Ok, I will put this to rest for you guys. Here is how it works. MSO or having a TITLE has absolutely nothing to do with warranty, PERIOD! End of story. The way warranty works, is every dealer that sells any type of vehicle with a warranty, does a thing called "warranty register". Basically this means, that when a dealer marks a vehicle as "SOLD" in his inventory, this is when the warranty starts clicking. Why anyone has ever thought that simply because a vehicle was never titled and is or isn't still on an MSO means the cars warranty has never started is beyond me. If this was the case, there would be tons of people across the world that would buy vehicles and never title them and have endless warranties for ever. Also, the comment that twobjshelbys made about customers not supposed to be receiving an MSO is also incorrect. Every NEW vehicle is sold on an MSO. Wether the selling dealer goes to the DMV and licenses and titles the vehicle for the buyer is between the buyer and the dealer, but it is perfectly, 100% legal to give a customer a bill of sale and an MSO to a vehicle at time of purchase. What is NOT legal (per new car dealer laws) is to give a customer an "open" or "blank" MSO. Hope this clears this up and helps avoid further confusion. Now, for the guys that say they bought a Ford GT in the last couple years and received a full warranty, that is because they bought the cars from the original selling FORD dealers which had never been sold to a retail customer thus the warranties had never started until they were sold to the current owners.
It says it's scheduled to be sold on Saturday, so unless someone has access to time travel, we're gonna have to wait!
Congrats on your 67 Vette, it sounds like a great car, I'll be the guy crawling all over the blue 8k mile 67 435 and the red 68 L88.SBR, yes, I found an awesome 67 427/435 Coupe, Duntov, Triple Crown, 26,000 miles. I think I've got pics of it on here somewhere...watch for me at the auction; I'll be the guy with the pretty wife that won't let him buy anything.
I think you are right on regarding price.
I was there this last Sunday. The GT looked perfect from what I could tell. It will be interesting to see what it brings. They do have a lot of really nice cars there. One thing that was fun for me to see was six or seven Sunbeam Tiger's, an example of which I have not seen in ages. Some of them were pristine. I looked up values on these and it looks like you could buy a nice one in the $45-50,000 range. I would love to drive one, talk about a small car with a V8 in it. They make an AC Cobra look large. If I'm not mistaken, didn't Shelby do this car before the AC, or was it about the same time.
On a side note, the prices on nice cars that I saw go through the auction were quite strong.
The last few GT's through the B.J. and Mecum have brought a little less than perceived market value. It will be interesting what this one brings. At the high estimate 250k + fees
seems high but you never know in an auction. My uniformed guess is 195 k + fees.
It is always entertaing when you get 2 bidders with more money than good sense.
So, I think this car may be a good barometer of fair market value of a no story, prime condition car (to the extent an auction can deliver an indication of FMV, which is the subject of heated debate...)