Antique cars
Car Show
Antique cars
Ford
Model T.An antique car is generally defined as a
car
over 25 years of age, this being the definition used by the
Antique Automobile Club of America and many other organisations worldwide.
However, the legal definition for the purpose of antique vehicle registration varies widely.
The term
classic
car is often used synonymously with antique car, but the formal
definition of that term has it as applying only to certain specific high-quality
vehicles from the pre-World
War II era.
25 years is about double the
design life of
modern cars and an even greater increment on those cars now 25 years old;
therefore, a car that's reached 25 is a rare survivor, and probably not economic
to maintain as regular transportation.
Owning, restoring and collecting antique cars is a popular
hobby worldwide.
Considered as investments
Some consider such collecting to be a form of
investment.
Buying a particular antique car is then done primarily in view of profit in a
future sale and not of enjoying a drive or taking pleasure in restoration work.
As with art
collecting, antique car collecting is another form of
gambling.
The market for antique cars fluctuates wildly over the years. There have been
periods, like the
1980s, which have seen strong and continued increase in price, but other
periods (e.g. the early
1990s) which saw
precipitous declines.
Experts in antique cars such as
Jay Leno give the same advice as serious art dealers and
professionals in the antiques trade: Collect what you can enjoy above all
because the future monetary value of any craft or art object is completely
unpredictable. Still, the other opinion and plan exists: Person's living in
naturally dry areas such the South Western Desert region, can approach this as a
potential long term investment, due to the lesser chance of destruction of the
bodies by rusting. One strategy, requires that you buy a car that is in good
condition with original paint and chrome in good order. It should be purchased
for less than $500 in good running condition, with no broken glass and low
mileage. The car should be at least 20 years old. This seems to be the time when
the value of the car "bottoms out". A person needs to have at least 20 of these
$500 cars. Parked on blocks, with the glass masked to prevent wind/sand damage.
No more than $100 per car per year should go to provide the outdoor storage in
the first year. The cars should be started up once every 3 months. 20 cars would
cost $2000 the first year in storage. By waiting 20 years, the cars might be
worth in adjusted dollars, 20 times or more than when parked. Constant dollar
$500 cars might become constant dollar $10,000 cars after 20 years, if long term
trends continue... as 99.9% of the same models will be junked, under all normal
uses... Rarity is a key basis of value, and the rest is about the inate charm of
the car, and its reflection of the era it represents. A 20 fold increase in
constant value is much better than most 20 year investments.
Value
As with all collectible antiques, current value is everything to do with
current supply vs. demand, and very little else; certainly little to do with the
car's price when new or any objective standard. Thus, rare cars that are highly
desired are highly expensive, while vehicles that are not
fashionable
to collect can be very cheap. Condition, of course, influences value. At the
present time, the variation in purchase price between a poor condition and good
condition vehicle is generally much less than the cost of restoring a poor
condition car; thus it is cheaper in the long run to buy the better vehicle.
In some instances, professional restorers can, through economy of scale and
performing the work in-house, realise a profit from buying an unrestored car and
performing a restoration. This is normally only possible when the car is in high
demand and either very rare (e.g. old Ferraris) or quite common (e.g. classic
Ford Mustangs). Amateur restorers who are highly skilled may find it cheaper to
restore than buy in good condition, but this is through considering their labor
enjoyment rather than a cost.
Realising much long-term profit in owning an antique car is mostly about
attempting to anticipate future changes in taste, which is highly
speculative. Most cars go through a period of being considered merely old
and undesirable before becoming valuable, and a car bought then might
drastically increase in value. However, a car is a large object that is
expensive to store and must be maintained, which cuts into such profits.
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