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Saturday, February 26, 2011

How to Buy a Classic Car at Auction

No. 1 rule: Do your homework




This elegant 1966 Continental four door convertible as an excellent buy at the Toronto auction selling for $20,000 including the 10 per cent buyers fee charged by the auction.

Photograph by: Alyn Edwards, CNS

 Anybody with any interest in classic cars has tuned into the Barrett-Jackson auctions carried live on television to witness the excitement and high drama of some of the most beautiful vehicles from our past, changing hands.

Classic vehicles selling in less than five minutes on the auction block represents an instant appraisal of what that car, truck or motorcycle is really worth.

It’s what the vendor will sell the car for and what the most motivated purchaser will pay. Sometimes there are incredible bargains for alert bidders. But few of those viewing this apparent free for all spending extravaganza would consider buying a car this way.

I wonder why because there are a number of great classic car auctions in Canada featuring wonderful vehicles. The spring and fall Collector Car Productions auctions held at Toronto’s International Centre are the largest in the country with Harold Henninger’s Car Crazy spring and fall auctions coming in second.
The auctions held at Abbotsford’s Tradex Centre hold third place. So what should you do to buy a car at a collector car auction?

“Do your homework, that’s the number one thing,” says Dan Spendick who heads up Toronto’s Collector Car Productions.

Spendick, a 16-year veteran classic vehicle auctioneer, encourages buyers to carefully research everything about the vehicle they want to buy, know in advance exactly what they’re looking for and what they should pay.

The Internet is a primary tool for research. Just paste the year make and model of the car, truck or motorcycle that you are looking for and see what’s offered for sale by vendors all over North America. You can also check the websites of auction companies like Spendick’s Classic Car Productions, Car Crazy Classic Car Auctions in Calgary, Barrett- Jackson, Mecum’s and others to see what similar cars have sold for. Auction results are typically posted on these websites immediately after sales.

The N.A.D.A. (National Automobile Dealers Association) classic car value book is a very handy reference tool and classic vehicle values can be checked online on the N.A.D.A website.

Harold Henninger, who has done a total of 19 classic car auctions in Calgary averaging 225 vehicles going across the auction block in his spring and fall sales, urges people to spend as much time as necessary to carefully check out all aspects of a potential purchase before waving their bidder’s card at an auction.
“Buy quality. You can always resell a quality vehicle because there will always be a market for it,” Henninger says. Henninger also suggests people invest in convertibles and he actively recruits drop top vehicles for his sale.

“Convertibles have always been a blue chip investment. They can be worth three times as much as a hardtop but don’t cost much more to restore. When the top goes down, the price goes up,” he says. When buying at auctions. You must add the buyers’ fee that is usually 10 per cent of the ‘hammered’ price and five per cent GST.

If you live in a province where there is sales tax, that is paid when you register the vehicle. Also factor in transportation costs. If you buy a car at an auction in Toronto and live in Vancouver, the cost of transporting the vehicle can range from $1,000 to $2,000. Art Carty and Peter Fawcett operate Canada’s oldest classic car dealership and restoration shop called Fawcett Motor Carriage in Whitby – 30 minutes east of Toronto. The company has been buying and selling cars at auctions since the business began in 1964. They urge buyers to be very prudent in deciding what kind of classic vehicle they want.

“Find the kind of classic vehicle you think you want to own and drive it. You may change your mind after you’ve been behind the wheel or that may reinforce your decision to acquire that type of classic vehicle” Peter Fawcett says.

Art Carty says it’s a matter of buyers getting completely educated before they make the purchase. They may own the vehicle a long time and it should be a good experience. Fawcett Motor Carriage sells all its classic cars with a full six-month mechanical warranty so buyers of classic vehicles won’t be hit with bills to repair unforeseen mechanical problems.

The best way to get into the hobby and buy the classic vehicle you always wanted is to start by attending auctions, seeing what’s being offered, doing research on the vehicle of your choice and then get a bidder’s card.

There may be a great classic car at a bargain price waiting for you right now.

Alyn Edwards is a partner in Peak Communicators, a Vancouver-based public relations company.

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Please vist our website for Classic cars for sale. All About Detail

Make sure to read out last news blog "Sage advice from a Car Appraiser"

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Sage Advice From a Car Appraiser

 2/22/2011


If you have either restored or created something both gorgeous and unique - document it today! Have someone you trust organize all the paid bills, invoices, bills of sale, etc. that have to do with that particular project. Then walk around that piece with a digital camera and take loads of photos noting any facet of particular interest. Should you choose to insure the vehicle - and you make any upgrades - document those and inform your insurance company at once!


Just finished yet another after-the-incident appraisal wherein a race car owner will suffer additional loss because this process never entered his mind.


Same discipline should follow every project involving cool vehicles.


Please do this ..... P L E A S E


By Jon Lundgren of Southwest Valuations


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Please visit All About Detail


And read our last article "Automotive Fine Artist"



Friday, February 18, 2011

Do you like Art? Do you like Car Art?

