If I'm ever going to do things like LeMons or the Challenge successfully, I'm gonna have to get better at wheeling and dealing with private sellers. The only times I've gotten good deals on cars, they were free gifts from loved ones. Every time I've tried to go buy something interesting, I always either
A) Spend way too much money to buy someone else's problem. B) Make a reasonable offer that is refused.
Are there tricks to getting someone to sell a car for what it's actually worth? Or is it just a matter of timing? Are there special things you need to say to someone who is selling a ridiculously overpriced car? Things that will make them sell for the actual value?
How do you go about telling someone that the car they're selling for $1200 is actually worth $200 and get them to believe you? Because that $1200/$200 thing happens a lot with used cars.
Do you inspect the car and then tell the guy every single little thing that's wrong with it and then make a lowball offer?
Do you try to be all buddy buddy with him and make friends for half an hour, then casually mention what you actually want to pay?
Do you show up with a trailer and a big angry dog on a chain that's "just a big softie really", and get the guy all anxious so he accepts your offer just to get you out of his life?
Do you walk up and give it the once over, name a sum, hand the guy a piece of paper with an offer and a phone number on it, and then leave? And then go home and wait?
I really don't have a strong grasp on practical psychology. Maybe I need to read more of those sales books that tell you how to A-B close people and E36 M3. I don't seem to have a natural grasp of this sort of thing, so I guess I have some stuff to learn. And I don't mind paying 3.5K for a nice car that's worth 3K nearly as much as I mind paying $800 for yard art that's worth maybe a hundred. If I'm buying a project, I want to pay that hundred, because that's all most projects are worth in raw form.
Anybody care to throw a dog a clue?