I think we are basicly in agreement. There are more guys becoming subagents for the various companys, and that is making it easier to see the cars. If you read my article on buying a used or incomplete car and use the info for the new ones, you probably won't go wrong. What you need to do is look over the forum and find some of the owners near you and make some side trips to their areas. There are more and more cars out there now, and the numbers are growing. I went to a meeting in south Texas and on the return flight I went to Phoneix to take a look at the RFs. To my amazement I wasn't told of Hershals car. So all I got to see was a car that was being "fixedup"(no windshield, and a few other pieces which had been removed) for its new owner. Didn't get to ride in it either. So as a result, since I had already seen Tornado and ERA's facilitys(on another meetig trip), a sale was lost. and a couple of months later I stumbled over an incomplete DRB car that filled my bill.
I tried to circumvent my own advice of not visiting. I settled for a video only. When the car arrived, the suspension was barely held on with the bolts,the wheels had one or two lugnuts each, The engine(supposedly just rebuilt) had the intake manifold just sitting on it, and he had left it out in the rain. The suspension bushings and ball joints were totaly unusable. He also didn't ship it with the engine and trans out of the car(which he had agreed on). Fortunately for me I got to fill out the papers for customs and I had him put some race decals on the car, so I had it registered as a "racecar". Otherwise the car would have had to be exported out of the US, had the engine and trans removed, and reimported, or it could have been impounded by customs and declared a complete car which then would have to meet DOT requirents for the year it was manufactured(no chance there). I also was smart enough to have the money deposited in an escrow account with only a small part sent as a down payment. The escrow account allowed me 5 to 10 days to inspect the car before I had to deside whether or not to accept the car.
Well it would have cost another $4k to ship it back, which I wouldn't have done anyway. ($8k spent for nothing, Idon't think so) So he and I renegotiated the price and I got about $2k knocked off the price.($1500 to rebuild the engine and $500 for the excessive storage fees for shipping loose parts in the car without any listing, or value attached). So It pays to check these things closely and know as much about what you are purchasing. Thus my article which hopefully will save somone the time, trouble, and money.
Bill