Truck Shop
Senior Member
Internet, internet review coverage in business good or bad--mostly doesn't make much
difference. If reading bad reviews really made a diff by prospective buyers it doesn't
factor much with businesses, unless percentage bad is 40% plus. A bad transaction
here and there is expected. As KSSS said, a third party inspection is the best bet on a
unseen piece, even then buying used is a gamble, crap happens. Not ranking the OP,
buying out of area is risky business, some have nothing but good luck others not so
much. It's a tough decision hitting the key or signing the check for payment with the
thought of {am I doing the right thing}. I don't know about the rest of the folks on
here, but for me I want to see/watch the facial expressions of the person I'm dealing
with. Texting and Emailing is a cold way to do business.
*
I'm asked about three to four times a year to go perform a pre-buy look on a truck.
Two thirds of the time I tell them to keep looking-unless the price is dropped by X
amount of thousands.
*
Karma--27 years ago I went with three others to look at this large Massy that had a
KTA 600 installed in it, high hours pulling a plow. I was really apprehensive, it just
didn't sound right, I told the guy looking not to buy. One of the other in group considered
himself a Massy guru, didn't think I knew what I was looking at or talking about when
I made the comment {it's about ready to drop a valve}. He stepped up and bought it.
Got to his place and spent the winter doing some hydraulic repairs/service work and
repainting the entire tractor. He sold it out of state. I found out through a very reliable
grape vine--while loading it on a lowboy---it dropped a #5 exhaust valve. Crap happens.
difference. If reading bad reviews really made a diff by prospective buyers it doesn't
factor much with businesses, unless percentage bad is 40% plus. A bad transaction
here and there is expected. As KSSS said, a third party inspection is the best bet on a
unseen piece, even then buying used is a gamble, crap happens. Not ranking the OP,
buying out of area is risky business, some have nothing but good luck others not so
much. It's a tough decision hitting the key or signing the check for payment with the
thought of {am I doing the right thing}. I don't know about the rest of the folks on
here, but for me I want to see/watch the facial expressions of the person I'm dealing
with. Texting and Emailing is a cold way to do business.
*
I'm asked about three to four times a year to go perform a pre-buy look on a truck.
Two thirds of the time I tell them to keep looking-unless the price is dropped by X
amount of thousands.
*
Karma--27 years ago I went with three others to look at this large Massy that had a
KTA 600 installed in it, high hours pulling a plow. I was really apprehensive, it just
didn't sound right, I told the guy looking not to buy. One of the other in group considered
himself a Massy guru, didn't think I knew what I was looking at or talking about when
I made the comment {it's about ready to drop a valve}. He stepped up and bought it.
Got to his place and spent the winter doing some hydraulic repairs/service work and
repainting the entire tractor. He sold it out of state. I found out through a very reliable
grape vine--while loading it on a lowboy---it dropped a #5 exhaust valve. Crap happens.
