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13k turbo on eBay. Best in country ..... With rare sunroof optune !?
- Thread starter T3rra
- Start date
Copperman05
New member
Edd
Kongsodoken
Active member
can some tell me the fuel line is joined is this the porsche replacement part? or are they all like this from new[
pauljmcnulty
Active member
Turbos are sometimes valued at over £10K, but it's still a rare thing. They fall in to two groups.
Well-converted track specials are always worth over £10K, but will be cars that have had over £20K spent on them. Clear front indicators doesn't make this a race car.
Concourse, low-mileage original cars are still valued at well over £10K, but a 100K turbo with the wrong front indicators is probably a long way from that market, where the cars only appeal to the museum collectors.
All I can see is an average tubo with the miles over that critical, if meaningless, limit where buyers with £13K to spend on a 944 seem to see "low miles" turn in to "intergalactic, worn out scrapper". No justification of the price by listing the massive amount of restoration that could make it a good buy, either.
Copperman05
New member
Edd
pauljmcnulty
Active member
we often recommend to buy on condition so if the car is as good as it looks in the pics I dont see the issue with 100,000 miles and a couple of clear indicator lenses,
A £13K 944 needs to be an exceptional car. Right or wrong, you have to tick certain boxes to get an insurance valuation over, say, half that nowdays.
I would say that a 944 turbo, excluding track cars or race cars, can't break the £10K mark under any circumstances unless it appeals to the concourse-fetishists, or the museum-owning billionaires. This is way off any of those categories, unless there's been a whole lot of money spent that they aren't mentioning, so it's just another red 944 at the end of the day.
Harsh, but even 50K is enough to take a car out of the "collectible classic" market. That's why the values of the low-miles cars are so high; there are too many with 6 figures showing, where the investors want low 5 figures or it's not worth bothering
Copperman05
New member
I think its a very nice red 944 and I hope the dealer get near the asking price and the new owner lots of 944 enjoyment.
Edd
Alpine
New member
MarkK
Well-known member
pauljmcnulty
Active member
ORIGINAL: Copperman05
Not sure why we are talking down 944 prices, we should be doing the opposite, we hark on about how the 944 is undervalued and then as soon as some decent dealers start pricing them as deserved (JACKO's comment about crappy 911's fetching more is a very valid one), we jump all over it and give reasons why it isnt worth it and will never be. Its a shame, however 'realistic' we think we are being.
I think its a very nice red 944 and I hope the dealer get near the asking price and the new owner lots of 944 enjoyment.
Edd
I understand your point, just that the ad in question tends to point towards a car that's the opposite of the potential good deals we see in the depressed market, and could be the sort of car that gives 944s a bad name?
Let's say it was adverised at £5K. We'd be asking for evidence of a whole load of work done, that isn't listed here. We'd be asking for internal shots of the sills, and proof that the paint was actually that good, rather than a machine-polish for the cameras.
For £13K with a six-figure mileage, I'd want to see everything refurbed. There's no evidence of bodywork restoration, a new clutch, head gasket, fuel or brake lines, caliper overhaul, clutch, suspension, recent front-end overhaul to include belts, waterpump and all the extras, PAS refurb, wheel refurb, tyres, interior refresh, new rad, ignition refurb to include leads, dizzy cap and rotor arm, I could go on.....!
The ad says "roof colour not available", there's not a single entry under "history", and judge for yourself the options if you click "warranty". To me, this is exactly the sort of ad that will put people off, even if you forget the silly price. This will be a potential nightmare of a car for someone at that price in my opinion, and on the basis of the advertised info it could potentially drop £10K when you buy it, which doesn't help our car's values at all. To be fair to the seller, it could just be the most badly advertised car, and actually worth that money, but who'd spend £13K on a 944 that's not well advertised?
Copperman05
New member
Edd
MartinRS2K
Active member
ORIGINAL: Copperman05
Not sure why we are talking down 944 prices, we should be doing the opposite, we hark on about how the 944 is undervalued and then as soon as some decent dealers start pricing them as deserved (JACKO's comment about crappy 911's fetching more is a very valid one), we jump all over it and give reasons why it isnt worth it and will never be. Its a shame, however 'realistic' we think we are being.
