How much will this cost to fix? | Page 2 | FerrariChat

How much will this cost to fix?

Discussion in 'Technical Q&A' started by Boxer12, Nov 25, 2005.

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  1. Boxer12

    Boxer12 Formula 3

    Jun 1, 2003
    1,672
    Have you ever asked for 'facts' and got mainly 'opinions?' Its a little frustrating. I am 48 yrs old and getting a lot of fatherly advice here...hahaha. It reminds me of a couple things my father said, 30 or so years ago, like "Don't piss on another man's parade." and "there are nore naysayers than doers in the world." I am not judging you guys, but some of you need to look in the mirror and see if either of these apply to you.

    When I was 16, and looking around to buy my first car, I located a 64 Corvette (my dream car at the time) with a burned out motor (including wire harness, front fenders, etc.) at a local wrecking yard. Just about every one said negative stuff like I am hearing here, and all my Dad said was "if you start that project just make sure you finish it." My Dad was in heavy construction and I grew up repairing everything from pick'em'up trucks to dozers. He didn't have a concern about my ability to do it, and he knew me better than anyone. He no longer says that "make sure you finish it" to me, just "I look forward to seeing the end result."

    I guess this isn't the best way to do research, but its a start. Don't piss on my parade guys, but please do share any 'factual' info if you have any to contribute. Have a modern Ferrari? Hit a curb? Work on a similar project? What was your experience? Thanks.
     
  2. Boxer12

    Boxer12 Formula 3

    Jun 1, 2003
    1,672
  3. Ricard

    Ricard Formula Junior

    Jan 23, 2004
    867
    Donington Park
    Full Name:
    Richard C
    Amen, good luck, sounds like a cool project.
     
  4. speedmoore

    speedmoore Formula 3
    BANNED Professional Ferrari Technician

    Apr 15, 2003
    1,541
    Austin, Texas
    Full Name:
    D Moore
    You asked for advice.....we gave you sound advice, maybe not what you want to hear, but dealing with salvage title is whole different ballgame.....I still tend to suggest you should walk away. You may have been getting fatherly advice because it probably seems to most of us you have already decided to purchase even though you probably should not unless you can buy it for about $50k. That's all it's really worth in the condition it's in. Then you can afford to put the $50k it may need and have $100k in a car that "may" be worth only $90k with a salvage title fully repaired. You have to remember that Banks won't loan on it, so you it's only worth what someone will pay for it.... you have to think of it in those economic terms. The 360 Spyder market is very soft right now with no signs of firming up since the intro of the 430. You can get a good one for well under $150k now if you shop around. Coupes seem to be holding their value a bit better.

    1. First off the photos don't show enough of the crash damage to make any kind of proper estimate. Get more detailed photos. Wheel off, undertray off, inner panels off, etc.
    2. Hire an experienced Ferrari mechanic in the area to go look at it if you can that also knows about crash repairs/body & paint. Mechanicals are usually done by the repair shop and then frame/paint & body done by the paint shop, so you will need someone that can help you with both. If at all possible, pay to have it towed to a qualified shop and pay no less than 6 hours labor to really inspect the car including checking ride heights on scales etc to see how tweeked the frame is. If not fly down there with someone like me with experience and knowledge of what these parts cost and what the repairs will cost and try to do as much as possible by measuring frame dimensions and basic things like wheel base side to side and toe, etc. Look hard at the aluminum frame, that's the real ticker in the repair. Replacing parts and paint and body is easy, the frame is your critical aspect of do or don't on this project.
    3. After you get a more detailed analysis, prepare an estimate on what it will cost in real dollars to have it fixed professionally and 100% correctly. You may even want to hypothesize the extent of the damage and try to get some estimates of that type of repair beforehand. Yep, price up worse case scenario, i.e. right suspension complete, 100 hours frame repair labor, some frame components, new wheel/tire, axle assembly, possibly differential if it took a hard hit and the axle punched into it hard (commonly need replaced on lateral impact) rear quarter panel and all inner panels,
    4. Deduct cost of complete repairs from current value of "clean titled" car and then deduct another 30-50% and that should be your offer or final bid on what the car should be bought on a fixer upper basis.
    5. Buy the car, strip it, part it out and from the money you make, buy a car with a clean title. You'll have fun disassembling and not be stuck with a "salvage titled" Ferrari.

    If you really want this car, you need to get more serious than just asking for advice or opinions on this board. These are just the starting point of my suggestions/recommendations, and yes I have lots of experience fixing broke/crashed cars as I do it for a living for what it's worth. I also have the proper frame jig "celette bench" to do these type repairs and I still think you need to be very careful and seriously think about passing. Check out my website on my profile and you can email me if you like away from this forum for real help.
     
