Wheeler Dealers

Author
Discussion

Mercdriver

2,058 posts

34 months

Monday 6th May
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Fiat 126 was OK, Polish method of “adjusting” spring gave me shivers. A bit too much time on visiting clubs etc, just FF

Looked much better at end, a good polish and valet?

Reminded me of my youth, under cars when it has been snowing and raking about in scrapyards and removing parts yourself.

Wife had one of these many years ago, reliable if boring, eventually scrapped it due to rust.

Smollet

10,665 posts

191 months

Tuesday 7th May
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I enjoyed this episode more than last week for some reason. The Poles are so friendly. Just don't annoy them rofl

LARK F1 GTR

3,318 posts

147 months

Thursday 9th May
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I really disliked the wheels they put on it!


daqinggregg

1,579 posts

130 months

Thursday 9th May
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I’m enjoying it as much as always, the more I see of Mike, the more he comes across as a genuine car enthusiast.

Misanthroper

110 posts

33 months

Tuesday 14th May
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I may not know all the ins and outs of M3 pricing but did they really just pay 69k euros for an M3 with an engine rebuild and paint job done at home by the seller with no documentation or warranty on the work??

It’s not a bad show but it’s lost its way from what it started out as, and Mike seriously needs to start looking after himself. The cars they show in different garages are more interesting than what they buy and work on and I’d question whether without the show they’d make any profit on these cars, more like barely break even or a loss.

MDifficult

2,073 posts

186 months

Tuesday 14th May
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Misanthroper said:
I may not know all the ins and outs of M3 pricing but did they really just pay 69k euros for an M3 with an engine rebuild and paint job done at home by the seller with no documentation or warranty on the work??

It’s not a bad show but it’s lost its way from what it started out as, and Mike seriously needs to start looking after himself. The cars they show in different garages are more interesting than what they buy and work on and I’d question whether without the show they’d make any profit on these cars, more like barely break even or a loss.
Do people really think that the whole 'make a profit/loss' thing in Wheeler Dealers is actually real? Really?

Seriously, it's a plot device. A conceit. A convenient start and finish point to the show. What Mike buys it for, what he sells it for, how much the parts cost is all just made up! The risk of whether the cars actually make a profit or not is no more consequential to the show, or Mike, than whether he has sugar in his tea or not. It's just a way to make the show more interesting! He's said as much himself a dozen times.

Anyone with half a brain can see that the 'cost' of what they do far outweighs any profit he's ever made. He doesn't cost his time. Or transport. Or Diesel. Or rent, or electricity, or insurance or a million other things that would all contribute to whether fixing up these cars in the way he does is a viable economic activity or not.

For the last time: Wheeler Dealers isn't a TV show about a man trying to make money on fixing up cars. It's a fun TV show about fixing up cars.

Mercdriver

2,058 posts

34 months

Tuesday 14th May
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Not the best programme I thought, I think they bought the car because they wanted one at any cost to make the programme. I would not have paid that amount of money for a car with 180k and painted at home.

At least Elvis got his hands dirty on the diff. Another boriing rebuild of a seat, ho hum.

Shy about revealing the price again too, another loss?



President Merkin

3,173 posts

20 months

Tuesday 14th May
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Literally one post later. In what way is any car they ever do not a loss? Show me your working how doing up bangers in a fully equipped workshop for television with a mechanic you see on screen & several you don't, camera operators, a director, sound guys, set designers, make up people, script writers, producers, accountants, catering, electiricians, grips, editors and presenters has a dollar in it,


MDifficult

2,073 posts

186 months

Tuesday 14th May
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President Merkin said:
Literally one post later. In what way is any car they ever do not a loss? Show me your working how doing up bangers in a fully equipped workshop for television with a mechanic you see on screen & several you don't, camera operators, a director, sound guys, set designers, make up people, script writers, producers, accountants, catering, electiricians, grips, editors and presenters has a dollar in it,
laugh exactly!

Mike said there's a core production crew of about 30 people! Just look at the titles at the end of the show!

I'd love someone to do a real cost breakdown of Mike spending a whole day, with two camera people, and a sound guy, driving a piece of dashboard 300 miles to be fixed by a guy in a shed, just to 'make a profit' on the car he's fixing.

laugh

Mercdriver

2,058 posts

34 months

Tuesday 14th May
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I appreciate your arguement and you are correct but the way the programme started was that they replicated what you or I could do at home I.e. restoring a car ignoring the labour costs and he always stated up till now how much or little profit they made on the sale.

The profit will be on selling the programme to the tv companies.


snobetter

1,164 posts

147 months

Tuesday 14th May
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MDifficult said:
President Merkin said:
Literally one post later. In what way is any car they ever do not a loss? Show me your working how doing up bangers in a fully equipped workshop for television with a mechanic you see on screen & several you don't, camera operators, a director, sound guys, set designers, make up people, script writers, producers, accountants, catering, electiricians, grips, editors and presenters has a dollar in it,
laugh exactly!

Mike said there's a core production crew of about 30 people! Just look at the titles at the end of the show!

I'd love someone to do a real cost breakdown of Mike spending a whole day, with two camera people, and a sound guy, driving a piece of dashboard 300 miles to be fixed by a guy in a shed, just to 'make a profit' on the car he's fixing.

laugh
As much as I know the buy and sell costs etc are what they are, if you're going to add in the cost of the film crew etc you need to add on the profit from TV. That'll be a big figure....

Smollet

10,665 posts

191 months

Tuesday 14th May
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I wonder what it went for in the end?

Mercdriver

2,058 posts

34 months

Tuesday 14th May
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Quote: As much as I know the buy and sell costs etc are what they are, if you're going to add in the cost of the film crew etc you need to add on the profit from TV. That'll be a big figure....

Yes, that is where the programme went off the rails when the yanks got involved and cheapened the show by reducing the spanner time, I guess the film crew spent a lot of time waiting for the mechanics to remove, repair and refit some parts. Hence Edd left, was he correct? Professionally yes but not economically for him?