The 997 GT3/RS Cars For Sale Thread...
#496
Rennlist Member
The regular GT3 body shell is the unique one in the line up. It uses C4 inner structure with the quarters from the narrow width Carrera. The RS body shell is shared with the Carrera 4s.
#500
Burning Brakes
The order guide was published before Carrara white was available on the RS; that was a late addition in response to massive outcry from customers who wanted white. Unless you have an updated order guide that shows something I'm not seeing.
On an earlier page of the guide it states as standard equipment:
"Flared body with lateral decorative stripe Incl. GT3 RS logo in contrasting color, 911 GT3 RS"
On an earlier page of the guide it states as standard equipment:
"Flared body with lateral decorative stripe Incl. GT3 RS logo in contrasting color, 911 GT3 RS"
#504
Rennlist Member
It's funny how US buyers devalue the Canadian cars. Getting them over here isn't THAT big a deal and the 2.5% duty is often offset by the purchase price. You're big compromise is the numerals on the speedometer.
I guess there must be more to it than my experience leads me to believe.
I guess there must be more to it than my experience leads me to believe.
#505
It just creates another story and if someone is buying one of these to collect dust in hopes they can retire off it in 25 years they don't want another story attached to the car. Just my humble opinion.
#506
Agent Orange
Rennlist Member
Rennlist Member
Thread Starter
This past spring I bought a US car that was imported into Canada a few years back. Thankfully after I did my homework I found a previous US title and did not pay the 2.5% import tax when I was crossing the border with it. Some border crossings are more stringent than others in that regard however. Maybe I was lucky.
The purchase/import process is not that difficult although there are a couple of extra layers of paperwork. You can hire an importer to do the paperwork for you for a fee, that usually helps. My title also took forever to arrive after I registered the car with the DMV, but at the end everything worked out just fine.
My car was discounted 7-8% from what a similar one would've sold in the US at the time. Well worth it to me.
And at the end of the day an RS is an RS. It doesn't matter where it's from as long as it's legally here. A Canadian door jamb sticker shouldn't have an impact on its value in the US.
The purchase/import process is not that difficult although there are a couple of extra layers of paperwork. You can hire an importer to do the paperwork for you for a fee, that usually helps. My title also took forever to arrive after I registered the car with the DMV, but at the end everything worked out just fine.
My car was discounted 7-8% from what a similar one would've sold in the US at the time. Well worth it to me.
And at the end of the day an RS is an RS. It doesn't matter where it's from as long as it's legally here. A Canadian door jamb sticker shouldn't have an impact on its value in the US.
#507
Burning Brakes
There is no Canadian spec, only North American spec as the same emissions and crash standards are met. The gauge clusters swap from miles to km at the flick of a switch. That includes the digital speedo and the odometer (even USA cars can be changed to km). You will however have a temp gauge in Celsius and the completely unreadable analog speedo will be in km. You can change those of you want by getting replacement cluster for 3k or just leave it.
Importation to USA is 2.85%
Canada economy is more oil dependent and the usdcny reflects these movements.
#508
Rennlist Member
Only problem with changing the gauge cluster is it is the odometer and has to be noted on the title at time of sale. Not sure if the miles show up correctly on a new cluster?
As Ilko notes and like most things, no one wants to do homework. This is not 1987, where one "grey market" car may have been imported correctly or not. There is no Canadian spec, only North American spec as the same emissions and crash standards are met. The gauge clusters swap from miles to km at the flick of a switch. That includes the digital speedo and the odometer (even USA cars can be changed to km). You will however have a temp gauge in Celsius and the completely unreadable analog speedo will be in km. You can change those of you want by getting replacement cluster for 3k or just leave it. Importation to USA is 2.85% Canada economy is more oil dependent and the usdcny reflects these movements.
#509
GT3 player par excellence
Lifetime Rennlist
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Lifetime Rennlist
Member
their reputation is just as poor now.
though walter's GSM is moving up to my town to head up carlsen. let see how he does. perhaps they may be interested to add 30 porsche purchase from our group on an annual basis. but as you know. dogs can't learn to not eat their own sh*t (chinese proverb)
cond 1 cars are really not subject to econ, buyers are out there and will pay up. they are just waiting for the nice car. most of the RS shown were not exactly nice.
though walter's GSM is moving up to my town to head up carlsen. let see how he does. perhaps they may be interested to add 30 porsche purchase from our group on an annual basis. but as you know. dogs can't learn to not eat their own sh*t (chinese proverb)
White was not available at all in the pre-order batch of 2007 RS. When it was available about halfway through, it was something like a 5000 PTS up charge.
In regards to the cars at Mecum, the white/red 997.2 RS was a steal. Very nice car and the seller had PPi data and results in a binder on the windshield of the car.
I know the owner of the 490 mile white 4.0 RS, and his car was obviously immaculate and cost the buyer over 550k.
The issue with Mecum is that a lot of people are bargain hunting there, but unlike their other auctions- the pebble one seems them bringing out fantastic examples.
The red Enzo, f40 with 550 miles, 599 GTO, 997 RS 4.0, 150 mile CGT, green 997 RS, FGT Heritage, Vulcan, LaFerrari, etc etc are all really awesome collector cars.
