D

Dude#1279435

Audioholic Spartan
Mecum Kissimmee-

90s Mustang Cobra R for $165K. Gotta be ultra rare.
 
highfigh

highfigh

Seriously, I have no life.
I know state laws are different, but anyone ever do a salvage title? I can't figure out in my state law if I can drive it as is or not or how that effects the insurace???
You probab;y won't be able to get collision coverage or comprehensive , but liability isn't a problem. Your state may be different.

I can see buying cars on price, but when they were drowned, it's not long before hte wet harness rears its ugly head. A lot of dealers won't talk about how a car was salvaged but look into 'branded title' in your state.
 
D

Dude#1279435

Audioholic Spartan
You probab;y won't be able to get collision coverage or comprehensive , but liability isn't a problem. Your state may be different.

I can see buying cars on price, but when they were drowned, it's not long before hte wet harness rears its ugly head. A lot of dealers won't talk about how a car was salvaged but look into 'branded title' in your state.
Probably best to avoid it altogether.
 
highfigh

highfigh

Seriously, I have no life.
Probably best to avoid it altogether.
I think it could be a good way to buy cars cheap, but mainly for used dar dealers and people who can do a lot of different types of service. I wouldn't buy a car from any coastal state and I would recommend Carfax or other title search, to find out if it has been in a crash, drowned, etc. I wouldn't buy one from Milwaukee either, for several reasons- the city seems to think cars are pretzels and need salt, the roads are complete crap, 15K cars have been stolen in the last three years and the prices aren't lower than from places where they don't use salt.
 

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