Wow, that must have been one very special 1996 Corvette !
lol. that's what I was thinking. a 96 corvette is worth about 8-10k.. 20-25% of its original msrp. Grand sport is an exception, but even those aren't worth what they were new.
Wow, that must have been one very special 1996 Corvette !
Wow, that must have been one very special 1996 Corvette !
$55,000 Good!
Lets face it guys...They aint getting any cheaper and they are simply the Coolest And Meanest Baddest looking cars around!!!
The first year I had my car, I went to a lot of car shows. Not so much anymore. What I found interesting at the car shows though was what the average Joe thought my car was worth. People would ask me "what did you pay for it"? I would always just say "what would you guess I paid for it?" 99% of people always guessed $75k or more. I firmly believe that the Viper community is the Vipers worst enemy. The Viper will go up in value if we have a massive VOI at Jonestown........
Ask the guy who sold his 71Hemi Challenger with less than 2k miles on it at Mecum last week. ☺.
What you don't see and I was surprised to find out from a car collector is the number of people who buy back their own car from fear of losing it to a low price. Wonder why B.J. brought back the reserve?In my opinion the auction scene is filled with rich guys looking to buy cars without doing any leg work. The car rolls up on the block, they see it, they buy it for an inflated price.
Wow, I never thought of that, makes sense.What you don't see and I was surprised to find out from a car collector is the number of people who buy back their own car from fear of losing it to a low price. Wonder why B.J. brought back the reserve?
The car sold for $640k (plus buyers premium). He was the original owner and it has some 1800 miles on it. The good cars are bringing good money, the difference is the ***** ones are not doing crazy numbers like they were...a lot like housing I suppose.
It was enough to make them bring back the reserve like some other competing auctions.Wow, I never thought of that, makes sense.
Besides mine I have never seen a viper in my neck of the woods..(well with the exception of a few 3rd gen vipers, but I dont even consider them real vipers with their ugly convertible top..They look more like an S2000 on steroids..Sorry if I offend anyone..)
Tough call. If you buy it back you have both buyer and seller fees plus both coming and going expenses. At least BJ makes something on the car when seller buys it back. BJ makes nothing on a reserved car if it doesn't sell. The NR sellers are really "market testers".It was enough to make them bring back the reserve like some other competing auctions.
Interesting discussion for sure... one thing I often think about regarding Viper collectibility, is the following:
Are there enough Viper enthusiasts to actually drive up the values of these cars?
I recently read a good article on collector cars where they were emphasizing that rarity does not always equate to value. If you look at the prices of the chrome bumper Vette's, its crazy, especially considering there have been over 1 million Corvette's built. There is just a huge Corvette following that makes the demand out weigh the supply and keeps the prices high. There has never been a affordable "base" model Viper to build up that base level following, in my opinion. It will be interesting to see what this does to the collectibility over time. Another thing to keep in mind with many of the super high priced collectible Corvettes, it's typically driven by rarity of engine options. An LT-1 Corvette will always pull way more money than a base model for example and a 4-speed will always pull more money than an automatic. This has become an industry in and of itself, stamping Corvette drive trains to falsely appear "rare", recreating false documentation and on and on.
I believe this will cause some challenges for the Viper. All generations came with the same exact engine for that generation. All vipers were built with manual transmissions. ACR's have upgraded components, but still, the same 10 cylinder engine and same transmission. Most "rare" vipers are simply rare paint schemes. Even the 1998 GT2 has some cosmetic differences and smooth tubes, but the same basic drive train as other 1998 Vipers. I'm not saying that Vipers won't become collectible, as only time will tell. Just suggesting there are some potentially limiting factors that may keep them from being as interesting to collectors as some of the Corvettes are, for example.