you don't have to, you can always find it at MSRP, just check states like Montana and such or wait till the winter and buy one in New Hampshire when they can't give them away. Dealers in Pittsburgh were selling new 350Z's under sticker when they came out. Dealers down here in florida wanted like 8K over sticker. Its all in where you buy it.
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If you want to see a recent history of a $70,000 car selling for over MSRP just go to Corvetteforum.com and check out the numerous threads in the C6 ZO6 forum.
There were numerous people willing to pay $10,000 - $20,000 over MSRP which drove the market up. Some dealers charged just over msrp and a select few actually charged msrp. To make a long story short, it takes a lot of phone calls, but the deals are out there. The problem I see is that Nissan dealers aren't used to selling expensive, highly sophisticated sports cars. They will over-react and treat the car like it is a Ferrari. (i.e. no test drives, big mark-ups, probally won't even let you sit in it without a credit check...LOL!) -AL |
yes, I am on the corvette forum as I own a corvette at the present time, I remember there was a dealer in Montana that was selling for quite good deals. Its just about looking around for them and buying in winter in a state where it snows. sports cars don't sell well in the winter.
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we may see a feeding frenzy for the GTR after all. the rollout is excruciatingly slow and painful.
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Originally Posted by bonzelite
we may see a feeding frenzy for the GTR after all. the rollout is excruciatingly slow and painful.
I just wonder what the long term sales will look like. The new GTR is in a unique niche. It is a high tech 2 door 2+2 seat sports coupe, with 450+hp, aimed at the luxury GT market. It will fit in somewhere between the BMW M3 and the Porsche turbo. The problem is the Marque. Using the Nissan name might put off the potential BMW, Porche, and Mercedes AMG types after the newness factor wears off. I wish Nissan good luck. It will be cool to finally have a production GTR in the states. -AL |
Originally Posted by HellBent
Yes, it will be interesting. I'm sure that demand will outstrip production for at least the first year.
I just wonder what the long term sales will look like. The new GTR is in a unique niche. It is a high tech 2 door 2+2 seat sports coupe, with 450+hp, aimed at the luxury GT market. It will fit in somewhere between the BMW M3 and the Porsche turbo. The problem is the Marque. Using the Nissan name might put off the potential BMW, Porche, and Mercedes AMG types after the newness factor wears off. I wish Nissan good luck. It will be cool to finally have a production GTR in the states. -AL -shahul |
Originally Posted by robl45
you don't have to, you can always find it at MSRP, just check states like Montana and such or wait till the winter and buy one in New Hampshire when they can't give them away. Dealers in Pittsburgh were selling new 350Z's under sticker when they came out. Dealers down here in florida wanted like 8K over sticker. Its all in where you buy it.
-Shahul |
Ive been working with a big dealer here in Texas, I reserved the first 3 GTRs theyll be getting. (one for myself, two for my car dealer friend). remember not every dealer will be able to sell GTRs so make sure they can if you really want one!
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Originally Posted by chimmaera
(Post 3808)
Ive been working with a big dealer here in Texas, I reserved the first 3 GTRs theyll be getting. (one for myself, two for my car dealer friend). remember not every dealer will be able to sell GTRs so make sure they can if you really want one!
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Hey, buddy, Shahul. Didn't know you were on here, too. Good to see you :)
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