  5. Boxer12

    Boxer12 Formula 3

    Jun 1, 2003
    1,672
     
  6. hardtop

    hardtop F1 World Champ

    Jan 31, 2002
    11,298
    Colorado
    Full Name:
    Dave

    Jim,
    I am sorry that I (along with others) pissed on your parade. However, you asked what people thought about the cost of doing this car with very little to go on and did not mention you are already all set to jump in with both feet. You were met with unanimous skepticism about this project from people with clear minds and, as in Speedmore's case, a lot of experience. What few "facts" could actually be offered on such limited info, were in fact offered. If you wanted us to "rah rah" the idea instead of playing devil's advocates, you should have said so up front. BTW, I am older than you, so if I sounded fatherly, so be it.

    Good luck,
    Dave
     
  7. Boxer12

    Boxer12 Formula 3

    Jun 1, 2003
    1,672
    Dave,
    I want to build a road/track car, and it certainly doesn't have to be this one 360. I am committed to the project, not the vehicle. Thanks for sharing and I don't mean to insult you in any way. I just get the feeling that there is way too little information to 'rule out' this car, just a lot of negative assumptions, including some about my abilities and motivation (talking collectively, not necessarily you). I can distill some info from all the comments. Lets flip the coin over. 'If' this car has no frame damage, no salvage title then it might be a viable project car, right? If it has 'some' frame damage, is it then ruled out no matter how minor? If it has a salvage title, is it then ruled out no matter what the purchase price? Jim
     
  8. No Doubt

    No Doubt Seven Time F1 World Champ

    May 21, 2005
    72,740
    Vegas+Alabama
    Full Name:
    Mr. Sideways

    My experience has been that a whole lot of dreamers bid up wrecked Ferraris to prices that make no economic sense. You're going to be competing in your bidding with people who have no idea what it costs in time and money to restore or rebuild a Ferrari.

    I once watched a completely wrecked, unrepaired Ferrari 348 TS sell for over $39,000...and a low mileage 348 TS with no damage history and a real title sell for $42,000 in the same week.

    That's just nuts. Frankly, you'd be better off low-balling Ferraris on eBay, knowing that whatever car you eventually won would really be a project car by the time you saw it in person.

    But, if this particular Ferrari has your name on it, then go for it and make her right again.

    In all fairness though, used Ferraris *are* project cars to begin with. It's the passion that makes the effort worthwhile, but make no mistake there is effort involved even on the cars that haven't been wrecked.
     
  9. Boxer12

    Boxer12 Formula 3

    Jun 1, 2003
    1,672
    I wish I could find a low mileage 360 with no suspension or brakes on all four corners (which I intend to replace), and no other damage. That would be my perfect project car, but then someone would bid it up to the price of one with all four wheels. Haha. Seriously, when I go to auctions, I do a bit of homework ahead of time, arrive at what I think is a fair price and NEVER exceed that while bidding.

    I would love to 'steal' a car on ebay, but 360's seem to still have high reserves or shill bidders on board. If you know someone willing to part with their sub-10K mile 360 for under $100K, give them my name.

    I have been looking for a while, maybe 6 months, so I am obviously not going to jump on the first car that comes along. I have looked at used Challenge cars, resales on various sites, wrecks and non-wrecks, the entire gambit. The right car will be bought for the right price. It's that latter part that is the tricky part when dealing with repairable cars. Truth is, I never expect to make money or get my money back out of cars. No way. I find the best way to get your money out of a car is by user miles. I consider my seat time to be worth something, so I drive them, and don't worry about resale. Just buy what I want, mod it the way I want it, and enjoy it. Jim
     
  10. judge4re

    judge4re F1 World Champ

    Apr 26, 2003
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    Dr. Dumb Ass
    Yin, most of these cars don't make economic sense, it is about the hobby side...
     
  11. hardtop

    hardtop F1 World Champ

    Jan 31, 2002
    11,298
    Colorado
    Full Name:
    Dave
    There is a 99 360 on cars.com right now with 10Kon it, asking 109K. Another high mileage at 99K. I have seen a few coupes priced just below 100K. I think if your primary purpose is to track it, a higher mileage car might be the ticket. They should be well serviced and sorted and probably driven easier than low mileage cars. I have been mulling over getting a dedicated track car myself although not necessarily a Ferrari and I think that's the direction I will go.

    Dave
     
  12. ylshih

    ylshih Shogun Assassin
    Honorary Owner

    Mar 21, 2004
    20,582
    Northern CA
    Full Name:
    Yin
    That's true. There's an implicit norm for expenses/losses for 355's that everyone's buying into, that the average non-F-car person already considers "extravagant". But beyond that norm, someone might be OK with an extra $10K, but scream (or get screamed at :)) if it goes to an extra $50K. That's the part I couldn't judge.
     
