For the past nearly 3 years I have been buying/selling some salvage cars as detailed in this thread and the subsequent threads linked to it. In general, I've had a good run with some easy, modest profits, until now...
One thing I admire about some GRMers is that they come on the board and detail their challenges and troubles. i'm more the type to just show "the good story." This one is not. It is a loss story but I think it is an important side of flipping cars and gambling with salvage cars so here we go.
Last month, Jan 5th, I went to my local IAA as I often do. Of the dozen cars I looked at, 3 still held my attention after actually looking at them. My focus on these cars was to be flips to sell in Feb-March to people now looking to spend tax return money. The inspection day is Mondays and the bidding happens on-line on Tuesday. I needed to be on the road all day Tues so I could not sit and watch the auction happen live. I put in 3 modest pre-bids on all 3. I was certain that the bids were low enough that I'd be lucky to get even one of them. Yeah, I won all 3!!!
So, the following day, I used my borrowed tow dolly to get them all. Upon getting them home and sorting them just slightly I realized that one was great, one was good, and one was crap. This is the story of the one that was crap.
The Focus is great. The Sonic is good. It is the Equinox that is crap.
I should add that it was originally the Equinox that I thought would be the big win. The opposite became evident as soon as I was strapping the Equinox to the dolly. This car was hit in the driver's front and fender. I studied that area pretty good at inspection and I was okay with it. What I did not study was the passenger side. As I was strapping on the elevated dolly it was easy to see under the car and it was also easy to see daylight where the passenger side front engine cradle mount should be bolted to the frame rail.
My guess is this area was rusty but that the side pushing impact then made a rusty connection become a rusty non-connection.
So, this is a 2006 Equinox with just 66k miles. It is being sold by State Farm. They gave it a $5,500 pre accident value with $2,800 in damage estimate. I thought for sure I could generate a $4,500 sale from this when done. I had a pre-bid in for up to $975 and it took all of that $975 to buy it. After fees that was $1368. Before I bid, I had already sourced via car-part a same color Equinox, very local that had the body parts I needed. I envisioned needing just $400 in parts. I was shooing for $2k into the car with a $4.5k sale. Not to be.
I suppose these issues could be fixed but doing the work is beyond my personal capability. If I "learned" how to do the work, I was going to have a lot of hours into that learning. If I just flat out paid someone to do that work I was going to be out a lot of money (and time) and possibly still not clear a profit. So, as in the thread title here, I decided to fold and just take the loss. My biggest concern is that I really just didn't want my name associated with repairs to this vehicle
The very evening I brought the Equinox home, I posted up a CL ad. I used just the pictures from the IAA auction and gave an honest assessment of, "recent auction purchase has more frame damage/rust than I am comfortable with for my family but you may feel differently." I emphasized the 66k engine and the pristine leather interior. Cut to the chase and 3 weeks later a guy drove in 3 hrs from Lansing, MI. He was a flipper who expected to use this on two other cars; one which needed an engine. I was happy to just see it go for a measly $600. I thought just better to fold and loose the $768. Also, that is a $768 loss with no effort on my part. What I mean is I could have sunk a lot of hours and effort into this Equinox and still lost money.
....know when to run.
Photo dump: