Derwud
Well-Known Member
This thread has me thinking of the same kinda thing in So Cal...
In Orange Park you should do well. There are enough classics and old people with money for you to do well. I just wouldnt put it on 21....what is that like 100 traffic signals in 50 blocks? LOL! it takes an hour to get back to the interstate from a few blocks away.
Or we will do it GarageMy son told me last night I should name the garage Any Chance Garage because every time I walk into a parts place, junkyard, or garage I always ask "any chance you guys do this/have this?"
Bruz..... i have a good friend in St. Augustine that seems to have an inside scoop on parts. He's a good guy. I litteraly would go strip a car from his yard and resell the parts from home. He offered me a 71 challenger small block for 6k ... i was being a cheapo and didnt buy it. Dumb move on my part!Orange Park used to be where all the money was, but now it's in Oakleaf, Fleming Island, and the Southside, but Orange Park is situated between the three so I think it'll work. I've already written off Blanding Blvd anywhere near I-295. Too much mayhem. I was looking at a couple of spots on Wells Rd but they were former auto dealerships and way too big.
This is a spot on Blanding that's just past College Rd. It used to be an air conditioning sales and service place.
A guy moved in a little over a year or so ago and turned it into a classic sales and consignment shop, and he does some P&B and interior work as well.
He seems to be doing pretty well, but I think he would better going a service route because he's less than two blocks from a major P&B shop and a big upholstery shop. I also think he would do better with more of a old-time showroom look up front.
All great information, and I already have a tax ID number, but I think this shows the danger of what we in the military called "mission creep". Yes, there are lots of services we could offer, but the problems start to come in when you start migrating away from basic servicing and into restorations or major repairs. I've spent a lot of time in this hobby, and seen a lot of trends, and one of those trends is when owners find a good source for something they tend to stick with it. You find a good engine builder, trans guy, rear end guy, etc., you keep going back to them, and most folks already have their pet engine, trans, etc., guys.
There's also the time factor. Replacing a transmission takes time, space, and labor, and how much of that do I want to tie up on one job if I can be getting five or six servicing jobs done? Plus quick-turnaround repairs require a pretty comprehensive inventory of parts, and that's another expense and space issue to deal with. This is why I was focusing on the servicing angle more than the repair angle.
Looking at the servicing side, I see a lot more turnover going on. You go to Jiffy Tire to get your brakes done because Bob has always done a good job for you, then you go there and Bob left and now they want someone who takes your wheels off and yells "hey, this car ain't got no calipers" working on your car. These shops, if you're lucky, have one in-the-know guy and eight know-nothings and once the in-the-know guy leaves they're done. And there's no real value to keep these guys around because how often does a classic car come into Jiffy Tire?
So the model I'm looking at is going to focus on lowering turnover, which that itself will likely drive up customer retention because when we find a good service source we keep it. Focus the business on servicing like old-time garages used to do, and then refer customers out for larger repair issues and make money off referral fees.
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Seriously... that's not such a bad idea. I'll bet some of those Cuban mechanics know 50s and 60s cars better than anyone.
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Yeah, "Mopar Only" and I would be broke in three months. We have quite afew around, but not enough to keep a business going.
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When I was in the Navy, every base had an auto hobby shop with lifts, tools, everything, and you paid to use it by the day or hour. We LOVED that benefit almost as much as our paychecks, and I always thought it would be great to open one for civilians, but it always comes down to liability costs.
As for my age, I'm showing 54 years on the title, but about 75 on the odometer... it's not the age, it's the mileage. I'm right in that target demographic of guys who love driving old cars but have too much money and too little desire to keep making repairs on them ourselves. Another two or three years and I don't ever plan on seeing the underside of my car again.
Before he even gets to "this car don't have no calipers", he has already broken off all of the driver side wheel studs trying to take them off "lefty loosey" with the impact wrench, and told you you need all new studs since the ones on that side of your car have apparently failed from age.
Start with consignments but ONLY premium cars! up front just for show. he's almost there just needs some changes in his format/display like moving the cool classics up front instead of the TRUCK!