Interesting that I attended Thurday through Saturday and never saw the red #448 car. As mentioned it sold for $30,000. I did see the "restored" black '66 (#626) and in my humble opinion, it was fair at best...amber tail lights, later wheels, no headlight notches, etc. I tried to open the hood but it made such a racket that I closed it immediately as it felt like it was going to fall off [:0]. At $35,000, I would say that the owner got more than the car deserved.
Some thoughts: I understand that BJ Scottsdale auctioned approximately 1,080 cars in six days. 400 of which were Chevrolets. The buyers (5,000 registered bidders @ $350 each bidders fee) were American muscle car buyers in the largest part. As much as I loved the "show", I wouldnt ever bring my 113 there to sell. On the flip side, "rare" Corvettes, Chevelle's, Cuda's and Challengers were bringing the really BIG dollars (ie: 1969 low mile L88 'Vette $310,000). Plus ALL cars auctioned by BJ at this event are NO RESERVE so you have to take what the high bid ends up at or but the car back yourself. The seller fee AND the buyers fee that BJ takes is 8% on each side of the deal!
Highest priced vehicle??? A one of 12 produced 1950 GM "Futurama" bus-type vehicles used by the maker for shows and exibitions...$4 Million...go figure.
Kevin Caputo
Boca Raton, FL
1967 230 SL Automatic
670 Light Ivory
113 Bronze/Brown MB Tex