I Lost Over $6000 Selling My Land Yacht...

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  • Опубліковано 26 сер 2024
  • Read More about my 1978 Lincoln Continental Town Coupe Ownership experience here: www.autotrader....

КОМЕНТАРІ • 889

  • @carloselrey36
    @carloselrey36 7 років тому +885

    LMFAO you fixed the car for him, and gave him a little extra money on top of it for the car he sold you..

    • @HooviesGarage
      @HooviesGarage  7 років тому +118

      He was the only person in the world who wanted it-- AND HAD THE MONEY TO BUY IT.

    • @04dram04
      @04dram04 7 років тому +82

      Wow you must have had to suck up allot of pride to sell it back to him. I mean, it sounds like he lied to you about the leaks.

    • @zloychechen5150
      @zloychechen5150 7 років тому +91

      we agree that you're an idiot, but we still like you very much.

    • @sunnyg6109
      @sunnyg6109 7 років тому +15

      YES YOUR MONEY

    • @sidneydean.
      @sidneydean. 7 років тому +8

      Bound to take a horrible loss eventually

  • @gamerwithagun803
    @gamerwithagun803 7 років тому +16

    I love how he's talking in past tense when he still has the car with him.

  • @markothevrba
    @markothevrba 7 років тому +42

    Pretty good deal for the guy who sold it to you. He basically fixed it for free AND got 3K cash

  • @MagnusFeirenbacher
    @MagnusFeirenbacher 7 років тому +26

    i would totally drive one of those. every day.
    I love big cars

  • @seansean3765
    @seansean3765 7 років тому +34

    It sounds like losing money on vehicles is one of your specialties

  • @Hauuy-el1vv
    @Hauuy-el1vv 7 років тому +59

    I'd buy it if I lived within 2 hrs but I live in the UK... Land yachts are awesome

    • @martinmacdonald
      @martinmacdonald 7 років тому +5

      Until you get to a width restriction. Or a single carriageway.

    • @Hauuy-el1vv
      @Hauuy-el1vv 7 років тому +1

      martin macdonald It wouldn't be a daily that's for sure...

    • @DonPablo2011
      @DonPablo2011 7 років тому +2

      +TFC Absolutely. I'd love that car.

    • @Lincolnator721
      @Lincolnator721 7 років тому +3

      even though I live in the U.S., my mom had a 1986 Lincoln Town Car that wouldn't fit in a few parking spots. It was too long and too wide. The car rode like a dream. Couldn't feel anything going over bumps.

    • @martinmacdonald
      @martinmacdonald 7 років тому

      $5.60 per (US) gallon, on average, March this year according to the BBC.

  • @JasonLambPage
    @JasonLambPage 7 років тому +7

    We had a 77 Town Car. It was moondust metallic and I remember just how enormous it felt from behind the wheel. Really enjoying your UA-cam channel so far.

  • @williamskagen9901
    @williamskagen9901 7 років тому +159

    Okay, so you got a "working" w221 s class with a v12 for 9k, and then this thing for the same amount. Are you mad!?

    • @packardcaribien
      @packardcaribien 7 років тому +9

      William skagen There's entire groups and clubs dedicated to 70s American cars - especially the luxury ones. A Lincoln like this in absolute mint shape could fetch north of 20k (although an earlier model or a Mark coupe would go for more).

    • @joeyscleaninglady2877
      @joeyscleaninglady2877 7 років тому +6

      should have gotten an imperial complete with the sinatra cassettes

    • @zloychechen5150
      @zloychechen5150 7 років тому +3

      well, yes, he is, because both of these are huge piles of shite.

    • @Spencer481
      @Spencer481 7 років тому +1

      seriously, my sister was shopping around all over for a good one the nicest ones were going for 7 to 8, and to buy a lemon for that much is pretty tragic.

    • @MRthekid0ne
      @MRthekid0ne 7 років тому +7

      zloychechen5150 eww you're not American

  • @Ball.Daily11
    @Ball.Daily11 7 років тому +75

    Damn he spun you lol. How could he even look you in the eye lol.

