Clean it, put some seat covers on it, drive the hell out of it for a year or two then restore to original if you have the cash.
Achim - back me up! , or slap me out of this reverie before I fall for this old lady!!
Achim? Why Achim??? Is his opinion here really important? I think no.On the long run it depends all on the value you get for your money.
One of the most important questions is, is it complete and (more or less) untouched. Both of these factors are even more important for a project car like this.
Plenty of past oversprays and new (vinyl or incorrect leather) interiors or other incorrect body repairs in the past make a car look (much) better on the first glance but only make a project car less worth to be restored.
Personally, I doubt the car has already been sold for the closing bid appearing on ebay; if you take a look at the bidding history, the last and outrageous bids came from newbies without feedback.
This appears to me to be a highly interesting car if the price was/is right. Ok, the poor paint and the totally rotten seat covers together with the missing horn pad and other little findings distract a bit how good or not good this car can/could be. Only a close personal inspection can tell you more but not the pics.
Personally I like the (very) early ones like this car built around August 1963 very much. There are plenty of little details different from later cars and I think these are highly admirable.
Furthermore, look at these door panels. They are dirty, yes; but I have never seen early door panels up to serial no 000914 in leather in such good condition. Not a very common find! Those have reference characteristics once a thorough leather shampooing will have been applied. The chassis number 000296 and body number 00300 (!) (one digit less!) fit each other well since those were only identical with the very first cars like in the case of VIN 000020 or so.
This car would give a perfect basis for a careful full restoration by Gernold or Tom Colitt if the (new) owner/customer is willing to pay for that.
Sadly, 230ies like this one hardly justify this kind of investment in the States; and luckily here in Continental Europe 230ies are not as undervalued as they are in the US.
This ones been sitting in humidity for a long long time. Ive never seen a complete firewall peel off like that.
Ah, nope! Incorrect observation.
If it were a humidity-exposed example the interior and engine bay would look way different. This car looks much more as if it was a barn find and brought back to some life by comprehensive technical maintenance (FI pump, distributor cap, ignition coil, hood stap, new brake reservoir, battery etc. after finishing a loong and neglected storage.
As to the firewall pad ... this is one observation to render a car like this highly collectable. Who of you guys has ever seen the early style firewall insulation mat in the real? Only a few like Alfred and me I would guess ...
This one looks way different from what we are commonly used to in later cars and which was reproduced for us a year ago.
This here is the early style thin multi-layer firewall pad with a very fine grain pattern that at least the early 500 or so 230ies had (like VIN 000004 or 000015 which we discussed here on the forum comprehensively - look for their threads).
And this here is even good enough to be carefully removed from the car and put it back after the car's rotisserie restoration.
Oh wow ...
I wish the car all the good luck it could receive.
Achim