corsair231
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jul 8, 2005
- Messages
- 2,185
I don't think it would be unusual to have some chips in the paint of a 27 year old car with 32k miles? Everyones idea of mint is different. Maybe it's the nicest one he's ever seen?
If it's the one I saw on the auction site I would have been fooled too. It looks really nice in the pics, doesn't look like a clone.
I can't speculate on the rust issues and other items you brought up but I have seen chips in rock guard and clear coats appear white. I guess it would depend on how thick or thin it was applied and how it was chipped (maybe the angle it was hit at?) They would basically disappear when the car was washed but after a while they would start showing up white again. Not saying that you shouldn't have walked away but if the car was a clone/repaint then there should have been other indicators such as the SPID label and other places where a normal repaint would not cover the factory colors.
Not trying to discourage you but these cars were put together on an assembly line by people who did not have to depend on producing quality work to keep their jobs so very few of them were museum quality from the get go and if you find one that is, it is usually because someone didn't drive it at all or either someone restored it to better than factory standards. Either way if you want a museum quality car you're going to pay a museum price.