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February 27, 2009

Triumph Spitfire on Craigslist

By Rob Einaudi

Editor-in-Chief

I’m providing the full text for your reading pleasure:

Runs surprisingly well, transmission shifts nice. Brakes work well. Passes inspection, all lights, wipers and horn function. Minimal rust, solid rockers, good floor. It’s a 20-footer. Lots of dings and hickies but complete. Originally had the rubber bumpers until chrome bumpers from an earlier car were installed. The alloy wheels are Minilite copies called Minator also made in England. The tires are good condition Kumho. The paint is dull so this could be a good beginner’s painting project. The convertible top isn’t perforated and has clear windows. Unless I happen to fix it prior to selling, the driver’s door opens from the outside handle only, the passenger side only from the inside. The horn honks like it has a frog in its throat. I have no idea how many miles are on this car as the odometer has never worked. It marks its territory with a few drops of oil, doesn’t smoke and has good oil pressure. The gauges all work, the dash lights illuminate, the heater blows hot in any season. The driver’s seat needs upholstery repair. It comes with a tonneau cover to cover the cockpit without putting the top up.

Learn the art of “Shabby Chic”. Most people having a mid-life crisis blow a king’s ransom on a Porsche Boxster or late 60′s Stingray – or – grow the obligatory cliche goatee + big gut and buy a Harley. We both know you’re not that lacking in creativity. You want a car that says you take the less trodden path, that you’re mechanically inclined and that you like to park anywhere without concern for door dings or theft. Voila! Here’s your car: pre-dinged and invisible to car thieves, the thrill of top-down British motoring at a sub-Geo Metro price. You won’t have to wear a bag over your head with this $2K purchase. Cheapskates rejoice: register it as an antique for once-every-5-years renewals, and no inspections. Surprisingly, insuring this car is peanuts.

Buyer’s Guide for the Married Man (or) How To Justify Buying My Car to a Significant Other

There’s no rational justification for buying this car so you’ll need to stretch the truth. For example if you’re a one-car household you could say it’s the second car for commuting to a nearby employer or for getting groceries. You and I both know your employer doesn’t look favorably on iconoclasts in tiny cars who arrive late and blame dodgy Lucas electrics. We also know that this is the wrong car for trips to Costco, but it’s all about the S.O. (significant other) at this point. You can call it an economy car as it’s a 1500cc 4-cylinder car that weighs about as much as a full dress Harley Davidson so your nose won’t go Pinocchio on this point. You could also point out you’ve upped your life insurance to a cool $1 million dollars and this car doesn’t have air bags & sits at the height of a big rig’s lug nuts. Think outside the box. You can do it. Working together we are a team. (Bonus points: this car played a role in the unraveling of a particularly dumb marriage, and for that I am glad. I should keep it as a memento but feel it might help some other trapped person break the bonds of a loveless relationship.)

Via Austin Craigslist

Triumph Spitfire on Craigslist

Comments

JayPhoenix
Feb 28, 2009 at 10:35 pm

very classy and well advertised. top notch

Katakuna
Feb 28, 2009 at 10:12 pm

If I had the cheddar, I’d buy it, especially from someone that damned honest and convincing.

camarofreak30721
Feb 28, 2009 at 12:50 am

I’m not sure what to say to this first, lol. That is awesome. The seller is very creative and convincing. After reading that and seeing the pics of the car it kind of makes me wish I had the money to buy it. I could justify it as a good car to drive to college and save miles on my Eldorado, even though I don’t have a S.O.

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