What will help the cause is to explain some of the # s spent. Like the 6800 on trim. And other stuff. Some can't just guess the costsIt's certainly ain't the hottest ticket on the planet right now. That's for sure.
What will help the cause is to explain some of the # s spent. Like the 6800 on trim. And other stuff. Some can't just guess the costsIt's certainly ain't the hottest ticket on the planet right now. That's for sure.
There's $6800 in chrome alone, rebuilt gauge cluster was I think $3k. $10k is funny, but thanks for the response.If I had to buy it the way it is sitting right now I would not offer any more than $10k for it
I am putting together a 70 Charger right now that was completly apart I got from an estate sale
Trying to figure out what parts and bolts and screws go where is not that easy when you did not take it apart
If all the parts are there and nothing more needs to be bought the best thing to happen would be the owner needs to put it back together
There are other $20k projects on the market that would yield more return on the time invested than this car ever would
Sorry to say but someone needs to figure out with this car which way will loose the least amout of cash Press forward to cut it loose now ??
We don't paint, but just got a quote on a C10 that needs full in and out, in similar shape regarding prep (but has its floors) for $14k. That's show quality blah blah blah.I want to start out by saying I am not trying to put you on the spot, but I have a legitimate question.
What would your shop charge to put in the floors, finish the bodywork, paint, and reassemble that car? To me, that would be ground zero. The cost of acquiring the car and parts gets added to that.
The reason I look at it that way is my 68 Coronet project is pretty well stalled because at least in my neck of the woods, bodywork and paint is currently about what my car and parts are worth. Add the two numbers together and I have a car that would be a monetary loss if I sold it upon completion.
I mean I have made it fairly clear that almost everything has been redone, restored, or refurbished. The gauge cluster, completely restored. The grille and headlight assemblies, restored. New glass. New rear end and internals. Console restored. Dash. And and and. Just about everything has been bought new, restored, or refurbished.What will help the cause is to explain some of the # s spent. Like the 6800 on trim. And other stuff. Some can't just guess the costs
Not sure where I said he's not selling. The car will be for sale, I am trying to see when people think is fair.Late to the party here, but if he's not selling... why are you asking "what's it worth"??? Who cares, he's already knows what he spent. Now if you can put that car together in less than 200 hours, I'll pay the full price for it! Not a f'n hope in hell, I don't care how many you've put together !
You say "Nothing productive is happening here." But in reality you've learned that the car your client chose to invest $70K in might be worth $45K on it's best day once completed... And as you know it only needs another $25K at a bare minimum to get completed....Thank you all for your responses, but I think it's time to end the discussion.
Nothing productive is happening here.
Have a great night!
Value of 66-67 Chargers….I appreciate your input, but I work at a custom car shop and I am very familiar with how much it costs to restore a car. I just don't know a lot about these cars specifically as far as valuation in the current market.
I knew it wasn't a popular car.You say "Nothing productive is happening here." But in reality you've learned that the car your client chose to invest $70K in might be worth $45K on it's best day once completed... And as you know it only needs another $25K at a bare minimum to get completed....
Paint $14K
Floor installed $1.5K
Assemble and debug car easily $10K
The reality is it's just not a car that most people are willing to fork out big $$$$ for
No, not a B Body guy.When he originally posted the thread I noticed his post count was like 5. So not a member but a lurker, and definitely not a Mopar guy.
This one would be better to start with for the money.
[/URL]
I see lots of responses giving you opinions on what we feel its worth based on your description. The people like myself who have said it needs a lot of work left to be finished are telling you that to explain why we feel it's worth somewhere between 10k and 15k. The heavy lifting is in the body and paint work, it's my guess that is why your shop doesn't do it. There has been no heavy lifting in some dude writing a check to get his trim restored or grille restored. On any car project the heaviest of lifting and the most expensive things are body, paint and drive train, none of which has been done to this car, hence the low value numbers you are receiving from us.I knew it wasn't a popular car.
I wanted a fair valuation, in its current condition, as described by me. What got was a lot of "it"s going to need xyz so it's going to cost more to finish". Or "you should finish it and you will get more". Obviously if it needs more than I claim, then it would be worth less. It would be nice if there were validation numbers that matched what I said it needed, not what someone imagines it will need. Also, I am not going to finish it, the owner is not going to finish it. So every sentence typed stating that it should is a waste. I would MUCH rather spend the time to finish my cars and bikes, and our shop is full of the owners cars and not taking any new vehicles.
I know the car is upside down. As someone mention in a previous response in this thread, most projects are upside down. I know it's not a popular car. I actually kinda like them, but not the point. I know if it was a year later and a Hemi... I know I know.
What I didn't know is what a group of Mopar B Body enthusiast thought a 67 Charger 383 car needing floors, paint, and assembly, with all of the other heavy lifting done and restored, would be worth... and I really didn't get that answer. But, as with the others in this thread, I appreciate your response.
Y'all have a wonderful day.