Rebuilt titles

   / Rebuilt titles #11  
It used to be where I live that the state patrol inspection had little to do with the inspection of the vehicle but rather a list of parts and receipts for the work done. We used to see that same clan at insurance auctions do things like buy the car with stripped interior example. Cost way to much to fix, unless you were the one that stole and stripped the car in the first place. Me? I would do my due diligence and find out what I could on damage extent or type of damage. Even a before pic tells you something. Then at the every least have it scanned to see if there is some red herrings in a BCM, ECU or what have you that may give a guy trouble.
 
   / Rebuilt titles #12  
1 more suggestion

Put It Up on a Lift

and look at everything closely.
 
   / Rebuilt titles #13  
Make sure you can get it insured.

Flood cars are automatically totalled. Buying one is a crap shoot.

I would not buy a flood car, it will have many electrical issues.
 
   / Rebuilt titles #14  
I currently have a car that has a "salvage" title. We purchased it brand new in 2014. It was the wifeys car and after 2 years only had 15K miles on it. Then the next spring, we had a hail storm with 1 1/2" hail stones. The car was dented on the very small hood, the entire roof, and cracked the windshield. The car was $14K brand new, we owed about $8K. Damage was estimated at $4800 to repair. The insurance company valued it at around $10,500. They totaled it out, paid the balance owed, and "sold" it back to us for $1200. We actually still got about $800 back after paying our $500 deductible.

We still own that car... inside is immaculate, mechanically perfect, and the only time I see the dents is when I'm standing right next to it!

You CAN find very good "salvage" or "rebuilt" vehicles.... it's all in the history of WHY they are classified as such!
 
   / Rebuilt titles
  • Thread Starter
#15  
Here it is
 

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   / Rebuilt titles #16  
Google the vin. You can likely find before pictures if it’s a relatively recent rebuild as there’s websites that archive salvage auction results.

Lots of Russians that do shady stuff in that area where the truck is. Personally I would only buy salvage directly from insurance auto auctions, if and only if sold by an actual insurance co. If seller is not listed on vehicle details page, buyer beware.

That being said, I have 4 cars at the moment. All came from insurance auction. 3 now have rebuilt titles and one is clean. I rebuilt them all myself.
 
   / Rebuilt titles #17  
A quick check of the dealership doesn't necessarily come up roses. Is there a state court website to check?
 
   / Rebuilt titles
  • Thread Starter
#18  
Google the vin. You can likely find before pictures if it’s a relatively recent rebuild as there’s websites that archive salvage auction results.

Lots of Russians that do shady stuff in that area where the truck is. Personally I would only buy salvage directly from insurance auto auctions, if and only if sold by an actual insurance co. If seller is not listed on vehicle details page, buyer beware.

That being said, I have 4 cars at the moment. All came from insurance auction. 3 now have rebuilt titles and one is clean. I rebuilt them all myself.

Funny you mention. I went and looked at a truck months ago and the salesman had a Eastern European accent. :laughing:
 
   / Rebuilt titles #19  
I would not buy a flood car, it will have many electrical issues.

I have "rescued" several flood cars. After Harvey several friends and family had cars that they didn't have the desire or ability to mess with, that I either fixed for them or bought and revived. They can be exorcized of gremlins but it can be a process that is not for the faint of heart.

I started by removing the interiors and letting them dry in the sun for several days, also the doors open on the car sitting in the sun for several days. Unplug every electrical connector that was beneath the water line, spray it out with contact cleaner (you'll need to buy the stuff by the box), scrub with a toothbrush if any corrosion has already started, and pack full of dielectric grease. Same for every single module (airbag module, fuel pump controller, etc, all the modules that got submerged); open the module, inspect for corrosion, clean with contact cleaner, coat circuit boards with dielectric grease. It is a good idea to hit every connector and module, even those that weren't submerged, because ambient moisture (it's like a rainforest inside those cars) can get into the connectors. But this is an even more daunting task that I chose to forego, and luckily it did not come back to bite me.

Put the car back together, drive it for a while and address the gremlins that pop up. After a couple thousand miles usually what's going to come up will have come up already. And usually it can be remedied by repeating the cleaning and greasing of the effected connector/module. I only had a couple of modules that were actually damaged and had to be replaced.

The cause of the gremlins is almost always bad connections (intermittent open circuit) caused by corrosion in connectors or intermittent short circuits between circuit board traces, also caused by corrosion. The corrosion is caused by electrical charge in the presence of moisture. The best thing you can do if your car gets flooded is disconnect the battery ASAP. You take away the electricity and the corrosion will be minimal. Do not reconnect the battery until the car is completely dried. If the windows get foggy when sitting in the sun, it is not dry enough to reconnect the battery.

All of the cars I repaired are still on the road and not having issues. I consider that a stroke of luck, and only possible because my first action after flooding was to do what I did. Where it becomes an insurmountable problem is when a car gets flooded and the owners thinks "hey it still runs, guess i dodged a bullet," and they begin to drive it around without addressing the moisture in connectors and circuits. They're driving around pumping more and more electrons into the many thousands of little reactions which are slowly eating the car like a cancer. By the time it's discovered, it's progressed to the point that it's a lost cause.

It really is a crapshoot buying a running/driving flood car. You don't know what steps were done to mitigate the damage. I would only buy a flood car that I personally rescued from a flood or that I know hasn't been driven or ran since being flooded. And even then, I would not pay even half the blue book.
 
   / Rebuilt titles #20  
Just looking at the ad you posted, the truck looks to good. With that many miles you expect to see some dings a scratches. I woukd say it has been repainted, which is not necessarily bad.
 

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