Latest news with #Bimmers
Yahoo
18-02-2025
- Automotive
- Yahoo
YouTuber Forced To Return Rescued BMW M6
Read the full story on Backfire News We covered previously how a car YouTuber rescued an abandoned 2008 BMW M6 that was just loaded with problems. It turns out he hadn't completed the purchase process with the owner, who demanded the car back later. The reason was all thanks to the previous video we showed you didn't catch the first video, the story is that some rich guy bought the M6 for his daughter, who proceeded to trash it. Badly damaged, including with a window that wouldn't roll up all the way, it was parked partly underneath a shed's awning. But water got inside, filling the passenger-side floorboard with several inches of putrid stuff that just sat for years. Unsurprisingly, the thing was moldier than a cheese factory inside. Even better, once the YouTuber got the M6 home he was able to read the codes, of which there were literally dozens. If you know anything about these Bimmers, they're infamous for breaking big and this one likely had multiple pricey issues. The owner was out of town when the YouTuber picked up the car, so the sale didn't happen then. Let that be a lesson to you – never be too eager to scoop up a vehicle, no matter how good of a deal it appears to be, that you take it home before the title is handed over. She later saw the first video and was offended, then proceeded to ghost the YouTuber for weeks, or so he says. Then she asked for the car back. He tried renegotiating the price, but ultimately after a few months they couldn't come to an agreement. If you ask us, this YouTuber dodged a lethal bullet and he seems to realize that. The BMW would've cost him multiple times what he paid for it to get it running and driving properly again. And we can almost guarantee it would've broken again no too long after. He dropped the money pit back at the same place where he rescued it. We wonder how many more years it will sit and molder. Image via BradenBuildz/YouTube
Yahoo
12-02-2025
- Automotive
- Yahoo
Bring a Trailer's European Expansion Was a Natural Step
Randy Nonnenberg, co-founder and current president of Bring a Trailer, will be the first to tell you that eBay was his original auctioneering fix — at least until his creation was born. Follow that thread for 18 years, and Bring a Trailer has become the premiere auction website not just for low-mileage Bimmers and niche Saabs, but for those seeking to maximize their return on investment from rare, quirky, or just plain clean pre-owned vehicles across the spectra of ages, brands, and styles. But while that opportunity for enthusiasts to find the cars they really want has been limited to North America, our gearhead friends across the Atlantic in Europe are equally as invested in finding quality metal. Hence, it was only natural that Nonnenberg and the team at Bring a Trailer — which, like Road & Track, is part of the Hearst Autos group — set their sights on crossing the pond in 2024. Now, with three partner locations spread across the European Union, Bring a Trailer is ready to operate in Europe as if it had always been there. at "We have had a lot of sort of grassroots fans of BaT in Europe for a long time, some of them bidding on cars. So I would get a lot of questions of, 'When are you coming to Europe?'" Nonnenberg told Road & Track. "And we just wanted to do that intentionally, in a way that our tech was built out for it, and our team was ready to support it. And we are there now in a substantial way, and ready to grow even more," The site's three partner locations span from the Netherlands down to Belgium and across to Germany. BaT's Netherlands partner, Image Street Classics, was established last summer and offers the storytelling, imagery, and auction logistics expertise that the auction site has become famous for. Then came 1600veloce, BaT's central European partner — and perhaps its most geographically important — in January of this year. Centered between Frankfurt and Hamburg, 1600veloce's position makes the cross-continent shipment of cars easier than ever, allowing cars from around Europe to be more readily vetted, photographed, and prepped for auction. BaT's Belgium bureau, Colombo & Co, is its most recent addition, serving as a port-side hub to ship the best and most bizarre cars Europe has to offer Stateside. But not every auction success story ends in the U.S. Around 50% of cars auctioned off in Europe stay in Europe, making 1600veloce and its Germanic location a prime cross-country headquarters. (Just look at the Schipol to Dublin success story of this 1959 Mercedes-Benz 220s cabriolet.) The rules haven't changed much, Nonnenberg explained, as European buyers can bid on U.S. auctions and vice versa — but the intra-European sales mix is becoming an increasingly important part of BaT's year-end report. "We're not going to do just one in each country, but we're kind of starting there so we can get a footprint and spread it out. What those partners do is give us capability on the ground — local language spoken and local contacts — the ability to navigate the local market without us having to go set up offices all over Europe to try to do it sort of top-down," Nonnenberg said. "We're doing it sort of on a community level, enthusiast level, and from the bottom up, which is a little different, but gives us sort of a local European flavor to it. As opposed to a bunch of us coming from over here to go try to solve the way of selling in the market." The listing and buying processes remain largely the same for Bring a Trailer users in Europe. Selling your car on the site comes with a custom-written listing, a seven-day auction, and the choice to add professional photography for a few hundred dollars extra. (Nonnenberg admitted that the system of dispatching photographers across the country isn't quite set up for European operations, but that isn't far off.) Bid amounts will be translated into the currency of location, and value-added tax is calculated and tacked on for applicable transactions. Pricing is on par with the American version, too; EU listers pay the typical $99 listing fee in the form of €99, while U.K. sellers pay £79. Buyers fees stay at 5%, with a maximum of €7,500 in Europe and £6,000 in the U.K. The biggest change to BaT's operational layout from its expansion appears on its website: prospective European buyers can filter auctions by region, including European Union and United Kingdom filters. There are even more granular search options once inside of the EU or U.K., allowing for nationality- and era-tailored listings. These filters aren't exactly new, but the ability to show off Euro-market listings is one Nonnenberg is particularly excited about, and it's one that builds on the community-oriented principles BaT was founded on. With the site's bounty of regular commenters and a strong sense of community underneath every listing, Euro enthusiasts are now better represented than ever — no matter their car-buying affinities. "Some people think that Europeans just drive, you know, European marquees from their own country or something. But there are Italian car fans everywhere, and there are American car fans everywhere. And there are even Japanese cars getting shipped around and all over the place. So it's a diverse group," Nonnenberg said. "And that means a lot of need for the ability to transact the way that BaT does — which is transparent, and with low fees, and in a helpful way." 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