Was bidding on a truck last year and after I reached below my high stop point the bidding stopped. I was expecting to have that truck but the second call someone bid it higher. I went one more time to my limit and someone over bid me again. I let it go and said Oh Well next time maybe. The next day a Mecum rep phoned me to see if I wanted that truck for my final bid. He said the other guy could not come up with the financial final payment so the truck was mine if I wanted it. I said no more than three times to this pressure sales guy. Just before hanging up he made a statement in passing “Looks like I am going to be out some money on this deal”. That truck showed up again in the next auction. I have heard of Mecum doing this on other sales where the auction is going to end below the estimated price. Crooked dealings are not what I am looking for. If Mecum is bidding on their own listings then I am not going to support these guys.
Explain how they said there was a “1975 Z28” full restored at just after 21:00 minutes in the video. There was no Z28 option in 1975. Nice fail for Mecum.
@@713classiccarsthe Z28 option was available in the 1967-1974 Camaro. No Z28 option in 75 and 76. Z28 option comes back half way through 77 model year. 74 is easy to tell apart. It’s the first year of the large aluminum bumpers but kept the flat back window from 1973. In 1975 the rear window was larger wrapping around the side. Physically the 74 thru 1977 are the same with the large aluminum bumpers. But 74 is unique to have the flat window from the 1973 model. And I looked at the online listing on the Mecum site. Sure is listed as a Z28 model. Look it up lot T121.
They don't show interior or motors ?
Was bidding on a truck last year and after I reached below my high stop point the bidding stopped. I was expecting to have that truck but the second call someone bid it higher. I went one more time to my limit and someone over bid me again. I let it go and said Oh Well next time maybe. The next day a Mecum rep phoned me to see if I wanted that truck for my final bid. He said the other guy could not come up with the financial final payment so the truck was mine if I wanted it. I said no more than three times to this pressure sales guy. Just before hanging up he made a statement in passing “Looks like I am going to be out some money on this deal”. That truck showed up again in the next auction. I have heard of Mecum doing this on other sales where the auction is going to end below the estimated price. Crooked dealings are not what I am looking for. If Mecum is bidding on their own listings then I am not going to support these guys.
Explain how they said there was a “1975 Z28” full restored at just after 21:00 minutes in the video.
There was no Z28 option in 1975. Nice fail for Mecum.
I thought there was a 1975 Z28 but not a 1976 Z28. It is lot T121 and sold for $22,000.
@@713classiccarsthe Z28 option was available in the 1967-1974 Camaro.
No Z28 option in 75 and 76.
Z28 option comes back half way through 77 model year.
74 is easy to tell apart. It’s the first year of the large aluminum bumpers but kept the flat back window from 1973. In 1975 the rear window was larger wrapping around the side.
Physically the 74 thru 1977 are the same with the large aluminum bumpers. But 74 is unique to have the flat window from the 1973 model.
And I looked at the online listing on the Mecum site. Sure is listed as a Z28 model.
Look it up lot T121.
🏆🍀👀✌️
That’s why no one bid they knew it was a fake.
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