    • @HooviesGarage
      @HooviesGarage  7 років тому +67

      He was a nice dude. He's lost his ass plenty of time on these too.

    • @zloychechen5150
      @zloychechen5150 7 років тому +13

      "was"? served him right getting locked in that boot.

  • @mickm5097
    @mickm5097 6 років тому +1

    This is like the King of Queens episode where Doug buys the ice cream truck and then sells it back to the same guy at a loss.

  • @ronaldthomas3528
    @ronaldthomas3528 7 років тому +51

    That is just rediculous. The guy obviously had sellers remorse. He would have paid way more, but he smelled your desperation.

  • @AdrianosClassicGarage
    @AdrianosClassicGarage 7 років тому +213

    well... living in one of those doesn't sound THAT bad! :p

    • @Shyzah
      @Shyzah 7 років тому +9

      WTFtube as long as you got your hentai stash

    • @HooviesGarage
      @HooviesGarage  7 років тому +28

      Compared to a 500 maybe.

    • @120masterpiece
      @120masterpiece 7 років тому +4

      I think there's enough room in there you could make it work. It is a land yacht afterall.

    • @campervanelvisitoofonyou8720
      @campervanelvisitoofonyou8720 7 років тому +4

      Hoovies Garage Actually, if you search youtube for car dwellers and van dwellers this car would be like living in a mansion to them.
      Btw, I had a 1966 Cadillac Sedan Deville that I paid $500 for and didn't have 5 % of the problems you had. But I bought it in 1983.

  • @jakeford1570
    @jakeford1570 7 років тому +3

    my love of things with motors has brought me to the brink of bankruptcy a time or two. your channel gives me hope that there are people even dumber than me out there. thanks hoovie!

  • @tylersigler2001
    @tylersigler2001 7 років тому +59

    I see a Chrysler TC by Maserati in your future!

    • @kennethj1956
      @kennethj1956 7 років тому +10

      Yes A great choice; along with Buick Reatta, Cadillac Cimarron wagon and there is always a Chrysler Cordoba with "Corinthian Leather".

    • @briantracy1324
      @briantracy1324 7 років тому +6

      I see a Maserati BiTurbo in Hoovies future.

    • @pmvaldez1
      @pmvaldez1 6 років тому

      Are there any of those left?

    • @yamahonkawazuki
      @yamahonkawazuki 6 років тому

      which neaarly resembles a lebaron lol

    • @alanrussell6678
      @alanrussell6678 4 роки тому

      @@pmvaldez1 www.korzautofarm.com/details/used-1990-chrysler-tc/55521053

  • @davidk8184
    @davidk8184 7 років тому +308

    Tell your boss Doug I'm enjoying your videos better than his. ;)

    • @zloychechen5150
      @zloychechen5150 7 років тому +32

      waaay more

    • @slashbashin
      @slashbashin 7 років тому +43

      Way way way more. The fact that he knows how to edit a video without Imovie music and transitions helps.

    • @davidk8184
      @davidk8184 7 років тому +7

      Doug needs to understand the concepts of sweetened audio and the cutaway.

    • @fabts4
      @fabts4 7 років тому +17

      And tell Doug you're underpaid.

    • @phantommedia9964
      @phantommedia9964 7 років тому +8

      The way Doug edits his videos is his signature style lmaooo

  • @RockBassTv
    @RockBassTv 6 років тому +2

    Here in Europe, you won't really find this Lincoln under 10 000Eur which is about 12 000$ and people love it and buy it here. I'm about to buy my first classic car soon. Got 8000$ ready deciding between a '69 or '73 Chevy Caprice or maybe a '77 Dodge Monaco. However this video makes me think twice... Thx for making it!

  • @ChiselMouse
    @ChiselMouse 7 років тому +17

    It's really a beautiful car. Saw it when you had it up on Ebay. If it had been me though the guy I'd bought it from would be the last man on Earth I'd sell it back to. But I'm just ornery like that.

