Kevin74
Well-Known Member
Has anyone used an escrow service where they hold the money and the title until both buyer and seller are satisfied to complete the deal?
I don't know your distance or method of travel, but could you rent a trailer (and truck if you don't have one)? Probably cheaper than a shipper if you're driving there anyway.Thanks to everyone for their information!
I don’t have a trailer, so when I visit the seller, and perhaps decide to buy, there is still the issue of how to exchange money and title. I guess I could give him the cash in exchange for the title, but then I would drive home with no car while waiting for a shipping company.
That’s why I was wondering about some type of escrow service..
I had an inspector do the same for me for a convertible from a certain proboscis-shaped state. Car arrived with almost no brakes, bad radiator, bad trans, bad diff, bad carbs, and a bad gas tank, and it spent 9 months in the shop. Everything that could be photographed looked great but everything else he could have lied about he did, including the test drive. I think if word gets around in a community that an inspector is saying bad things about cars he just doesn't get allowed to look at cars around there anymore, so these guys are in fact not accountable to the remote customers hiring them, but to the locals. It's a total scam industry.I hired an inspector to go look at my convertible that I did end up buying. Cost ran $300-$350. Gave me a 7 page report and took 108 pictures. He also took the car for a test drive.
I had an inspector do the same for me for a convertible from a certain proboscis-shaped state. Car arrived with almost no brakes, bad radiator, bad trans, bad diff, bad carbs, and a bad gas tank, and it spent 9 months in the shop. Everything that could be photographed looked great but everything else he could have lied about he did, including the test drive. I think if word gets around in a community that an inspector is saying bad things about cars he just doesn't get allowed to look at cars around there anymore, so these guys are in fact not accountable to the remote customers hiring them, but to the locals. It's a total scam industry.
Then there was the inspector I hired in NYS who claimed a car had an "almost #1 paint job", first thing I saw when it rolled off the truck was a bunch of obvious runs on the rear paint right over the passenger wheel that had been there since the original respray 15-odd years ago. The photos were conveniently angled and distanced to miss this. He also told me "yeah, it's got front disc brakes" and guess what it didn't have. And these guys I hired cost hundreds of dollars and they or their firms had fancy websites and decent reviews.Your experience was the exception, trust me.