and you won't look back!

timwatsham

230 posts

251 months

Tuesday 18th July 2006
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Oh and Nick at Early 911 does source and restore great cars. www.early911.co.uk

johnny g-pipe

174 posts

244 months

Tuesday 18th July 2006
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Looks a bit, err, tired and moody. Some cars look sprightly and just intangibly 'happy': this not so much.
Espec rear three quarter view.

The american cars are generally OK for rust, though, as long as it came from Cali or similar. The mileage is irrelevant - when was the motor last rebuilt? The gearbox sounds a little concerning, too..'they all do that, Sir' hmm. So my concern would be engine and gearbox health over rust for this puppy.
And I hate the steering wheel.

Otherwise, no problem!!