1. Car Forklifted Onto Delivery Truck Because Auction Had No Key
2. Finally Sees Car and Damage In Person on Delivery Truck
3. Videos of S-Class Forklifted Off Delivery Truck And Slid Into Garage
4. Additional Rear-End Damage Photos
5. Cost Breakdown For Vehicle and Parts as of 3/12/16
6. Key Arrives! First Start Up.
7. First Test Drive, Warning Lights Abound
8. Fixed Electrical Issues(?), Replaced Battery and Alternator
9. New Woodgrain Steering Wheel Installed
I finally bought it Fellas!



IMO, he's just looking to stir the pot as this board has become quite boring since this ridiculous thread died down. I really don't think he's planning to sell it.
I just checked, it is. Its even longer than the Picture Sticky thread.
S-class is the standard for large luxury cars, so every Tom Dick and Harry seems to want one and will do anything to get one. There are many paths to the same result. This is one of the most cost-effective for sure.
I wish other posters would be as honest, intelligent, forthcoming and good at documenting as Benz55. He is a credit to this forum.




How to do a low budget fixer-upper job on a salvage car so that it looks good on small low res pics?
Do you know how it drives and what condition the engine/drive train/suspension is in? The things that can cost real money when issues occur...
If you want to get an S-Class for cheap, there are plenty on auto trader or craigslist with clear titles that could be taken for a thorough inspection before purchase.
Prices would be close to what he paid and I bet that the overall cost of ownership will be less.
The Best of Mercedes & AMG
Wolfman is right in that the car looks OK with low res pics. Honestly, it probably looks similar to any other 10 year old car with normal wear and tear. The problem is that he had it fixed on the cheap and it will never have the same structural integrity of a car that never sustained a high impact collision with frame damage. I just hope for his sake that he never gets rear ended (enter Mike) in that car again as the rear crumple zone is no longer the same as it used to be.
I believe he has around $17-18k into that car. It should not be compared to a non branded title car as his is only worth about 60% (perhaps a little less) than a similar car that has not sustained that kind of accident and never been branded. His car's actual resale value is likely worth no more than what he paid for it prior to any of the repairs.
I think Sloan's BJ is a little out of touch with reality. Many of the people who he thought offered "bad advice", which I'm sure he'd consider me one of them, were offering realistic advice to make his car proper and safe. The OP chose to take the cheap route to make the car look like a 10 year old Benz that might not be noticed as having been totaled to the average observer, but it has lost the rear safety aspect and cannot be compared to a car that never sustained an impact like that.
If he keeps it at least a few years and the car services him well, then this project won't look as stupid since it will keep depreciating no matter what. In a few years when a non-branded car with $120k+ miles is worth $10k, his might be worth $6k. So the value gap will keep narrowing over time.
There are actually plenty of sub 100k mile S550 4matics available for under $20k. Here's a sampling:
https://www.cars.com/for-sale/search...=GN_REFINEMENT
Not an easy fix for a set of tail lamps, a deck lid and bumper at $1000 including repairing both quarters with a mallet. But not a total disaster repair scenario either.
Very entertaining thread. How many threads run that long and spawn a Hollywood screenplay in the middle? I hope he keeps the car and gets to enjoy it for awhile. A lot of work just to flip it.
The cars.com link was a reasonable expression of FMV. And autotrader is another reasonable expression of FMV.
KBB and Edmunds are complete figments of the insurance industries imaginations. If I'm feeling generous. When I'm not feeling generous KBB and Edmunds are vile evil products produced covertly by the insurance industry to maliciously defraud claimants with fictional "values" far below any real marketplace.
Once you're under 20k for an S class, "branded title" means a whole lot less than you seem to think. There are plenty of people who understand that cars get "totalled" for lots of reasons, and many of them were easily repairable, but weren't for various reasons. Sometimes the adjuster cheats the claimant on FMV. sometimes the claimant is psychotic and things diminishment of value should be 10k on a 22k car. But once the claim is settled, there are a number of people who make a living picking up the salvages and "working them".
If there weren't, then the salvages wouldn't be selling for $11k.
Last edited by nycphotography; Jun 17, 2016 at 12:00 AM.
Not an easy fix for a set of tail lamps, a deck lid and bumper at $1000 including repairing both quarters with a mallet. But not a total disaster repair scenario either.
Very entertaining thread. How many threads run that long and spawn a Hollywood screenplay in the middle? I hope he keeps the car and gets to enjoy it for awhile. A lot of work just to flip it.
The cars.com link was a reasonable expression of FMV. And autotrader is another reasonable expression of FMV.
KBB and Edmunds are complete figments of the insurance industries imaginations. If I'm feeling generous. When I'm not feeling generous KBB and Edmunds are vile evil products produced covertly by the insurance industry to maliciously defraud claimants with fictional "values" far below any real marketplace.
Once you're under 20k for an S class, "branded title" means a whole lot less than you seem to think. There are plenty of people who understand that cars get "totalled" for lots of reasons, and many of them were easily repairable, but weren't for various reasons. Sometimes the adjuster cheats the claimant on FMV. sometimes the claimant is psychotic and things diminishment of value should be 10k on a 22k car. But once the claim is settled, there are a number of people who make a living picking up the salvages and "working them".
If there weren't, then the salvages wouldn't be selling for $11k.
I disagree about your assessments of KBB and Edmunds. I believe Edmunds is a pretty accurate valuation tool, especially trade-in values as they do seem to follow auction prices fairly accurately. Market value of "some" cars can be off by quite a bit, especially specialty models like BMW's M cars and AMG's which usually bring higher prices than what those companies claim the values are. But Edmunds for regular cars is a good tool to use.
Daves just upset that his 07 s600 with a clean title is only worth 5k more...
But I'd still estimate about half the S550's in the NYC area are used for car services, and they know they're going to cycle them out at 85-100k miles.
So buying without provenance, you have to pretty much assume the worst. Particularly transmission services, brake fluid flushes, power steering flushes, and any ABC flushes likely never got done.




Maybe he knew he was willing to risk the $14k for the learning experience? Maybe he understood that if the whole thing went boom, he could still part it out and come out almost flat?
Maybe, and here's a really shocking thought that nobody on the internet ever seems able to grasp, maybe he knows his own circumstances better than we do? GASP! NO, that can't be possible. I mean we KNOW it's a bad idea. We KNOW he's an idiot. We KNOW all sorts of stuff...... that we don't actually know but we sure like to think we do.
THAT is my problem with the "it's a bad idea" judgement in general. It's arrogant. It's presumptive. And even though it's right for the speaker, and maybe even actuarially right in general, it completely dehumanizes the individual its being directed at by assuming them to be average, normal, and/or not capable of directing their own life and their own results.
Last edited by nycphotography; Jun 20, 2016 at 02:10 PM.









ha Dave was waiting for the come back!!!