Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
jdoria said:ahhh, no Take my word, I have done millions in busines with 907a, Salvage, TMU, etc.
David Fermani said:Unless you know exactly to what extent of damage caused the vehicle to be totaled, don't assume that the car is a POS. Cars can and do get totaled by insurance companies with very little damage all the time. Especially exotics..
jdoria said:An above average 1200 car per year high-line dealer ran $90 million through their books on an average year in the 90's.
David Fermani said:You'd never think a high volume, high-line new car dealer would have the exposure (i.e. selling/ processing) to "millions" of salvage titled vehicles? Especially when they aren't "worth their weight in toilet paper". I guess the clientel in NY is different?
Accumulator said:Wish that'd been my experience......I sure wish they'd just totaled a few bent ones that my wife and I had (Chubb's given us great service for generations but they hardly *ever* total anything IME). I've had not-totaled cars that were repaired by the (rare) shops factory-certified to do the work; they tested 100% to spec...and they simply did *not* drive the same, especially unibody AWD cars (body-on-frame RWD cars seem to turn out pretty well no matter how badly they were tweaked). This Lambo is one of those that I really can't see getting both totaled out and fixed right, but maybe my past experiences are prejudicing me.
jdoria said:As I'm out of the business, and the business is deader than dead, Ill let you in on a little secret.
Through the police books of the store license, we never ran anything other than what was sold on site, no shenanigans ever. Too much at stake.
I populated car lots all over the Bronx and Queens with salvage, 907a, and re-titled TMU cars for almost a decade. The target buyers don't care what the title says, or where the cars came from, they only wanted to drive a Mercedes or BMW for a cheap price. ( or a Volvo, Pathfinder,or Montero) (RX-7's and Hondas went to Puerto Rico by the container full)
If you could keep $350k per year pay at the store and make another $15-20k per month from working the salvage yards and junk yards a few days per week, why wouldn't you? It pays to know all angles of your business.
Would I put a friend or family member in one. Only if I didn't like them and they were dead broke. You cant resell, they aren't worth toilet paper.
David Fermani said:Wow! Out of all the dealers I know, I've never heard of this stradegy to make money. I know tons of shady body shops and B-lot dealers that dip into this, but for a reputable new car store to risk it is something different. Is NY a full disclosure state?