G37 Journey Sedan
#1
G37 Journey Sedan
Is there not a market for G37 Sedans? My dad has a G37 Sedan he's been trying to get off his hands for a while now and he rarely gets a call for it and when he does the offers just crack him up. It has really low miles but it's salvaged due to a minor accident. Could that be the culprit? Are people really that afraid of salvage?
#3
Registered Member
In my personal experience, I would never purchase a salvaged vehicle, especially if it has been modded in anyway (not saying yours is). But also, price is a big factor as most people think they can an AMAZING deal when a car is salvaged. Location also relates to the price as in the Bay Area (CA), you can buy a salvaged G37 anywhere from 5-10 grand. Theres a salvaged 2013 G37 with 35k miles going for $10,500 to give an example.
#4
Registered Member
If the only offers he's getting crack him up, he's probably asking way too much. A super common car that's not worth much anymore to begin with that's also a salvage title...
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AARONHL (06-27-2018)
#5
In my personal experience, I would never purchase a salvaged vehicle, especially if it has been modded in anyway (not saying yours is). But also, price is a big factor as most people think they can an AMAZING deal when a car is salvaged. Location also relates to the price as in the Bay Area (CA), you can buy a salvaged G37 anywhere from 5-10 grand. Theres a salvaged 2013 G37 with 35k miles going for $10,500 to give an example.
#6
[QUOTE=Epiphany;4204322]If the only offers he's getting crack him up, he's probably asking way too much. A super common car that's not worth much anymore to begin with that's also a salvage title...[/QUOTE
$6k is nowhere near a fair price for the car considering it has less than 30k miles and is in excellent condition
$6k is nowhere near a fair price for the car considering it has less than 30k miles and is in excellent condition
#7
In my personal experience, I would never purchase a salvaged vehicle, especially if it has been modded in anyway (not saying yours is). But also, price is a big factor as most people think they can an AMAZING deal when a car is salvaged. Location also relates to the price as in the Bay Area (CA), you can buy a salvaged G37 anywhere from 5-10 grand. Theres a salvaged 2013 G37 with 35k miles going for $10,500 to give an example.
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#9
Administrator
iTrader: (8)
The 6MT is a S by default, and the Journey (see title) can't be a 6MT... you know that, Lego. He could have a Journey Sport. Blah blah blah, just teasing you, man.
Salvage titles are great buys for people who want to keep their car for 10 years or more. But they're lousy constraints on someone expecting equity in their car. Bummer for the OP.
The following 2 users liked this post by Rochester:
Daddy Fat Sacs (06-27-2018),
Slowg37x (06-27-2018)
#10
Registered Member
iTrader: (3)
With the exception of the Journey Sport and 6MT, these are incredibly common cars, with horrible resale. Factor in a salvage title, and you can probably shave the price in half.
Plus, you're looking for a cash buyer at that point as well, because nobody is going to finance a 5+ year old salvage title. Tough position to be in for a seller.
#11
Administrator
iTrader: (8)
Probably because of its rarity, but it's not uncommon for people to miss that the 6MT was classified as a separate sub-model. There were 3:
Insofar as badges go:
- Journey
- AWD
- 6MT
Insofar as badges go:
- G37 - Journey
- G37S - Journey w/Sport Package
- G37x - AWD
- G37xS - AWD w/Sport Appearance Package
- G37S - 6MT
Last edited by Rochester; 06-27-2018 at 11:57 AM.
#12
I know it does sound funny but my dad has been fixing cars for over 20 years and has customers that have waited over a year just to have him fix the car because he's the only one they trusted. I know it sounds like I'm trying to upsell haha but the truth is the truth. Also, the car had no frame damage and only the passenger doors were replaced. We literally replaced them with color matched doors and that was it. No paint or bodywork was done on the car whatsoever. It has no issues that we know of. And as for selling salvage cars, this isn't the first one we tried selling. But it is by far the one with the least calls for.
#14
Administrator
iTrader: (8)
I know it does sound funny but my dad has been fixing cars for over 20 years and has customers that have waited over a year just to have him fix the car because he's the only one they trusted. I know it sounds like I'm trying to upsell haha but the truth is the truth. Also, the car had no frame damage and only the passenger doors were replaced. We literally replaced them with color matched doors and that was it. No paint or bodywork was done on the car whatsoever. It has no issues that we know of. And as for selling salvage cars, this isn't the first one we tried selling. But it is by far the one with the least calls for.
Or sell it to Lego for parts.