steveone
steveone
steveone

And why is it being sold? I’ll put my money on the rock-hard suspension and how the owner is fed up with it. The cachet of being a Black just isn’t enough for the owner to keep it so let someone else have the “fun” of having their fillings knocked out while driving it. That’s my bet.

Obviously well cared for to make it this far, and the price is drive-til-it-breaks money. A reasonable chance of getting your money’s worth before that happens. NP.

why not a GMC motorhome?

Get a Prius.

If you think the major shortcoming of hang gliding and motocross is that neither one alone offers enough ways to die, this is the transit revolution you’ve been waiting for!

Wait, so I am at Wal Mart, how am I going to get home? Do I have to stop driving my Jesko immediately? I have ice cream. 

I am 100% the target market for this car and give it a full throated NP knowing full-well that this is the dreaded, high mileage German sports sedan that we endlessly rail on about. I would convince myself that this owner (and all the other owners) already addressed all the expensive parts and I’ve got X number of

Pluses: it appears in great shape, 100K miles for its age is OK, and $17K is right in the ballpark for what these Continentals go for.

Just a heads up. The $130,000 and $150,000 price tags on these special edition cars do not include mandatory floor mats. Once your dealer adds those you’ll be looking at $230,000 and $250,000 respectively.

Hey give these guys some credit. They could easily wreck it before it gets stolen.

Sold on BAT for $7,600 back in October and already being resold.

And this is why cars are usually poor investments long-term, as collectible goods to be bought and held onto in hopes that they’ll appreciate. Not only did the car sell for less than its original MSRP in real dollars, it failed to keep up with inflation. Had the original owner kept it all this time, they’d have needed

I cant imagine the horror of seeing an instant 650' wave.  I would definitely be frozen in place.

I think it looks great as-is.

Here’s an ‘87 that sold for $20.5K—the BaT premium—when the pandemic first hit:

Are you serious?

They should sell those cars.

I’ll go one further.

Unless we know the chronology, there’s a chance that he knew he was separating before the sale was finalized and the truck was delivered, and still decided to take delivery.

Addendum: I just read the contract for anyone who purchases a Cybertruck, and according to the contract, at anytime before you

I absolutely came here to say something similar.  

That to me is the way funnier part of this story. Is this man ordering a Cybertruck the direct cause of him separating from his wife? Probably not!