Option 1 is your only option IMO. Buyer beware, it was running when he bought it.
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Option 1 is your only option IMO. Buyer beware, it was running when he bought it.
I bought a car that ran fine and drove onto the car trailer fine, but once home I never got it started again, not even to get it off the trailer. Bought a car that blew an auto box two days after I bought it. Both were cheap older rangies and such is life, I paid my cash, signed the form, was my problem from that second on, I don't blame the sellers they let me test drive both and inspect both to my hearts content.
If the $900 special went for five years trouble free, do you reckon he'd come back and offer another $900? :angel:
Yup! $900 "As Is" =with all faults if any== 30/30 warranty,30 metres or 30 seconds
I would suggest that he wound it out at highway speeds+ to see if he could break it,and try for money back,what's the bet he has a similar poor bodied one out the back :angel:
If I bought a 900 dollar car and it happened to me I'd treat it as one of life's little lessons. And try my luck with another 900 dollar car :P (I'm a sucker for punishment!)
Ian
I bought a $50 FC Holden Sedan in Sydney in 71 it had a permanent oil light the dealer just wanted it gone,I fitted a new oil pressure switch light went out,and used it without a problem for 2 years, traded it for a 58 Star Model Customline :D
Option 1 , as someone else said if he has trade plates, he's either a dealer or close to one. He's using the line daily hack(a normal buyer would ring RTA for temporary rego to get to mechanic as trade plates cost a fair bit) , you could use the line $900 has gone to pay daughters credit card, rent, uni bills, holiday etc, so not there anymore;)