  13. speedmoore

    speedmoore Formula 3
    BANNED Professional Ferrari Technician

    Apr 15, 2003
    1,541
    Austin, Texas
    Full Name:
    D Moore
    Frame time is frame time and it just takes that long. You've got 8-10 hours alone just setting the car up on the frame machine before repairs begin and may run higher depending upon what must be removed to perform repairs. That no. is just a worse scenario, fill in the blank no. to get you going. From the photos, the decklid looked tweaked as well as the fact it's a spyder that typically don't hold up as well due to their inherit weakness over a coupe structure. Since the structure is aluminum, cut and heli-arc weld is the method and thus takes more time than pulling.

    Some simple checks on measuring the frame is by measuring with tape measure at common diagonal points. I.E. measure from the LF suspension pickup point to the RR suspension pickup point and then from the RF to the LF, check the wheelbase side to side. Check door and panel gaps all the way around the car. A hit on one side can tranfer energy completely through the chassis can cause problems far from initial impact. Check upper to lower suspension pickup point dimensions and compare to the opposite side. If you can get a copy of frame dimensions even better, but you can do these simple check by varifying with discrepencies diagaonally and side to side as well as vertically. It can help pin point a twisted frame too. 360 owners manual has basic wheelbase and track dimensions.

    Call Daniel at Ricambia.....one of our F-Chat sponsors. He can help you with current price as well as supplying parts if you plan on doing it yourself. Unfortunately FOwners site Isoview estimating with Ferrari UK does not cover newer Ferrari.

    In my experinece any car that goes to auction is almost guaranteed to be salvage title. I too have seen stupid purchase prices at auctions do to inexperience and Ferrari buyer frenzie. The photos taken are pretty typical of how these auction houses work. They pretty much know they will get some sucker to run the bid up and pay too much. As a result, they typically don't care about divulging too much info and use the "as is" way out.
     
  14. hardtop

    hardtop F1 World Champ

    Jan 31, 2002
    11,298
    Colorado
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    Dave
    Sppedmore,
    I was wondering about the photo of the rear bulkhead from inside. It looks messed up, but the photo is not that good. Are they trying to show astute lookers that there is a lot of frame bending/damage in that area? Cosmetically, it doesn't look like that much damage, so I wonder why it's salvage.

    Dave
     
  15. BigTex

    BigTex Seven Time F1 World Champ
    Owner Rossa Subscribed

    Dec 6, 2002
    79,406
    Houston, Texas
    Full Name:
    Bubba
    You guys keep saying "frame" this, and "frame" that.....

    The 360 Spyder HAS NO FRAME!!!!! It is made up of various extrusions and sheet assemblies that insert into cast aluminum stress nodes and join the whole thing together!!! There was an excellent diagram in ???, magazine, when the system was first designed.......

    FoH has one of four shops equipped to rebuild them and the technique is eyepopping, involving MIG TIG and about four different kinds of glue adhesive!!!! It's about cut and chop, not like the old chain pulling days at all.....

    I have seen a 360 Spider there, from Dallas that appeared SPOTLESS from above, as the owner had 'flown it' off the road....about $110K to get that puppy tracking straight again.....it was new at the time, to pay off the effort.

    Just so you go in 'eyes open', this would make a burned out 'vette look like a tire rotation! LOL!
     
  16. Imola2001

    Imola2001 Formula Junior

    Jul 17, 2005
    889
    SoCO & SoCal
    Full Name:
    Mike C.
    I did something along the lines of what you are talking about, just not with an F-Car (and with much help from some friends & my brother).

    The idea was to find a non-salvage (hardtop) car for CHEAP that could be driven on the street if needed, but mostly for some track time, as the tracks do not really like Verts running around on them.

    We did the work ourselves. We did some drivetrain work, interior repairs, some body work, then gave it a paint job that looks good at 10 feet. We also added suspension upgrades, brake upgrades, a cage, 6 point harnesses etc. We ended up with about 50% more into the car than we would be able to sell it for, but still well below what it would have cost to buy a "nice one", and add the upgrades.

    It was a fun project, and while I did not do as much work as some of my friends, I still had a fun time with it, and ended up with a fun car to drive. One that if it ended up in a wall at a track day it would not be the "end of the world", just "back to the beginning" of the project car.

    A key part of the equation is the budget needed to get it to "Ready to go, Day#1 with my finished project".

    If you care to share that figure with me/us, I think that the advice and ideas you hear on the board may shift towards helping you get that "perfect project car".

    Best of luck with the idea of a project car :)
     
  17. Boxer12

    Boxer12 Formula 3

    Jun 1, 2003
    1,672
    OK, Bubba thanks for clarifying all that (or did you, is going for a fly the same as bumping a curb??). So, if you pop a curb with the rear wheel of a 360, or get hit by another car, it's just a box of parts? That's worse than I would have ever imagined. Who would want to track one, even if they could buy one for a decent price to begin with? Same obviously with CS and 430 then.

