In the past I was always leery of the classic car sales companies like Streetside, Gateway, ETC. When I was selling my AMX I went to Streetside but did not like how they stored the cars, did the creative writing to describe them and so forth so I sold it myself. Anywho, I was at a car show held at the Gateway Classic cars parking lot in ATL yesterday. Looking inside at the cars I focused on a red '65. It was one of the worst cars there IMO. Rust popping out all over, paint looked like a 10 year old did it, etc. etc. And as you know classic cars are like icebergs, you only see 10%, the rest is hiding underneath. When I finished walking around this poor thing I saw the price, $34K!! So when I got home I wanted to check the web site to see how they described it. Not a word about paint, etc. All pics are taken carefully as not to show the dozens of problems the naked eye saw. I cannot imagine anyone buying this from the site, having it shipped they seeing it come off the trailer would feel.
https://www.gatewayclassiccars.com/vehicle/atl/2148/1965-ford-mustang
Good to know. I do not think I would ever buy a car without looking at it myself, or having an unbiased expert look at it. I retained the consulting services of Chip Davis (
[email protected]), and flew him from his shop in Florida to Canada to inspect a 69 Shelby GT500 with factory A/C to validate it being a real numbers matching Shelby, and to report the condition. He took hundreds of photos outside, inside, underside, under hood, all relevant serial numbers, got the history from some solid sources, got the owner's back story and info, measured paint thickness over the entire body's main panels and seams, and came back with a glowing report re: the Shelby being in truly marvelous condition. Not quite perfect, but a solid #2 anyone would be proud to own, show, and drive. I was more interested in driving a really nice vintage, powerful, easily identifiable as special kind of cruising pony car. The GT500 seemed to fit the ticket, plus I had wanted one since seeing my first and only 69 Shelby on Ventura Blvd (SoCal) back in 1973 or so. I lusted for one, if I could find one with factory A/C and in really near perfect condition.
After getting Chip back home Lynda and I drove to Ottawa, Canada (a few hours from our home) after transferring cash to our checking account and advising our bank manager we would be calling for a wire transfer the next day, to see the car for ourselves. Chip was dead on with his report, it was a magnificent Shelby and we agreed to pay the seller's very fair and reasonable (for both of us) asking price, in US $, not Canadian $ <g>. Almost immediately after we shook hands our banker called me and advised she was just called to a meeting, so in the next hour if I needed the wire transfer I was to ask for her assistant who was aware of what was going on. I told her there was no need to call, and asked her to transfer the funds in the agreed upon amount to the target account I had already given her the day before. Done and done. The seller looked at, almost in shock, and said, "Your banker called you to see if the transfer was going to be ordered?!?" "Yep, we all want this to be a smooth process all the way around, to include getting funds wired internationally with no needless delays." I will say this, if all exchanges were as smooth as ours was we would not have any wars or lawsuits. He arranged the shipping in an enclosed carrier, at our expense, and handles all the export paperwork. We had the Shelby a few days later. We could not be happier, and we could not have had a better seller, Paul Cote, to purchase from.
Over the years following the purchase I have been in, through, and out of nearly all areas in the Shelby just to see if there were any areas I could improve on. There was one interior light in the rear that needed its chrome bezel (we knew that in advance), and the distributor vacuum advance diaphragm was ruptured. Both were nearly insignificant, and easily corrected. The temp gauge was reading in the upper range of maximum desired level. I checked the circuit and ended up replacing the sending unit. Perfect now. The plugs were virtually new, luckily (if you have never changes the spark plugs in a 390 or 428 65-70 Mustang or Shelby, you have not lived!
Having a straight up and truly interested seller makes all the difference. We have had nothing but really wonderful experiences with all three of our vintage pony car purchases. The sellers, Bob Klock, John Chrzan, and Paul Cote all deserve badges of honor for being the persons they are. If ever anyone in this forum comes across these gentleman you can be assured of a fair deal being at hand.