It was nice to meet you too Kevin. I was glad to see such strong money for the moss green 280SL at Gooding and Co.(lot 104 - $176,000 incl. buyer's premium), that was one of the most honestly presented W113s I saw all week. It was clean, but not TOO clean... underneath, was washed and tidy, but not surgically clean, a restoration wasn't completed just last week, the engine bay was, again, clean, but not overly detailed, it was a little oily under there. It had its original spot weldded fenders and proper headlamp notches (although technically speaking, both of those things can be recreated during a restoration, although I don't think that was the case here) illustrating to me it was a largely original, undamaged, un-rusted car. The interior and paint looked great. It looked like a really, really high quality car that could be driven and enjoyed without worrying obsessively about a rock chip, as it wasn't a concours condition show car.
An overarching theme I heard from lots of industry pundits in Scottsdale this year, from the Sports Car Market Insider's Seminar to the Desert Stars Section Mercedes-Benz panel discussion at their Saturday dinner, where I was a panelist, was how the first question anyone is asked these days is 'what should I buy today that will be worth more next year' nobody asks... 'Which one drives the best or which one is most comfortable and reliable for vintage touring?' Whether someone is talking about XK Jaguars, Pagoda SLs, or Porsche 356s... it seems everyone wants to buy whatever will be worth the most in the future with little thought as to what it might actually be like to live with the car and drive it.
Is a driver quality 230SL 1/3 the fun of a 280SL because it's 1/3 the price? I doubt it.