66moneypit
Member
xoxbxfx said:the absolute best thing you can do is get reliabe places to do the work you outsource IF you cant inhouse EVERYTHING.
We sent our cars out to blast and body/paint. The mach was at the paint shop for 8 months (we paid upfront) and the owner lost interest I guess. Screwed me over BIGTIME. The other thing is have dependable help... Dont ever depend on friends for the help, depend on yourself. I paid one of my friends to help me and there would be days he didnt show up and what not. Losing friendships isnt worth it, dont do business with friends.
Get some money saved up to build 1 car at a time, dont end up with 4 projects and no money to work on them. Just because you get them for a good deal, doesnt mean its a good deal for you. You dont have to get a "shop" to do business. I would suggest starting in your own garage and just do quality work. Take tons of pictures. If I could show you all the way from the beginning of the mach1 to the end, you would be amazed how much work went into it. I did it for the glory really. Saving a car made me feel good cause I knew these cars wont be around much longer. Money would have been nice but dont expect to make tons of cash per car. I had 16k into the mach 1 and hope to sell it for $25k or so. If I had it done in 1-2 months and paid my labor and shop costs, I probably would have had an actual profit of $4000 over 2 months. You think its gonna be nice makeing $9000 per car, but its not what it seems
Sounds like sound advice. It sounds like you are car rich and cash poor and that's a tough pickle to be in. 4K is not a bad return on a 21K investment (that assumes labor etc). That's almost a 20% return and in that short amount of time it's definitely better than the stock market. I think the money to be made with these cars is fixing and restoring them....not actually owning them.
If I were to open a shop, I'd open a shop have someone to restore the cars there full time. In order to do that though, you are right, it takes money to make money. You have to pay while you ramp up business. But I think once you establish a reputation and continue to live up to that rep you will have good business.

