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WTB:WTB early roundie 2002/tii


Luke Lanphere

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Hello fellow enthusiasts. I'm in the market to purchase a car. Has to be a roundie. I'm looking to purchase a project tii or a regular 2002 project. But will entertain clean 2002's not tii's.

My personal cell phone number is 9095183146 text me with what ever you have thank you for reading.

L.

Edited by lanph25
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It may be your intention, but this sort of "I'll buy anything" approach opens you up to cars ranging, generally, from $500 to $50,000, and needing, generally, from $100,000 to $0 in work, depending on your goals. And if that's your range, great! But, in all honesty, some potential sellers will see this and say, "This guy hasn't a clue what he's looking for. Why should I waste my time?"

If you're getting useful texts regarding cars you will seriously consider, fabulous. Ignore my post. But if you're not getting texts, or you're getting texts and having to repeatedly respond, "No thanks, that's not what I'm looking for", I'd recommend you spend some additional time perusing the car/project blogs on this website, along with the for sale ads, and perhaps narrowing your request range.

And there are some excellent restoration guides, frequently referenced in this forum, that provide a great deal of information about the cars and their restoration. The internal search function is your friend.

Good luck and regards,

Steve

Edited by Conserv

1976 2002 Polaris, 2742541 (original owner)

1973 2002tii Inka, 2762757 (not-the-original owner)

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It may be your intention, but this sort of "I'll buy anything" approach opens you up to cars ranging, generally, from $500 to $50,000, and needing, generally, from $100,000 to $0 in work, depending on your goals. And if that's your range, great! But, in all honesty, some potential sellers will see this and say, "This guy hasn't a clue what he's looking for. Why should I waste my time?"

If you're getting useful texts regarding cars you will seriously consider, fabulous. Ignore my post. But if you're not getting texts, or you're getting texts and having to repeatedly respond, "No thanks, that's not what I'm looking for", I'd recommend you spend some additional time perusing the car/project blogs on this website, along with the for sale ads, and perhaps narrowing your request range.

And there are some excellent restoration guides, frequently referenced in this forum, that provide a great deal of information about the cars and their restoration. The internal search function is your friend.

Good luck and regards,

Steve

Shouldn't this be signed "Conserv Classic"?

1975 BMW 2002 Fjord

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Depending on the condition of the car you are looking for and where you are located, the truly good finds are going to be a result of his/her own legwork. The best cars sell fast- I once responded to a 1-hour old craigslist ad for an incredible barn find in MN only to find the car sold 20 minutes after being listed. The above suggestion is legit btw, just about every component, problem and topic for this simple car has been covered on this forum. You will get out of it what you put in it.

Someone posted an interesting question in the General FAQ section asking where to find the perfect 10/10 car. A lot of great replies there.

Edited by LikeStig
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