Jan 31, 2008 01:19
Would you pay this man a million dollars? Found on eBay:
THE MOST LARGE COLLECTION OF MUSTANG IN THE WORLD
DONT PAY A MILLONS FOR 1 CAR . YOU CAN BUY A MOST FAMOUSE COLLECTION OF MUSTANG . THE COLLECTION HAS AROUND 87 CARS ALL MUSTANG . THE HISTORY OF THIS COLLECTION START LIKE A JOBBY AND FINISH WAS A LEGEND .THE OWNER BUYED ALL MUSTANG FOR SELL TO THE END OF ONLY HAVE THE GREATEST AMOUNT AS POSSIBLE. ALL CARS WERE PURCHASED IN GOOD CONDITION. TODAY THE COLLECTION HAS 28 CARS IN STORAGED , 32 FOR RESTORED AND 23 FOR PARTS ON INVENTORY . PARTS NEW AND USED. IM WILL HELP THE BUYER WITH THE ALL SHIPPMENT TRANSACTION AND I FIND A SHIPPER TRANSSPORTATION COMPANY. I WILL DELIVERY TO WORLDWIDE.
It's like reading fanfiction.net! The guy is asking for a million. And! Someone has bid $100,000!
A couple weeks ago I was watching the Barrett-Jackson classic car auction broadcast live by the Speed Channel. Watching the $2,000 cars of the 60s and 70s sell for $100,000 to $500,000.
I've been browsing eBay and Craigslist looking for the kind of car I learned to drive on, a Plymouth Duster. The Duster was a light-weight Mopar with the famous 340 V8 4BB. No frills, priced cheap for the youth market. The least well-known Mopar -- not well known today like the Charger, Road Runner or Barracuda. What no one seems to want to remember is how damn badly the Charger, Road Runner and Barracuda sold in their time, while the Duster sold about one and a half million copies. It was the poor guy's muscle car and performed as well as the Mustang, Camaro and Impala.
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