quote:
Originally posted by TerenceD
I know this is offtopic, but I am asking a lot of questions to inform myself. It has been passed to me that an older gentleman wants to sell his Gullwing. From what I know he is the original owner, the car is a 1957, and it has not been driven in 25 years. I will be traveling to view the car, and I would like to inform myself as much as possible about these cars. To that end I have a few questions;
is there a list of engine numbers and chassis numbers available, so that I can verify if the engine is original ?
is there any database of serial numbers and owners, so that I can verify if he is the original owner ?
I am unsure of the condition of the car, but I am assuming that it is a restoration case. If it is a restoration case, what would be a fair price to pay, roughly speaking, for a restoration case (I am assuming somewhere around $80 - $120,000 US).
Can you give me a rough idea of who the specialists are in this marque in North America and Europe ?
Can you also give me a rough idea of what a complete restoration, properly done by one of the marque specialists, would cost ? I am assuming somewhere between $100,000 and $200,000 US.
Are there any particularly important things that I should be looking for. I realize that this is an all encompassing question, but any help you could give would be appreciated.
Any help from fellow members who may have some knowledge about this would be greatly appreciated
Thanks,
Terence
Terence,
Drivable 300SL's, particularly gull wings, are expensive beasts indeed. Any car that sits for 25 years is going to need some work. If there isn't much rust and the body is solid, that's going to significantly reduce your cost to restore. If it has one owner, and has been sitting for 25 years, you may indeed have found a gem.
I believe your best bet would be to join or contact the gull wing group,
http://www.gullwinggroup.com/ and try to speak with some members. These are the guys who have the cars, have the money to repair them, have bought and sourced the parts, and have lived with the beauty, charm, and headaches. I would consider the group of owners collectively to be the greatest source of information.
Note also that it is a small community. In Michigan, through the MBCA and a couple of car shows, I know four owners. If I had a question, these four would then put me in touch with others. I would suggest that no 300SL owner is an island; they are all plugged into each other as that's how you have to be. Start making calls and making friends.
All of the questions you ask--serial numbers, chassis numbers, marque specialists, etc. is all very old information and compiled by people like the gull wing group and its members. You may have to get it through a member, however as I'm sure they don't just give this information out for the asking.
Good Luck! I just saw a 300SL yesterday at Motorwerks when I did a tire swap. Gorgeous, and this one isn't really pristine, either!
Michael Salemi
1969 280SL
Signal Red w/Black Leather
Restored