Should I buy this car?
#41
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The most important pictures are always under the hood.
But the car looks nice. Probably worth $5500 around here depending upon actual modifications versus speculation. Obviously you are in a different market. If there are no other Miatas but that one then there are no other Miatas but that one.
You should consider buying a Miata elsewhere and shipping it to you. If I recall correctly, you can get a vehicle shipped from the east coast of the US to Bremerhaven for around $1500-2000.
But the car looks nice. Probably worth $5500 around here depending upon actual modifications versus speculation. Obviously you are in a different market. If there are no other Miatas but that one then there are no other Miatas but that one.
You should consider buying a Miata elsewhere and shipping it to you. If I recall correctly, you can get a vehicle shipped from the east coast of the US to Bremerhaven for around $1500-2000.
#42
The most important pictures are always under the hood.
But the car looks nice. Probably worth $5500 around here depending upon actual modifications versus speculation. Obviously you are in a different market. If there are no other Miatas but that one then there are no other Miatas but that one.
You should consider buying a Miata elsewhere and shipping it to you. If I recall correctly, you can get a vehicle shipped from the east coast of the US to Bremerhaven for around $1500-2000.
But the car looks nice. Probably worth $5500 around here depending upon actual modifications versus speculation. Obviously you are in a different market. If there are no other Miatas but that one then there are no other Miatas but that one.
You should consider buying a Miata elsewhere and shipping it to you. If I recall correctly, you can get a vehicle shipped from the east coast of the US to Bremerhaven for around $1500-2000.
Yeah it does look nice- im getting a picture from under the hood to show you guys.
#45
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I mean, OP, it looks like a clean car, but still, you're going to have a bad time with your current knowledge level. You need to do one of three things:
1. learn a LOT more about turbo Miatas before buying one that's already turbo'd
2. buy a stock one and mod it yourself so you will learn as you go
3. Be prepared to deal with headaches and setbacks and huge shop bills when issues inevitably come up, which will probably be with regularity. You could easily have a small fuel or timing component fail and not know what's wrong til an essential engine part decides it doesn't want to play anymore.
1. learn a LOT more about turbo Miatas before buying one that's already turbo'd
2. buy a stock one and mod it yourself so you will learn as you go
3. Be prepared to deal with headaches and setbacks and huge shop bills when issues inevitably come up, which will probably be with regularity. You could easily have a small fuel or timing component fail and not know what's wrong til an essential engine part decides it doesn't want to play anymore.
#46
I mean, OP, it looks like a clean car, but still, you're going to have a bad time with your current knowledge level. You need to do one of three things:
1. learn a LOT more about turbo Miatas before buying one that's already turbo'd
2. buy a stock one and mod it yourself so you will learn as you go
3. Be prepared to deal with headaches and setbacks and huge shop bills when issues inevitably come up, which will probably be with regularity. You could easily have a small fuel or timing component fail and not know what's wrong til an essential engine part decides it doesn't want to play anymore.
1. learn a LOT more about turbo Miatas before buying one that's already turbo'd
2. buy a stock one and mod it yourself so you will learn as you go
3. Be prepared to deal with headaches and setbacks and huge shop bills when issues inevitably come up, which will probably be with regularity. You could easily have a small fuel or timing component fail and not know what's wrong til an essential engine part decides it doesn't want to play anymore.
1. Im not sure how to learn more, its hard to read EVERYTHING and have nothing to compare it to in real life.
2. Seems like a thing that i would never do, i just want stuff to work so i can enjoy it.. - i would never turbo a stock one, just do minor things to it..
3. Is this a matter of knowing when things doesn't SOUND right, and catch it before something else goes wrong? I was told by the mechanic who build it, that if i weren't to use it everyday i wouldn't have to much trouble. But using it everyday i would have difficulties keeping it running as well, not knowing when stuff doesn't sound/feel right... As you say..
What to do :( Maybe i should never have tried the turbo car, and i would have loved a stock one?
#48
I mean, OP, it looks like a clean car, but still, you're going to have a bad time with your current knowledge level. You need to do one of three things:
1. learn a LOT more about turbo Miatas before buying one that's already turbo'd
2. buy a stock one and mod it yourself so you will learn as you go
3. Be prepared to deal with headaches and setbacks and huge shop bills when issues inevitably come up, which will probably be with regularity. You could easily have a small fuel or timing component fail and not know what's wrong til an essential engine part decides it doesn't want to play anymore.
1. learn a LOT more about turbo Miatas before buying one that's already turbo'd
2. buy a stock one and mod it yourself so you will learn as you go
3. Be prepared to deal with headaches and setbacks and huge shop bills when issues inevitably come up, which will probably be with regularity. You could easily have a small fuel or timing component fail and not know what's wrong til an essential engine part decides it doesn't want to play anymore.
