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Lol, that's probably so. One of the advantages of restoring an old Italian car with today's technology, is that you could very easily apply various treatments to prevent rust. Too many great cars from the past have been claimed to the underworld by ungodly oxidation πŸ™ƒ

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Oh my that is sad to see i hope it ends up in a show room condition in the near future by some enthusiastic person πŸ€”

Seeing that this is a coveted Ferrari Dino, I'm sure someone will, or already has restored this to glory. The best examples of a 206 or 246 Dino will easily be priced around $300,000++, so leaving it rusty like this would be a crying shame 😭

I do hope it ended up been restored that's a lot of money to be pissing up a wall...lol πŸ˜…

Certainly, the person who bought this must have some intentions of taking great care of it, since they paid $221,000 for this pile of rust! Now, all they have to do is add another $100,000++ to restore it back to working form 😱

https://www.roadandtrack.com/car-culture/a7994/rusted-out-ferrari-dino-246-gt-sells-for-221000/

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Damn but it is a rare one and will certainly fetch big bucks when it's all restored properly a million plus for sure in time 😨

I'm definitely betting on that, for sure! If only that article had a chassis number, just so I could reference it, and maybe, just maybe someone's already restored it. For now though, these old Dinos are usually valued at $300,000-$400,000, depending on the condition.

Some rarities do pop-up, just like what one Ferrari collector did to his Dino. He not only restored it, but turned it into a resto-mod project. He replaced the Dino V6 with a twin-turbo Ferrari F40 engine 😱