56 400
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I remember seeing this Four Hundred sell at Hershey. It looked great. The buyers were going to drive it back down south. O_D, Ole and I all looked at the car.
cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/Packard-Four-Hun ... rksidZp3286Q2em7QQitemZ150603124277
Posted on: 2011/5/9 19:13
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Re: 56 400
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Agreed Randy, it does look like the same car. And weren't we shocked at what it sold for!!
Posted on: 2011/5/9 21:09
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Re: 56 400
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Odd that she is being sold again so quickly?
No idea of the PA price but if it cost close to 50K in AZ, with a current buy it now price of 35K someone must have taken a huge loss or plans a write off or two.
Posted on: 2011/5/9 21:50
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Howard
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Re: 56 400
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If the same car, it sold at Hershey for A LOT more than $41,800 if I recall correctly. I do remembrer the price it sold at but think it's a bit inappropriate to mention it here; suffice it to say we were all a bit astounded by it.
Posted on: 2011/5/9 22:22
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Re: 56 400
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Interesting, I believe this to be the same car I saw at the B-J auction last January. Isn't it interesting how some car go from auction to auction. I have never understood why this happens so often.
EDIT: Here is the B-J page highlighting the car and sale. Thought it was there again last January, but seems indeed it was 2010.
Posted on: 2011/5/10 0:09
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Re: 56 400
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Home away from home
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Auction prices listed by auction companies almost always include buyers premium, as it si in the interest of the auction firms to show cars selling at higher and actual (total) prices. On the B-J site referenced there is a note that the price includes the premium.
ON the subject of cars showing up at successive auctions. I believe that's either because the seller wants a higher price and keeps "shopping" it, or if it is declared sold then it really wasn't sold. (Figure out what is really going on). At a "no reserve" auction with an 8% buyers and sellers premium it costs you 16% of the sale price to buy back yoiur own car, in this case about $6400. A very expensive proposition. Doubting Thomas
Posted on: 2011/5/10 6:24
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Re: 56 400
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Home away from home
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If it is such a pristine low mileage car, why did it need a partial repaint? Also,if it sold for over $50,000.00 at Hershey a year or so ago, why is it being offered now at a much lower price now? Must be something about this car we don't know about.
Posted on: 2011/5/10 7:31
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Re: 56 400
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Forum Ambassador
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The young man who bought it at Hershey said it was being bought for a very large private collection in Texas, which I took, rightly or wrongly, to mean the John O'Quinn (or is it just Quinn?) collection. Following O'Quinn's death that collection was (still is being?) dismembered.
Posted on: 2011/5/10 7:56
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Re: 56 400
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Home away from home
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I do remembrer the price it sold at but think it's a bit inappropriate to mention it here
Why on earth is it inappropriate to mention what it sold for? Are we suddenly a colony of cloistered car collectors? Price is fair game; doubly so when it is a matter of public record. This site is about sharing interesting information....
Posted on: 2011/5/10 17:15
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When two men ride the same horse, one has to be in the back...
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