  • @brucecarney4416
    @brucecarney4416 7 років тому +2

    I am amazed that this man ever did anything to earn that much money in the first place

  • @Windennn
    @Windennn 7 років тому +1

    I'm looking to eventually import a 1979 four door town car collectors edition as a summer/veteran car here in sweden, after seeing yours and just falling in love with it. I had been trying to decide for ages what I wanted until I saw your Lincoln. Great job with these videos, dude! Gotta love land yachts :)

  • @suddens
    @suddens 7 років тому +16

    My grandmother has a 1969 Lincoln Coninental Mark III with everything original

    • @GeneDexterExperience
      @GeneDexterExperience 6 років тому +5

      suddens There’s one for sale in Plymouth, MI @ $52k

    • @jbird3602
      @jbird3602 5 років тому +2

      suddens buy that Lincoln from Granny I've got a mk 4 . A mk3 is a awesome car . 69 was the first of three years it was produced.

    • @linc131313
      @linc131313 5 років тому

      The Mark 3's are my favorite Lincoln! Love that beautiful design.

    • @linc131313
      @linc131313 5 років тому

      @@jbird3602 believe is or not, 1968 was the first year for the Mark 3. I only know this because I've loved that car for a couple of decades now and almost bought one in 2001 (I was about 23 years old at the time).

  • @hullinger
    @hullinger 7 років тому +8

    To quote a famous ex president, "I feel your pain"! I took a bath on a '66 Toronado and sold it recently for a loss close to what you did too. I was cocky and arrogant when buying it, thinking I knew what I was doing. Once the shipper dropped it off, I know right away it was a mistake. I was just bitter and nasty towards that car and learned one more lesson in the process.

    • @HooviesGarage
      @HooviesGarage  7 років тому +15

      To quote another famous president: Read my lips. No new Land Yachts... Oh wait.

    • @waterheaterservices
      @waterheaterservices 6 років тому

      66 Toro is a epic classic. Just say'n. PS I bought fairly nice 66 with a bad transmission, in 1975, for $35. Really.

    • @Mr.Everything
      @Mr.Everything 6 років тому +4

      To quote Frank Constanta; “I remember when I was arrogant, I was brash. I overseasonsed the meat. I sent 16 of my own men to the latrines that night. They were just boys.”

  • @MrGaryRoberton
    @MrGaryRoberton 7 років тому +4

    There used to be used car lot here called Nothing over $ 999 car sales
    an old friend of mine would buy a car drive it till it quit, take the plates off and go buy another one. Smart man.

  • @farnsworth3000
    @farnsworth3000 7 років тому +3

    Thanks for being so honest with your experience.

  • @smothdude
    @smothdude 7 років тому +19

    Your mic is still better than Doug's ;)

  • @frankfarago2825
    @frankfarago2825 2 роки тому +1

    I owned Cadillacs for 19 years. Model year 1968 through 1977, inclusive. Just about every model, but mostly Fleetwood, DeVille Sedan and Coupe, Dorado. I am about to get an XTS from the last production year. With that, you have a 3.6-liter V6 engine, no Turbo-monkeying around, no 4-cylinder eco-misers, not deadly self-igniting battery cars. Now, as for Lincolns, I considered those many times. Just never took the plundge. Maybe I was just lucky.

  • @Bmwguy2011
    @Bmwguy2011 7 років тому +1

    You had me spazzing with your other video, when you attended that stuffy Porsche event. You made a mockery of it all, and with such finesse! Keep it up!

  • @OMGWTFLOLSMH
    @OMGWTFLOLSMH 7 років тому +3

    I like you and your channel (newly discovered). You're hilarious, and you buy some interesting stuff. Sadly, this car was not one of your finer moments. Surprised you would pay this kind of loot considering you're a former used car salesman. This is a $1500-$3000 car - tops. Subscribed.