#49
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If you don't want to learn, you have three options:
1. Buy something pre-built, and spend headaches and money to fix it when it breaks, hoping that you've placed your trust in the right mechanic.
2. Buy something and pay to have it built, spending tons of money along the way
3. Buy something that has the performance you want in its stock form. This car you're looking at probably performs maybe a bit better than a stock S2000 or Porsche Boxster. One of those in stock form may be more to your liking.
That's seriously it.
1. Buy something pre-built, and spend headaches and money to fix it when it breaks, hoping that you've placed your trust in the right mechanic.
2. Buy something and pay to have it built, spending tons of money along the way
3. Buy something that has the performance you want in its stock form. This car you're looking at probably performs maybe a bit better than a stock S2000 or Porsche Boxster. One of those in stock form may be more to your liking.
That's seriously it.
#52
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Ah shucks if your dead set before you got here just buy it, what's the worst case scenario. I mean really what's the absolute worst case scenario?
Let me tell ya there's a '99 ae in the shop right now - very pretty - but as soon as you open the hood and see that dual injector setup flashbacks of the hot ex girlfriend who tried to stab me with a butter knife come rushing back. This car your looking at - much like my two examples - is likely a case where the bolt-on's don't make the machine worth the hassle. Close the hood slowly step back and walk away!
Let me tell ya there's a '99 ae in the shop right now - very pretty - but as soon as you open the hood and see that dual injector setup flashbacks of the hot ex girlfriend who tried to stab me with a butter knife come rushing back. This car your looking at - much like my two examples - is likely a case where the bolt-on's don't make the machine worth the hassle. Close the hood slowly step back and walk away!
#54
Echoing all of the above....
If you want to learn, buy a stock car, and learn to maintain it on the bare minimum. Learn how to change your oil, repair bolt on parts etc. If you inherit a project, and things go wrong, you don't learn **** by taking it somewhere and throwing money into a shop to take care of it for you. You will have a more aggressive learning curve, become more frustrated, and overwhelmed when troubleshooting a basket case. You will end up blowing more money on the car, and be telling all the new kiddo's on the forum to just buy a stock car and go from there.
If you want to learn, buy a stock car, and learn to maintain it on the bare minimum. Learn how to change your oil, repair bolt on parts etc. If you inherit a project, and things go wrong, you don't learn **** by taking it somewhere and throwing money into a shop to take care of it for you. You will have a more aggressive learning curve, become more frustrated, and overwhelmed when troubleshooting a basket case. You will end up blowing more money on the car, and be telling all the new kiddo's on the forum to just buy a stock car and go from there.
#56
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Buy the car.
Break the diff.
Replace the diff.
Remove all of the turbo junk.
Then you will have an N/A NA for more money than an N/A NA that you just buy.
Car is pretty. To continue the girl analogy, it's like a hot chick that has VD and a bitchy attitude.
Break the diff.
Replace the diff.
Remove all of the turbo junk.
Then you will have an N/A NA for more money than an N/A NA that you just buy.
Car is pretty. To continue the girl analogy, it's like a hot chick that has VD and a bitchy attitude.
#57
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He said it has a 1.8 diff already.
I've changed my mind. You should buy it. You've got support and it will be a good learning experience and it looks like a clean car. I'm sure it's been well taken care of judging by the way it looks. You can modify it and improve it as time goes on as a part of your learning experience and things will continue to improve incrementally.
By the way, your English is better than that of my daughter who has lived in America all her life, albeit not with me (adopted).
I've changed my mind. You should buy it. You've got support and it will be a good learning experience and it looks like a clean car. I'm sure it's been well taken care of judging by the way it looks. You can modify it and improve it as time goes on as a part of your learning experience and things will continue to improve incrementally.
By the way, your English is better than that of my daughter who has lived in America all her life, albeit not with me (adopted).
#59
He said it has a 1.8 diff already.
I've changed my mind. You should buy it. You've got support and it will be a good learning experience and it looks like a clean car. I'm sure it's been well taken care of judging by the way it looks. You can modify it and improve it as time goes on as a part of your learning experience and things will continue to improve incrementally.
By the way, your English is better than that of my daughter who has lived in America all her life, albeit not with me (adopted).
I've changed my mind. You should buy it. You've got support and it will be a good learning experience and it looks like a clean car. I'm sure it's been well taken care of judging by the way it looks. You can modify it and improve it as time goes on as a part of your learning experience and things will continue to improve incrementally.
By the way, your English is better than that of my daughter who has lived in America all her life, albeit not with me (adopted).
Thanks m8, i guess living in California for a while, and traveling quiet a bit, have improved my English.
So here are pictures of the engine bay, let me know what you think