The guys that bought the super high end stuff there did really well. I was mostly at RM and Gooding due to my event schedule but I examined all the Mecum cars since I stayed there at the Hyatt.
Secret collector is a better judge of the top top tier of cars than I am but I would say that the main limiting factor in any of the auction prices this year was condition. Some people tried to sneak some crappy restorations and potential time bombs through auction and didn't get good results. In order to really ring the bell you need to have a super rare and super desirable no BS no doubt car.
In regards to the cars at Mecum, the white/red 997.2 RS was a steal. Very nice car and the seller had PPi data and results in a binder on the windshield of the car.
I know the owner of the 490 mile white 4.0 RS, and his car was obviously immaculate and cost the buyer over 550k.
The issue with Mecum is that a lot of people are bargain hunting there, but unlike their other auctions- the pebble one seems them bringing out fantastic examples.
The red Enzo, f40 with 550 miles, 599 GTO, 997 RS 4.0, 150 mile CGT, green 997 RS, FGT Heritage, Vulcan, LaFerrari, etc etc are all really awesome collector cars.
The guys that bought the super high end stuff there did really well. I was mostly at RM and Gooding due to my event schedule but I examined all the Mecum cars since I stayed there at the Hyatt.
Secret collector is a better judge of the top top tier of cars than I am but I would say that the main limiting factor in any of the auction prices this year was condition. Some people tried to sneak some crappy restorations and potential time bombs through auction and didn't get good results. In order to really ring the bell you need to have a super rare and super desirable no BS no doubt car.
#510
White was not available at all in the pre-order batch of 2007 RS. When it was available about halfway through, it was something like a 5000 PTS up charge.
In regards to the cars at Mecum, the white/red 997.2 RS was a steal. Very nice car and the seller had PPi data and results in a binder on the windshield of the car.
I know the owner of the 490 mile white 4.0 RS, and his car was obviously immaculate and cost the buyer over 550k.
The issue with Mecum is that a lot of people are bargain hunting there, but unlike their other auctions- the pebble one seems them bringing out fantastic examples.
The red Enzo, f40 with 550 miles, 599 GTO, 997 RS 4.0, 150 mile CGT, green 997 RS, FGT Heritage, Vulcan, LaFerrari, etc etc are all really awesome collector cars.
The guys that bought the super high end stuff there did really well. I was mostly at RM and Gooding due to my event schedule but I examined all the Mecum cars since I stayed there at the Hyatt.
Secret collector is a better judge of the top top tier of cars than I am but I would say that the main limiting factor in any of the auction prices this year was condition. Some people tried to sneak some crappy restorations and potential time bombs through auction and didn't get good results. In order to really ring the bell you need to have a super rare and super desirable no BS no doubt car.
In regards to the cars at Mecum, the white/red 997.2 RS was a steal. Very nice car and the seller had PPi data and results in a binder on the windshield of the car.
I know the owner of the 490 mile white 4.0 RS, and his car was obviously immaculate and cost the buyer over 550k.
The issue with Mecum is that a lot of people are bargain hunting there, but unlike their other auctions- the pebble one seems them bringing out fantastic examples.
The red Enzo, f40 with 550 miles, 599 GTO, 997 RS 4.0, 150 mile CGT, green 997 RS, FGT Heritage, Vulcan, LaFerrari, etc etc are all really awesome collector cars.
The guys that bought the super high end stuff there did really well. I was mostly at RM and Gooding due to my event schedule but I examined all the Mecum cars since I stayed there at the Hyatt.
Secret collector is a better judge of the top top tier of cars than I am but I would say that the main limiting factor in any of the auction prices this year was condition. Some people tried to sneak some crappy restorations and potential time bombs through auction and didn't get good results. In order to really ring the bell you need to have a super rare and super desirable no BS no doubt car.
as for the auction results, here is my simple take: GOOD TIMES ARE OVER BOYS
facts are facts and here are they are:
- total gross cars this year was $282M vs. $340M last year (huge decline)
- 70% of cars sold below estimate vs. 57% last year
let's pause here for a second and process this statistics: almost 3/4 of all cars sold this weekend didn't even reach the lowest estimate number compared to about half of cars last year.
OK, let's keep going:
- only 28(!!!) cars sold above the top estimate compared to 54 cars last year (almost 50% drop from last year)
- price decline overall: this year average price of car sold was $941K while last year it was $990K. factor in an annual inflation number and that is a very significant drop YOY
but of course various shady brokers, dubious dealers and their proxies will try to pull the wool over your eyes and say that the cars were not good enough or come up with some other excuse... and they will say that the low miles rare cars command same high premium as before and are always in high demand. that is all bullcrap and you should not don't believe that for a moment. here is a perfect case to prove my point: the delivery miles 1994 Flachbau at Gooding which had estimate of $1,400,000 - $1,800,000 barely sold for $1 million dollars. this car is as rare as it gets and as low miles as it gets and it sold for almost 50% off its high estimate.
so don't let this "prices are dropping but cond 1 cars are keeping their prices" bullcrap fool any of you. just as the rising tide lifts all boats, hot air escaping from a pricing bubble equally affects all cars (american proverb)
in short: market is adjusting... it is adjusting fast and not in a small way. the numbers from this last weekend speak for themselves folks.