March 9, 200917 yr So I want to take the route of finding a totaled 300M (an LHS would work too) and use it as a parts car for mine. I was wondering, and sorry if this is s a stupid question, but will junkyards sell you a whole car that still has a good drivetrain, and will they charge you a crapload for it?
March 9, 200917 yr Author I've never had the pleasure of looking for an entire donor car. I was wondering if I was better off trying to find an owner with a wrecked one, or if this was a viable option.
March 9, 200917 yr Honestly, I think it will depend on the junyard. Some might, while others might want to make that money parting it out. You may have to call around..
March 9, 200917 yr Author Lucky for me there's a fair amount of junkyards in the area. Man, I so wished I had bought that wrecked 300M on Craigslist last year for $500.
March 9, 200917 yr Author Hmm, I'm not sure about dedicated salvage auctions. There probably is, but I would have to investigate.
March 10, 200917 yr Junkyards, in my experience, generally refuse to sell whole cars. #1 : junked cars seldom come w/ titles, and technically titles are required for resale. But this is going to depend on the individual yard... and what exactly the state/junkyard considers to be a 'car' vs. --say-- 2000 parts bolted together. :wink:
March 10, 200917 yr Junkyards, in my experience, generally refuse to sell whole cars. #1 : junked cars seldom come w/ titles, and technically titles are required for resale. But this is going to depend on the individual yard... and what exactly the state/junkyard considers to be a 'car' vs. --say-- 2000 parts bolted together. :wink: My experience is that junkyards don't want to sell the whole car. In NJ, all junkyard cars have titles, but they are savage and the yard _can_ sell you the whole car... but they want outrageous money for it. I offered about $800 for a trashed Bonneville coupe... they wanted $2K... two weeks later, it went to the shredder. They got about $300. As far as going to an auction, you generally will need either a dealer license or junkyard license or they won't let you in the door. eBay, CL seem to be the only ways to go. Also, drive around looking in backyards...
March 10, 200917 yr >>"In NJ, all junkyard cars have titles"<< You're talking about modern car junkyards. Most I've been in (tally is about 14 or so), which leans towards vintage and, as you prolly know full well, it's been a few years for that here -- hadn't wanted to sell whole cars, primarily because they had no titles.
March 11, 200917 yr It's pretty much impossible to buy a whole car from a junkyard; doing so from a private party is probably easier. However, when going to dispose of the hulk, some junkyards even go to the point of only issuing a check for the hulk to the name of the person on the title after you provide a photo ID proving you're that person (I know from experience: went to junk a '78 Coupe DeVille I had picked up for parts and the yard wouldn't make the check out to me even though I was dropping it off with paperwork. Lucky for me it WAS titled in my girlfriend's name, from when I had to keep it at her house for a few months) Best way to go is just to find a place that deals with low-mileage late-model wrecks and give them a shopping list. Atlantic Auto Salvage in Lowell is probably the best in our neck of the woods; that's where the engine for my '96 Riviera came from. It came out of a totalled '02 LeSabre with 13,000 miles on it. They even let me start it up and let me see and hear it run before I bought it.
March 11, 200917 yr That's why I title everything right away. Even my parts Camino is titled in my name.
March 11, 200917 yr Author It's pretty much impossible to buy a whole car from a junkyard; doing so from a private party is probably easier. However, when going to dispose of the hulk, some junkyards even go to the point of only issuing a check for the hulk to the name of the person on the title after you provide a photo ID proving you're that person (I know from experience: went to junk a '78 Coupe DeVille I had picked up for parts and the yard wouldn't make the check out to me even though I was dropping it off with paperwork. Lucky for me it WAS titled in my girlfriend's name, from when I had to keep it at her house for a few months) Best way to go is just to find a place that deals with low-mileage late-model wrecks and give them a shopping list. Atlantic Auto Salvage in Lowell is probably the best in our neck of the woods; that's where the engine for my '96 Riviera came from. It came out of a totalled '02 LeSabre with 13,000 miles on it. They even let me start it up and let me see and hear it run before I bought it. Good advice, thanks! Yeah, I've been to Atlantic once and they have the best selection of newer cars, many of which ended up their from wrecks. I went there a year or two ago and picked out Cobalts, Dakotas, Impalas and so on. I will have to give them a call.
March 11, 200917 yr That's why I title everything right away. Even my parts Camino is titled in my name. I title everything ASAP, as well. Even though a couple of my titled cars fit in a shoebox now. If you cut it up small enough, you can always find people to take the steel. ;-)
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