  • @southernbreeze3278
    @southernbreeze3278 6 років тому +2

    "The car broke down on the test drive................otherwise my friends gave a positive report." hahh hah ha !

  • @johnoflaherty2598
    @johnoflaherty2598 7 років тому +10

    I will forever love the old 60's 70's large American square body classics. If u had even 3 mos of pleasure reliving an era before you were born-- then believe me, the car has more than paid for itself. It's not always an extrinsic measurement. It's sometimes an emotional/subjective thing; and I think that's okay. I don't think u should have sold it, but that's just me.

    • @mccortezy
      @mccortezy 7 років тому

      B3burner I am 27yo and I love these "land yatch". simple, reliable, and comfortable. you can take a 20 dollar tool set and fix anything on it, plus a couple of extensions for good measures. people on here say it's POS they don't know what they talking about. this car been running for 30+ years, and if there are lol still in the earth to last 40+ more years. with these modern cars they great and all but once the warranty is expired it time to sell asap, because that's when the problems starts.

    • @BlutoBlutarsky
      @BlutoBlutarsky 6 років тому

      Agreed. People spend money on entertainment. How much should one spend? Well, if you're Hoovie, that much.

    • @sdmercuryman
      @sdmercuryman 4 роки тому

      7 years ago I purchased a 77 Oldsmobile Delta 98 Recency. 86k miles, I'm the 2nd owner and the original owner took immaculate care. There has been some repairs over the years, mostly general maintenance. I paid $500 for a wonderful car. Took me from Vancouver to San Diego. From there to North Carolina, to Florida. Back the long route to San Francisco, and then Vancouver. Best road car ever. Never tiring and faithful. East Coast was fascinated at the rust free Silver boat with the ox blood red vinel roof and red crushed red velour interior.
      Still have the old girl. She is getting tired @ 150k.

  • @JBsC6
    @JBsC6 7 років тому +1

    Thanks for the video...we be all been there...don't sweat it plus it makes for good UA-cam videos

  • @nickv4073
    @nickv4073 6 років тому +2

    I have more concern over an 85 year old man driving a friggin tank like that. lol!

  • @DannysGarage
    @DannysGarage 7 років тому +1

    That's why I do my own repair work- because paying a mechanic for repairs makes a cheap car not very cheap at all.

  • @tools2berty
    @tools2berty 7 років тому +26

    keep the videos coming and you'll get the youtube money soon enough :) we need more funny autovloggers like you :)

    • @michaelg-l8786
      @michaelg-l8786 2 роки тому +3

      Wow you were right lol he is doing GREAT right now 💰💯

    • @tools2berty
      @tools2berty 2 роки тому +2

      @@michaelg-l8786 yeah.. glad for him :)

  • @galil_6863
    @galil_6863 5 років тому +5

    0:24 Oh boy was that going to change... 😂

  • @SonnyGTA
    @SonnyGTA 6 років тому +1

    That guy has BALLS to contact you after he sold you that car after he knew about all the leaks!!!

  • @michaelchang2930
    @michaelchang2930 7 років тому

    Over time, there's nothing more expensive than a cheap used (or classic) car so "buy the nicest example you can find, or save up until you can afford it" is probably the best advice.

  • @genevivaa
    @genevivaa 7 років тому +2

    I love your parking technique at 4:20, it would be my luck the owner would video me and try and claim some inflated damage repairs... I'd love a big car like that one, awesome.

