Almost There said:As to the work needed - I totally agree that it's great to know what is new and in good shape. I had to do tires and battery first thing to mine. I think they were charging the old battery right up to the time I pulled in their driveway :dodgy: and the tires were OEM on a 13 year old vehicle...ahem!!
TucsonAZ said:Yeah, it doesn't make things easier that's for sure!
I really wish they would cut the "edit post" time down to 15 seconds, it's way tooo long the way it is.
TucsonAZ said:Well, it is looking like this turned out to be about a 2 month process as I bought a van yesterday.
2003 GMC Savana G3500, 6.0L v8, Extended cab, barn doors on the side and 113,000 miles for $3,400.
Needs tires, brakes, and a radiator all sooner than later but nothing immediate (and all things I'm happy to know will be new), runs good, shifts good, seems to be trouble free so hopefully it will hold up and be the deal I'm hoping it was. It was Rhino lined on the inside which I will want to removed, it's the floor and 18 inches up the sides, has some dings, scrapes, normal stuff but nothing of major concern in the 30 miles I have put on it.
Optimistic Paranoid said:I would actually PREFER that they leave the old, barely legal tires as-is, so I could go out and buy the tires **I** wanted, as opposed to them buying the cheapest set of new looking tires they could find.
Regards
John
dusty98 said:X3, I prefer seeing the condition of the front end, alignment, cupping, feathering, that sort of thing, but most (except contractors) seem to throw on cheap rubber just so they can advertise "new tires". I believe the average buyer likes new tires and doesn't care to look at what brand or load range they are, I do...
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