GeddesB said:
More info: The car had a front end hit at 1800 miles, and I think only a few months old. Damaged a cross member in the front, fenders, and broke the hood loose. Seller replaced everything broken with GM replacements. He is a sprint car chassis builder, and had a shop easily equipped to do these repairs properly. Here in PA the car needed a special inspection to get back on the road, that was done 40,000+ miles ago. Current repairs needed are the lower radiator support / skid plate. This seems a common repair for these cars. The clearcoat is coming off the areas that were repainted after the repairs. The car has been aligned twice since the accident and it was done by a local shop, who's owner is also our family friend.
As per exactly why it was totaled for a seemingly minor crash? I have no idea, but I know little of the inner workings of car insurance (thank goodness).
I'll try to get some pics today. Planning on stopping for negotiations.
Thanks to all!!
Somethings don't add up. It could be that you are omitting details in your few sentence reply (which is understandable) or it could be that the seller is omitting details.
Front hit at 1,800 miles and a few months. Was the car totaled then? Or, was this just a fender bender that the owner fixed himself? (with all GM parts.) Why would the seller fix this himslef, unless... The car was totaled and he bought the car back to self-fix. This implies the owner/seller completely knows why the car was totaled. I'd like to get some proof like some pictures from the accident scene or "after damage."
Special inspection needed at 40,000 miles in PA. Why inspected by PA nearly 40k miles later? Was the car totaled around this time of 40k miles? Or, is this just the PA annual inspection and since the car wears an R-title does this trigger a "special inspection" every year? From 1,800 miles to 40,000 miles was the car in PA or another state?
Aligned twice? Okay, I can understand aligned once for the first accident, but... If it was really just sheet metal that needed to be replaced at 1,800 miles then why the alignment? If it was aligned at 40,000 miles (if thats when the car was totaled) then why two alignments on a car that now only shows 46k miles?
If this car was just someone's sunny day driver then why two alignments in 46k miles. Sure, maybe an alignment with every purchase of tires. How new are the tires? Even performance tires, street driven, should go 20k. I'd expect the tires to be good. I am making an assumption that this was not someone's "track day car" which therefore might have been aligned often due to special alignment specs. For a car that is more a DD, I can't think of any DD that I've ever had aligned twice in 46k miles.
Color me suspicious and pessimistic.