  • @Kluneberg
    @Kluneberg 7 років тому +71

    I can't believe you sold a 1978 classic car for only $1500. In every second hand car's "lifespan" there is a point where the cars get cheaper and cheaper to the point where they are worth the same as if you scrap the car for the metal. At this point no one wants these cars and more and more of them start to disappear to the point they become rare. That's when people start seeing the value of these cars, sure the history of the car brand/model helps but after that tipping point of the car becoming so cheap most of the produced cars disappear the value and demand for them in the future can only increase(refer to your "Cars I Stupidly Sold Before They Shot Up in Value") not just because they have become rare but also because they are now a novelty by the younger generations what didn't grew with them when they were on the streets, not to mention the nostalgia factor of the older generations that contribute to the value too. I believe you sold your car at this tipping point where it's value is or about to become worthless right before it skyrockets in price in few years). I can't believe so many people can't realize this(similar mentality in forex and stock trading) - people buy expensive and sell cheap and fail to figure out why they lose money. When you have something that has become worthless in value you KEEP it instead of throwing it away. Look at that car, I'm not from the US but by EU standards that Lincoln is absolutely crazy looking, it's a freaking land yacht, people in the US may not appreciate it now but I'm sure they will in the future when this car become perceived as crazy as they're seen by people from outside the US.

    • @raiden5452
      @raiden5452 7 років тому +7

      bios47 essay boi

    • @OMGWTFLOLSMH
      @OMGWTFLOLSMH 7 років тому +19

      What are you going on about? He said he sold it for $6400, which was about $5000 more than it was worth.

    • @flowjob3813
      @flowjob3813 7 років тому +5

      OMGWTFLOL yeah, after He put in Double that money.
      so what he was saying is that he should've kept ist and Sold it in Like 5-10 years

    • @coomcake
      @coomcake 7 років тому +6

      First price I thought of seeing the car was $6,000 if it ran.
      Classics in good condition demand a premium.

    • @adamkatt
      @adamkatt 6 років тому

      what are you on about, he said he bought it for 9k and then took a 6k loss... so yeah you do the math... 3k....

  • @muziklvr7776
    @muziklvr7776 11 місяців тому +1

    5:33 That money rolled in, you made it!

  • @DoomFinger511
    @DoomFinger511 7 років тому +18

    Lesson I took from this: Don't ever send out dumb ass friends to inspect a car for you.

    • @RADIUMGLASS
      @RADIUMGLASS 7 років тому +1

      FRIENDS ARE NOT MECHANICS...........

  • @user-bq6iw1rd6y
    @user-bq6iw1rd6y 7 років тому +5

    The guy who bought it off you is a piece of shit. It took some nerve for that guy to contact you about buying it, and for so much less than you paid for it, FROM HIM. I'm not involved in any way and I'm sitting over here livid imagining that this happened to me lol

  • @maximood-tired
    @maximood-tired 7 років тому +28

    what are you doing for life if you can loose so much Money with ease? lol

  • @kcclark9664
    @kcclark9664 3 роки тому

    Bought a '79 Collectors Series one in '93. It was a 4 door with velour seats. My memory is I had it for less than two years but I have no memory of who I sold it to or if I made any $.
    One feature the car had was a button on the floor by my left foot that would cause the radio to search for the next station. I used it to play tricks on passengers.
    My main memory of it is it was the first time I ever owned anything that would play 8-track tapes. When people found out I had an 8-track player, I became the dumping ground for tapes they had been sitting on for years. After I sold the car, I bought some 8-track decks so I could play the collection of tapes I now owned.

  • @corrado9683
    @corrado9683 3 роки тому

    Hey Hoovie,
    Like I told you from a previous video,
    I have the same exact car.
    I can’t believe the way people treat the value of this beautiful panther platform car!!! I literally drive it around town and along the shore, and all I got is thumbs up and a lot of hoots and hollers!!! I really enjoy driving it and I still think the value will eventually go up!!

  • @FilmNfool
    @FilmNfool 7 років тому

    I owned a '79 MkV myself back in the early 90's - I had better luck, no repairs needed. And I've taken a bath or two over the years as well.

  • @northamericanauto43
    @northamericanauto43 7 років тому +13

    Really pretty car. This car was made from when American cars were American cars.

    • @CAHSR2020
      @CAHSR2020 7 років тому +1

      Yeah, back when shit cars were shit cars. Thank goodness those lazy designs and lousy quality control are dead.

