Absolutely the best post in this thread and one that any body who buys a performance oriented production line vehicle should read and fully understand as it cuts right to the core of the issues.
We live in a country where a lawyer is called if your 225 lb. daughter doesn't make the...
OK you expect us all to believe that Ford gave you all your money back because your car had a "tendency" to overheat? Sorry Pal, don't think anybody with a double digit IQ is buyin that BS.
Excellent point. What or how is it "rated". It is obviously not "rated" for anything is it. Why would guys spends crazy amounts of time and money building race cars if they could just bop on down to their friendly neighborhood Ford dealer, buy a GT350 and go racing every weekend.
You just don't get it my friend. The GT350 is a passenger car designed and outfitted for street use. It has turn signals, lights, air bags and all the other stuff that makes it a passenger car. Take it out on a race track and eventually it will break or have issues of some kind. Simple concept...
Class action suit indeed. NEWS FLASH, you did NOT buy a competition race car. These GT350s are street legal, EPA compliant passenger vehicles same as Cadillacs and Toyotas are. Doesn't really matter anyway as the overwhelming majority of all these "Shelby" badged Mustangs will never be raced or...
It is going nowhere and it will take FOREVER. You did not buy a race car, you purchased a vehicle that is primarily configured for street use. These are street driven passenger cars whether their owners know it or not or like it or not.
Ford, GM, Porsche, etc. build and market certain models that are considered "performance" cars that are 100% street legal and EPA compliant, GT350/R, Z06, GT3. They are NOT selling you a full blown, track dedicated, competition race car. There are many caught up in the hype who elect to believe...
Good for him, full sticker on a new car is a good deal for a sucker. Offer them invoice and don't budge. Car salesmen do NOT determine what you pay, you do.
Bad advice Dude. Offering MSRP tells the retailer that you subscribe to their hype and BS about "limited production", "instant classic", blah,blah,blah. Offer far less, you can always come up but can never go down. Make your offer by phone or email preferably. If in person make your well below...
Car dealers are going to bend you over as far as they can and still get your business regardless of now nice they may seem from a first impression. A retailer presents or posts an asking price which is in virtually every instance more or profoundly more than he expects a prospective buyer to...
That sounds odd. You are barking a GT350R here at sticker while there are scores of posts about how these cars bring 6 figures in your state of CA. So who is full of sheet?