Hello, I am new to the forum and have been reading lots of great posts full of lots of helpful information and forgive me if this has been posted a bunch of times and missed them. After dreaming about this car since it came out, I am finally looking to pull the trigger on my very own 05-06 Ford GT. I have watched several videos and read several posts about things to look out for when looking for one to buy. Some things I have noted are the following:
*Oxidation on center cap of steering wheel
*Oxidation of interior center trans tunnel
*All gauges functioning
*Windshield and exterior door seals
*cracked or leaking hoses/seals
I have read that many parts are difficult or impossible to find so I’m not sure of what else I should look out for besides obvious things I see in person. I’m hoping to find a car that was driven fairly frequently. 10-20k miles doesn’t scare me and is actually preferred because it’s been driven and hasn’t just sat in a garage. I like to drive my cars and would drive this often.
Anyways, any input or direction to a thread that answers this would be so greatly appreciated. My apologies again if this has been addressed. I was having trouble with the searches and went down a few rabbit holes.
Thank you kindly!
-Chris
*Oxidation on center cap of steering wheel
*Oxidation of interior center trans tunnel
*All gauges functioning
*Windshield and exterior door seals
*cracked or leaking hoses/seals
I have read that many parts are difficult or impossible to find so I’m not sure of what else I should look out for besides obvious things I see in person. I’m hoping to find a car that was driven fairly frequently. 10-20k miles doesn’t scare me and is actually preferred because it’s been driven and hasn’t just sat in a garage. I like to drive my cars and would drive this often.
Anyways, any input or direction to a thread that answers this would be so greatly appreciated. My apologies again if this has been addressed. I was having trouble with the searches and went down a few rabbit holes.
Thank you kindly!
-Chris