    • @OMGWTFLOLSMH
      @OMGWTFLOLSMH 7 років тому

      It's a rectangular lump, that's worn, rusty, leaky and has faded paint. What's pretty about it exactly?

    • @trillrifaxegrindor4411
      @trillrifaxegrindor4411 7 років тому +1

      this land yacht is a huge rectangle,this is one of the lowest points of automotive styling in history.
      rectangles are not pretty,they arent stylish,in fact they are boring ,UN-aerodynamic and uninspiring.
      this is also the lowest point of horsepower production,
      combined with the highest weight and worst aerodynamics
      of all time.a big block ford at this time had well under 200
      horsepower which is pathetic and slow as molasses.......

    • @leejackson4724
      @leejackson4724 6 років тому

      NorthAmerican Auto and with the quality to match 70's era Fords SUCKED I'm surprised that car hasn't rusted away into a pile of iron oxide Shoulda Let It Burn

    • @67marlins81
      @67marlins81 4 роки тому

      @@leejackson4724 I guess that's why my Dad's 1977 Ford wagon ran over 500,000 miles on the original engine. Idiot......

  • @chieftp
    @chieftp 7 років тому

    my friend's grandfather used to have dozens of these old Lincolns. he'd never trade when he bought a new car. he was selling them off back in the 90s for about $600 each. they were nice too - not junk.

  • @kornelis2960
    @kornelis2960 6 років тому

    It's refreshing to see a person who honestly admits that he did it all wrong, instead of, as is far more usual, boasting that he made the perfect deal, got a fantastic car for very little money and blah blah blah. As I'm thinking of buying a classic car myself, is it really true that you generally have the choice between very expensive ones in excellent condition and junk cars, and nothing in between?

  • @gedisdiop
    @gedisdiop 7 років тому

    Recently acquired a 1985 Grand Marquis LS for $10K. Just under 8K miles. Spent about $3,500 on refurb. Gaskets (including rear main seal), trans. mounts, engine mounts, complete brake rebuild, shocks, all fluids, tires, converted the A/C to 134A. It has the same turbine wheels as your Continental. Never smoked in; still has the new car smell. Absolutely pristine car. Full documentation, including original window sticker. MSRP, a touch over 16K. Even with a poochie 145 HP 302, it's a wonderful car to drive. While taking it on it's "maiden voyage" this weekend, it started to lose power. A LOT of power. It never actually died, but it wouldn't go over 35. Limped it in to the closest Shell, and topped it off. Fired right up, got back on the interstate, ran 'er up to 75, and she sailed like the Queen Mary. After about 10 miles, within 3 miles from my house, it again, started to lose power. I pulled up into the driveway, and noticed that the in-tank fuel pump was so loud, that you could hear it over the stereo ! It's one thing I didn't even think about; the fuel pump/gas tank. It had set for SO LOOOONG, that apparently, the fuel developed the "goo factor". Nonetheless, she runs fine, as long as I don't try to drive her to Los Vegas from Indiana. My point is, if you're going to buy a classic that has ridiculously low miles, make sure to have the fuel system cleaned, from front to back. Save yourself some inconvenience.

  • @qikqbn77
    @qikqbn77 7 років тому +4

    Love your parking techniques. Especially when a Porsche is around! no sh#% given! haha keep up the great work!

  • @user-s1o3nr532
    @user-s1o3nr532 7 років тому +1

    Such an old-fashioned design for 1978! I still think they look great tho.