Very rarely will we repeat an article. This is the exception. This article was posted long before we had any type of following. We would like to now introduce Hugo Prado to our readers and our followers. He is certainly worth the attention. 

All About Detail Classic Car News
Press Release  2/18/2011 
HUGO PRADO  HUGO PRADO with Jay Leno 
Born in 1952, Hugo Prado grew up in Miraflores a West Coast surfing suburb of Lima-Peru, South America. His main passion, other than car races and surfing, was drawing. Hugo's father, Carlos, was a race car driver and responsible for importing vehicles, such as VOLVO's, BMW's, FIAT's, etc. into Peru. "I was the most popular kid in our neighborhood”, Hugo comments, “since my father Carlos would bring a different car from work everyday"

After working as an illustrator in advertising, Hugo realized his life-long dream in 1989, when he decided to leave commercial art to become a full-time automotive artist and founded AutomotiveFineArt.com working in acrylic and watercolors sprayed through the airbrush. His original paintings usually take anywhere from three months to a year to complete. The 1931 Duesenberg and the Dale Earnhardt each took a year to complete.

His work can be seen on MOTORWEEK, and his prints have been sold on TV on QVC and auctioned by "The World Leader of Collector Car Auctioneers " KRUSE INTERNATIONAL. Among Hugo's noted collectors is JAY LENO, of the Tonight Show.

Our “in-house publishing capabilities” allows Hugo to publish his own limited edition Giclees on spectacular 8 color process. Being the artist he can match the color of his original art on all the published prints as no one can. 


"As an artist, I understand the meaning of quality and service. I provide my collectors with the best quality, from the original painting all the way to shipping”. This degree of commitment is part of what makes Hugo Prado's limited edition art prints so valuable.

Hugo Prado is available for private and corporate commissions. Galleries and collectors interested in commissions or in purchasing the prints please contact:

AutomotiveFineArt.com
9341 N. Nyberg Rd.
Hayward, WI 54843-6635
Phone: (715) 580-0404
E-mail: sales@automotivefineart.com
Web site:
http://www.AutomotiveFineArt.com
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Please join us at All About Detail and see some of Hugo's work at our On Line Classic Cars for Sale Museum.

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Is the Gas Going Out of Classic Cars?

With the increase in prices and the introduction of ethanol into the fuel, the combustion engine is under assault and is about to run out of gas. 


As a lover of the Classic Car I have a deep interest in what is happening with the price of fuel. Why? 

To understand just how much of attack our classics are under just pick up one of the highly published car magazines, such as Motor Trend or Automotive Magazine and notice the acclimates You have to know when they start touting the 0-60's or the 1/4miles, or the bizarre combined HP and ft. lbs. of these whining electric magnets it may be time to get concerned about the future of Classic Cars as we have known them. 

In the very near future the gas combustion engine, the engines that have been the work horses, the engines that carried lovers to lover’s lane and to A & W’s for most of a century now will give way to the electric transporter. As for me I find a Segway, the two wheel green mailman transporters to be more interesting. 

How is demise of the combustion engine coming about? Why is government not stepping in with the price gouging? Why is Exxon not worried? The answers to those questions are complicated and multilayered yet simple, money.

We will never know exactly why just like we will never know why the stock market climbs and at the same time the price of gas climbs and unemployment climbs. We can be sure though that of the banks, the investment companies, the government and the gas companies are not done stripping the rest of our hard earn savings from us.

My best advice is while you can afford to and while you can still purchase fuel that a Classic Car can run on, get that car that you have always wanted, take her to lover’s lane, enjoy a stop at an A & W and run the wheels off of it.

The time for combustion engine is running out of gas and you and I have an obligation to enjoy ever last minute of it.


Looking for a great Classic Car? Go to our Online Classic Cars For Sale Museum All About Detail.

Make to read our last article: Who Invented the Automobile .

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Who invented the automobile? Was it Henry Ford?

Although Ford certainly had an impact on the automobile’s history, the invention of the automobile pre-dates Mr. Ford’s birth. 

In the 15th century Leonardo da Vinci was creating designs and models for transport vehicles. Therefore an argument for the first romance could be made for Leonardo but he never even put together a running prototype and never got to experience the ride.  

The romance with the automobile is long and enduring but who invented it, does not have a straightforward answer.

1979 Nicolas Cugnot put together a three wheeler steam engine vehicle for the French Army.

1880’s Robert Anderson worked with electric propulsion.

1880’s Carl Benz put together a gasoline automobile powered by an internal combustion engine: three wheeled, four cycle engine and chassis form a single unit.

An argument could be made for each of these individuals but only one makes since to a Classic Car Nut like myself, Carl Benz. After all he used a combustion engine. He invented the car of vroom, squealing tires, drag racing, Nascar, Formula one, Daytona, Indianapolis 500  and so on. He invented the car I love.

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If you love the gasoline combustion Classic Car like I do, join us at All About Detail Classic Cars.

In our last Blog, released by Historical Vehicle Association HVA, they reminded us how much of an impact Classic Cars Community has on the economy with the article entitled “HVA’s Economic Impact Study”.