I sold our BMW Wagon yesterday to an older couple that turned out to be perfect buyers - Showed up, checked out car, payed full price, drove off. It had me remembering some past experiences from selling cars.
Selling a 2008 Miata:
This was a sweet machine in copper red and tan leather, with foldable hardtop, bilsteins, the "big" engine, manual 6speed and a proper diff. A middle aged gentlemen called and asked if he could come by in 20min. He stepped out of his car and walked with a cane up to the Miata, straight to the drivers door. I gave him the keys and we went for a test driver - he took it around the block and bogged it in 3rd, while saying "This is a really nice car". Back home again, he said "I'll give you half now and the rest tomorrow when I pick it up", which he did, no haggling. He had not opened the bonnet or even walked around the car at this point! After we had shaken hands he said "I was just at the hospital and they said I'm going to die pretty soon. So I might as well buy a cool car". Trust me: there is no good answer for that statement.
Selling an 1956 Opel:
I had a nicely restored vintage Opel for sale and a buyer who said he "might check it out as he was driving by". When buyer #2 called, I might have said that I had a buyer "lined up" to communicate some sense of urgency. She just had to have the car! (This was a $3500 car, so perhaps no mega investment). I told her to send me a down payment of $500 and I'd hold it for her, which she did. When she arrived with the rest of the cash, she had her whole family with her and their mindset was 100% that the deal was done and there was no need to scrutinize or check anything. They just loved the car right away with the kids yelling "Look, our Opel!" as soon as they arrived, climbing in it and checking it out. It was such a nice and fun change compared to nitpicking buyers picking cars apart and checking every millimeter and I just knew that they would enjoy it. I had to teach them to drive a column shifter, and what "lead additives" was, among other things.
What good stories do you have?