  • @GabrialMacLeod
    @GabrialMacLeod 7 років тому

    Hoovie, I understand completely.
    Last year I purchased a 1997 VW GTi VR6 with 236,000 KMs for 2700 (Canadian)
    The day after I bought it, the auxiliary water pump failed, and all of the coolant hoses needed to be badly replaced. $1500 later I was back on the road.
    Two months later I was exiting my parking area at home and smashed the bottom of the oil pan on the speed bump (car was bought lowered on coilovers). Later that day driving home from work, the oil pump pick up tube decided to break into a million pieces, taking the top end oil feeder tube with it so the head was starved of oil for about 2-3 minutes. Take it into a mechanic and that was repaired, $700 dollars later.
    Then a few months later as I was getting ready to perform some needed service on the interior, only to find a dollar sized hole in the floor pan. Further investigation revealed the entire driver side outer frame rail was completely rusted out. I really should have walked away but it was the car I'd wanted for many many many years, and was determined to save it. Rust repair was completed, and $2200 later I was back on the road enjoying the car.
    Fast forward 3 months, as I was driving to work the car stalled as I was going down a hill, put the clutch in and turned it over. It fired up for a couple seconds then died again, letting it coast down the hill until I could park on the side of the road. Got out only to see coolant pouring out of the car. Turned out to be a blown head gasket, in addition to a hydrolocked cylinder and a bent connecting rod.
    Walked away finally after weighing the options of getting another car or rebuilding the engine in that one.
    All told, I spent $7400 Canadian on the vehicle and repairs, only to sell it for $300 for a net loss of $7100.

  • @s.m.2868
    @s.m.2868 7 років тому +5

    Well, you haven't lost that much money as I have with my 2009 BMW X5 I had it for half a year and it broke down more often then I can even count....

    • @HooviesGarage
      @HooviesGarage  7 років тому +4

      I have a similar X5 story with a 2003 4.4i

    • @Ted335i
      @Ted335i 7 років тому +1

      Stefan Micsa if you're buying a BMW make sure you get a bumper to bumper warranty. Mine has cost way more than the warranty every year. I wouldn't be surprised to find out that Alfa Romeo's are more reliable than BMWs.

  • @vulpixgrant
    @vulpixgrant 6 років тому

    Knight Rider Trans Am was my childhood DREAM car. In the late 90's me and my dad looked everywhere for a decent one and they were all worn out or rusted to hell. Well in late 2015 I stumbled on a midnight blue TA on a local lot and had to look it over. It looked perfect, and I paid $130 to have it inspected by a mechanic I trusted who said good solid car. Over the next 24 months the tranny failed, the motor blew, the radiator popped twice, some electrical issues came up, the alternator went, and the automatic shifter linkage and shifter itself went out, and finally the fuel pump failed... All this happened one at a time over and over and I kept saying NOW the car will be good... NOW the car will be good... Finally when the Ignition and Starter both went after the fuel pump that was it and I literally sold it not running for $1,500 to a friend. When all was said and done, I had spent $5,000 for the car and another $8,500 in repairs for a car I never had running more than a month before it broke again.
    My lesson learned I will NEVER own another old car no matter how much I love it. New car with warranties or no car at all. Now I get to watch Hoovies go through my ordeal lol.

  • @OS-qd5wo
    @OS-qd5wo 3 роки тому +1

    🤣🤣my guy I feel for you I've been in a similar spot myself, we make mistakes so that we can learn from them, life is a great teacher because when we don't learn a lesson life will just repeat it. Great btw👍👍 good luck on this endeavor

  • @terrellwright7565
    @terrellwright7565 7 років тому

    The Jackson 5 quote was awesome!!! Yeah, that buyer played a game! You obviously love what you do and felt no issue with that low ball offer.

  • @bizvidonlinemarketingsoftw5675
    @bizvidonlinemarketingsoftw5675 6 років тому +1

    You gotta love Lincoln... Great video!

  • @FreeMovies521
    @FreeMovies521 7 років тому

    I bought an '88 Lincoln Town Car for $1000. Best money I have ever spent. Only thing wrong with it is that the clear coat is coming off. It only has 90,000 original miles. I love how smooth the ride is as well as how comfortable the leather seats are. Plus a smooth non scratched or damaged leather roof. True luxury in my opinion.(=

    • @STARDRIVE
      @STARDRIVE 7 років тому

      Even if you spend another 10 grand on paint, hoses, tires & stuff (make it new), you still have a better car compared to a modern day luxury barge. Cheaper to service too, more durable and it doesn't depreciate.
      Unless of course, you dump it after a year like this clown ;)

  • @rpsmith2990
    @rpsmith2990 6 років тому +2

    You and Doug are a pair of hot messes that deserve each other...lol. That is precisely why I keep watching.

