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 π€
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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 π€
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 π
I do hope it ended up been restored that's a lot of money to be pissing up a wall...lol π
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 π±
https://www.roadandtrack.com/car-culture/a7994/rusted-out-ferrari-dino-246-gt-sells-for-221000/
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 π¨
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 π±
Oh man a twin-turbo Ferrari F40 engine in a little Dino that would be like a slot car and black now that is certainly car-porn π π
Absolutely... Black paintwork, red interior, and that display case showing off the engine is a treat for the eyes. It's called the Ferrari Dino 3.6 Evo, one of several restomod Dinos using this style, of putting modern engines to give it a slight boost. Purists might call it sacrilege, but it's been done so beautifully, that I wouldn't mind it at all... π