Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 2,748 Threads: 31
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Location: Auckland, NZ
American prices are a puzzle.
I dunno about the UK but here interminable TV programmes about cooking have been replaced by American Pickers. The age of some programmes is uncertain, but the prices for old motor cycles are staggering, tens of thousands of dollars. Yet for old cars prices very modest. Here, a country formerly packed with old cars, interest is now low; the cars I am familiar with, Sevens and Jowetts, fetch half or less UK price. Being practicable in modern traffic and with spares cheaply avilable Ford Model A coupe would fetch $NZ15k-30K (half in UK pounds). Yet on the USA programme good but laid up Model A coupes go for a mere $US6000. ($NZ8000).
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 3,329 Threads: 372
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Car type:
so David, what would you expect a final landed and tax paid price to be if that was bought at say 4000 dollars and brought to UK?
Do these all come in for 'vehicles of historic interest' treatment so VAT and import duty lower, or is that before a certain date only? I did look it up once but it was all quite confusing...
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 1,048 Threads: 108
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Location: Cheshire
One advantage I found with a car brought back from America was that the State DMV had kept all the paperwork relating to the car from the time it had been exported in the 1960s. With the help of a local librarian in Oregon, I obtained certified copies of what they had, including an early buff logbook, and this was accepted here by the DVLA and they gave me back the original registration number for the car - quite a bonus.
Regards,
Colin
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 425 Threads: 30
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Location: Wellington, NZ
Were those Bantams the inspiration for this car I wonder?
And now that theme song is stuck in my head.
Simon