I think its a very nice red 944 and I hope the dealer get near the asking price and the new owner lots of 944 enjoyment.
Edd
Totally agree with you Edd, I bought my 944 Turbo privately last year from London with 47k on the clock and a full service history and gave what I thought was the right money for the car. I have since spent over £3k on the car including the Hartech Gold Service with required jobs and new Porsche rated tyres.
The car has been valued by PCGB at well over what this car is advertised for and I personally think it is the correct value for the car.
There are always going to be big fluctuations in price for the different conditions of the cars for sale but a genuine low mileage car with no accident damage and a comprehensive history is only going to increase in value if it continues to be maintained and looked after.
Rotten, damaged or badly maintained cars that are sold with faults will always drag the pricing down, but these cars cannot be compared to a maintained car and will end up broken for parts or driven til they die.
The more we see quality cars advertised for 5 figure sums the more likely it will be that people will be prepared to spend money on the upkeep of their cars as they will see the value in doing this and this will in time push the prices up as potential buyers will start to look at the positives of owning a 944 (ie. build quality, looks, power, handling, reliability) rather than the negatives that keep getting mentioned (ie. sills, wings, cam belts, occasional electric faults) [
If you don't want to spend money looking after a "high performance" car then buy a VW Golf GTI or similar hot hatch that is cheaper to run [
The pool of good cars is dwindling, look at the number of breakers on Ebay and the number that are dropping off on Howmanyleft, people pay thousands, sometimes tens of thousands for old Escorts, personally I dotn expect my cab to really be worth a vast amount but hope that it is still worth the four grand that I paid for it, perhaps a bit more, would just like to keep seeing the odd 924/944/928 on the road, I like 911's but the frotn rengined cars have their own virtues and in a lot of ways are better.
ORIGINAL: MartinRS2K
ORIGINAL: Copperman05
Not sure why we are talking down 944 prices, we should be doing the opposite, we hark on about how the 944 is undervalued and then as soon as some decent dealers start pricing them as deserved (JACKO's comment about crappy 911's fetching more is a very valid one), we jump all over it and give reasons why it isnt worth it and will never be. Its a shame, however 'realistic' we think we are being.
I think its a very nice red 944 and I hope the dealer get near the asking price and the new owner lots of 944 enjoyment.
Edd
Totally agree with you Edd, I bought my 944 Turbo privately last year from London with 47k on the clock and a full service history and gave what I thought was the right money for the car. I have since spent over £3k on the car including the Hartech Gold Service with required jobs and new Porsche rated tyres.
The car has been valued by PCGB at well over what this car is advertised for and I personally think it is the correct value for the car.
There are always going to be big fluctuations in price for the different conditions of the cars for sale but a genuine low mileage car with no accident damage and a comprehensive history is only going to increase in value if it continues to be maintained and looked after.
Rotten, damaged or badly maintained cars that are sold with faults will always drag the pricing down, but these cars cannot be compared to a maintained car and will end up broken for parts or driven til they die.
The more we see quality cars advertised for 5 figure sums the more likely it will be that people will be prepared to spend money on the upkeep of their cars as they will see the value in doing this and this will in time push the prices up as potential buyers will start to look at the positives of owning a 944 (ie. build quality, looks, power, handling, reliability) rather than the negatives that keep getting mentioned (ie. sills, wings, cam belts, occasional electric faults) []
If you don't want to spend money looking after a "high performance" car then buy a VW Golf GTI or similar hot hatch that is cheaper to run []
Totally agree with this. It's time we started talking the prices up and not trying to pull every car that comes on the market to pieces.Stop calling down dealers and sellers who are pushing the prices up.Stop looking for faults in cars and start looking for the positives.(Im sure all your cars are perfect and fault free )
Obviously I wouldn't buy this car cause it's the slow colour,with a hairdrier, and the clock screen is bust. [

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