    Funny, the 3*8's are too heavy, the GT's are no good for track, and the 360-430's are impossible to fix if you mess up even a little. Where does that leave a guy looking for a decent Ferrari 'road and track and show' car for under a buck fifty, that you don't have to eat if you make one little mistake?
     
  18. judge4re

    judge4re F1 World Champ

    Apr 26, 2003
    13,477
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    Dr. Dumb Ass
    Makes you a 911 owner.

    Welcome to the Ferrari world. It is pay to play over here.
     
  19. Boxer12

    Boxer12 Formula 3

    Jun 1, 2003
    1,672
    I've been there, done that! (for 13 years...i'm bored with Posha's)
     
  20. BigTex

    BigTex Seven Time F1 World Champ
    Owner Rossa Subscribed

    Dec 6, 2002
    79,406
    Houston, Texas
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    Bubba
    Well, sorry! From that one pic I couldn't tell WHAT was hit, and it looked like someone had already done some exploratory surgery to get the insurance check!

    Don't get me wrong the insurance gives up EASY as they have "heard" about Ferrari repair shops...not like the normal guys they can push around for a 75% discount!

    The 360 was a MAJOR departure in structural engineering, was all I was trying to say..quite impressive technology by Alcoa and others.....

    My steel tube frame 308GTB has been smashed to he11, T boned at 45MPH and spun, by a Surburban on a grass parking lot, and after all that didn't even REQUIRE frame work, so the older tube framed cars are quite tough, IMO. But you can stick 'em back together with conventional welding technology.....and of course the old pulling table with alignment jigs......

    Then of course the drop top complicates things but actually the 360 was designed for that originally, so there ya go....it's just hard to see where the Average Joe, even with lots of talent would come out ahead......but heck if it's 'still straight', go with it!

    Ferrari is one car that is pretty brutal on Salvage Title value, so a trip thru some southern States will be required......
     
  21. BigTex

    BigTex Seven Time F1 World Champ
    Owner Rossa Subscribed

    Dec 6, 2002
    79,406
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    Bubba
    308GTBs HEAVY???

    Lose the spare and date skinny girls....next problem, please.........LOL!
     
  22. judge4re

    judge4re F1 World Champ

    Apr 26, 2003
    13,477
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    Dr. Dumb Ass
    Wow, I got bored after a year.

    360s are expensive to mend. All future Ferraris are going the aluminum construction route and will be very expensive to put right.

    Check into a 355, all versions are in your budget. You may be able to get an old challenge car as a track toy and still be able to squeeze a spider in the garage too!
     
  23. Imola2001

    Imola2001 Formula Junior

    Jul 17, 2005
    889
    SoCO & SoCal
    Full Name:
    Mike C.
    Ok, here are a few questions to ask you, or you to ask yourself.

    1> Does the car HAVE to be a F-Car?

    2> Does the car HAVE to be street legal?

    3> What is the budget to the nearest $10k to get to the point "Done and ready on Day #1"?

    4> How much of a "Project" are you looking for?

    With answers to at least the first three questions I am guessing that you will get all sorts of suggestions and ideas.

    :)
     
  24. gdbsti

    gdbsti Formula Junior

    Oct 10, 2004
    283
    Nor Cal
    Full Name:
    Bruce
    Digressing but with good intentions here:
    Are you specifically looking for a track car? If so, how about a purpose built open wheel race car that you can run in SCCA and similar events?
     
  25. speedmoore

    speedmoore Formula 3
    BANNED Professional Ferrari Technician

    Apr 15, 2003
    1,541
    Austin, Texas
    Full Name:
    D Moore
    Uhh, ok let's get back to basics here. It's NOT a monoquque it's a freak'n frame albeit Aluminum tubing and castings by Alcoa and Ferrari welded together if you like.....simple layman terms "frame"....it's even called that in the factory workshop manual in tables/Tav 101,102,103,104, and 105 as well as the Owner's manual.

    Go look at it again. The rear is clearly a "framed structure". Ferrari used aluminum for weight savings, corrosion resistance, and torsional rigidity as well as it's deformation/crash characteristics.

    If I may quote Ferrari, "The overall sturcture bodywork, is based on a space frame. The space frame structure is basically composed of three body components:
    Extruded sections............yadiyadiya
    Cast sections.................yadidayada
    Reinforcement sheets and gussets.......yadeyaya

    HOWEVER.........you may elaborate with your firsthand visual inspection of how detailed and technical it is repairing aluminum by cutting and TIG welding in new components with the proper tooling and jigs.

    That my friend is what we have been trying to point out and why this is an expensive proposition if "frame" damage is present.
     

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