im guessing the recaros were damaged when the car was written off.. so they replaced them with black ones. haha dc2itr, the car gets to me in a few days cant wait.
im also guessing he renewed the rego before the accident?
altho the rego should of been voided already :S vicroads lol
The owner told me the car had been stolen in 2002 and they had removed the red recaros.
you cannot reregister a statutory write off. so if anyone in the melbourne area is looking for a dc2r.. stay away from this one.
I did some research and according to VicRoads, you cannot re-register the vehicle if it was a statutory write-off after 1 May 2002, so this could possibly mean that you can re-register statutory write-offs which occurred prior to 1 May 2002.
Quoted from Vic Roads link;
Originally Posted by VicRoads
Statutory write-off
A vehicle that is recorded as a statutory write-off after 1 May 2002, cannot be re-registered and the vehicle identification number (VIN) cannot be reused.
A vehicle will be recorded as a statutory write-off if it is a total loss and so severely damaged that it should not be repaired. Only certain parts from statutory write-offs may be used to repair other vehicles. The following document provides a guide for the use of parts from water and fire damaged vehicles.
So judging by that I am assuming it depends on when (date/year) the statutory write-off occured.
If any car, let alone a sports car is damaged so badly as to be deemed a write off, it should be just that....a write off. Too be used for parts at best.
A number of years ago a friend of mine owned a nicely modified DC2R and it had been rear-ended, by the looks of it not to badly. Anyway, after a year or so ownership, some hard driving and track day or two(that said, the car was religiously maintained), the rear of the car started to just rip apart.
The car was sold, the new owner knew about the damage and paid accordingly....and I think my friend was lucky.
this is why you need to do a revs check for whatever car you buy... $30-$50 just gives you piece of mind and basic history of the car...
It's free to find the information the OP did. Paying for a certificate simply guarantees the information you received and protects you from finance worries.
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