OK, last part.....a long winded discussion on what I felt I should pay. what I did pay, some justification, and what comes next.
The Value
Like a lot of Fathers, mine told me not to buy the first car I looked at, or the second one. The first car I looked at was a car listed here. His had 84k miles, plenty of mods, a hail blemish requiring a full repaint, but well cared for and well enjoyed. The ask last October was $190k (do not know what the sale price was). A great learning experience for me, and the car I bought is very much like that car. Between October and February when Ricky reached out to me, I saw a lot of cars, talked to a lot of sellers, talked to a lot of recent buyers here. For new buyers, don’t conduct this search in a vacuum…talk to people, lots of things to learn.
I was really close to buying a 4k mile local car 5-6 weeks ago (as in having transferred the money and had the loan set up), and I’m glad I didn’t….having to wipe out the car fund (including the money I had set aside for Diablo & GT maintenance) PLUS borrowing $40k just wasn’t the right thing to do financially, and would have limited the use of the car because I would feel a little guilty driving away the premium I just paid…and would be paying on for four long years. Many owners with higher mileage cars here recommend buying a similar car with miles so there is no guilt factor.
A note for future buyers, don’t be afraid to reach out and ask what buyers paid. This market changes quickly, and there are a lot of dealers out there with Fantasy Land pricing and nonsensical auction results. I was fortunate enough to have on good authority what 6-7 cars sold for between Oct and February, and developed (with another member here) a formula that was really accurate for predicting sales prices between 3k and 17k miles and had decent reliability up to 30k miles.
Since the car I bought was a lot like that first car I looked into, I thought the pricing should be similar with some added allowance for the odometer issue and the minor issues found in the inspection. After some short discussion (again, a wonderful seller, everything was calm and pleasant, I’m really a believer in buying a seller as well as a car, and this experience was great) we settled on $182k.
For me, this was a good value…..the car is not a salvage, not in an accident, not ultra high miles. In exchange for accepting that the car wasn’t a perfect museum piece only touched by microfiber baby diapers and de-ionized water I won’t even buy for my children, I found a local private owner car (saving transportation, flying in an inspector, me flying to see it, goofy charges dealers try to tack on….$500 for inventory tax? Really?) which saved me $6k over a similar car located in say California or the East coast, with an additional $7k in mods I would have paid for (and a couple of good ones like the Motons that I will enjoy having) in the first year anyway.
So the case can be made that my net cost was even lower vs other similar potential cars located remotely that were in stock form, or missing the optional wheels (which I really wanted). When I go to justify this purchase to myself, I think of the net price as $169k.
A GT that didn’t break me financially and can drive guilt free…..yeah, a good fit for me.
My back-up car through all this was a Ferrari Scuderia…..great car, but not the icon a Ford GT is, nor on the same level as a collector car….and most of the Scuderias I saw listed for sale were in this $175k to $190k area (with 15-20k miles). So you can make the case I bought a GT for Scuderia money or less.
What’s Next?
I have already commissioned my mechanic to perform some service work. Some things (other than the front tires and getting the car prepped for inspection) I don’t have to do right now, but fits my philosophy for making the car better.
Hate the black wheel trend a lot of guys like today, so want to get those back to the shiny original color eventually. Maybe start replacing the weatherstripping. Then maybe some Carbon Fiber stuff….anybody have a supplier suggestion?
Thanks to all those who assisted me through the process, and anyone reading this all the way through. If anyone has questions, feel free to reach out to me, I would like to help you get cars off the street and into your garage. I really believe this era Ford GT is the last hurrah of an age that will never shine again.