  • @johnamstutz
    @johnamstutz 6 років тому +1

    My Mom had one like that but in yellow, I loved driving it.

  • @crimsonstang
    @crimsonstang 4 роки тому +2

    I'd be fine with the issues, I want one of these as a project.

  • @brianandrews7099
    @brianandrews7099 7 років тому

    I agree that in the antique and classic car world, there seem to be only two types - the big money cars; tri-five Chevys, muscles cars that are pre 1972, '64.5-70 Mustangs, etc. etc., and then there is everything else. If your buying one of the "everything else" cars, buy the nicest car you can find, negotiate a really good price for it, and most importantly, MAKE SURE YOU REALLY WANT IT! Once you plop down that cold, hard cash, understand that odds are better than not that you'll never see that money again, so be prepared to keep the car for a long, long time and keep it in good condition. Otherwise, just consider it like any other used car purchase. Drive it alot, hope you get some fun and decent service out of it, and assume you'll lose money on it when it is time to move on.

  • @BikerJim74
    @BikerJim74 7 років тому +1

    I'd love to buy that car.

  • @bluebird5100
    @bluebird5100 6 років тому

    That has to be one of the funniest stories I have ever heard from anyone. Your gonna be a legend Hoovie.

  • @austx290
    @austx290 6 років тому

    That is a beautiful Lincoln! I'm looking for a 77-78 right now with the 460! LOL I have a similar story with a 66 442 that I bought a few years ago (but I still have it) where it stays broken in the garage more than it does on the road. SIGH, live and learn.

  • @Evangelionism
    @Evangelionism 2 роки тому +1

    D'know if anyone's ever told you this - and I strongly doubt I alone hold this thought - but you're like the Louis Rossmann of UA-cam automotive content creation.
    P.S., you actually resemble and sound very similar to him, too. It's trippy.

  • @ReelX1
    @ReelX1 7 років тому +4

    You are damn right about "there is nothing in between superb and pricey and wortless" with these land yachts , but hee.... you were driving one of the biggest and laziest Lincolns in the world, aint that special?
    I have a 1977 Town car, slighlty bigger than your yacht, and it give me the same feeling. But I am living in the netherlands, so they at least apreciate the roominess inside

    • @FirebirdCamaro1220
      @FirebirdCamaro1220 5 років тому +1

      There was no size difference between the Town Coupe and Town Car until 1980, they were the same length and rode the same 127 inch wheelbase.
      In 1980, they went to a split wheelbase with the Town Coupe going to 114 inches and the Town Car to 117 inches, and 81 was the last year for the Town Coupe (which for that year, was no longer a Continental, as there was no 81 Continental)

  • @johnjon1823
    @johnjon1823 6 років тому +1

    I love those old boats especially Lincolns.

  • @unclebrucelive
    @unclebrucelive 7 років тому

    I love this guy's car reports!....lol, he should have his own TV show.

  • @kfl611
    @kfl611 26 днів тому

    When I think of a classy car, this is what I think of - or a Cadillac of the same era. My mom always wanted a lincoln town car or a convertible cadillac. A land yacht of course. Just like cars from the 1930's, they will never make the huge long square cars from the 1960's and 1970's. I had a 1975 Caddy Coupe De Ville, I always felt like if I got in an accident the other car would have been much more mangled than mine. That was one of the easiest car to drive, not so easy to find a spot to park it, but it sure had power and was easy to drive. Even if it did get like 8 mph.

  • @alphonsozorro7952
    @alphonsozorro7952 6 років тому +2

    For a car almost 40 years old, what did you expect? It looks very good for its age, and once the glitches fixed, should be a nice car to have, provided you have a large space to park it. Unwieldy but nice!

    • @frankfarago2825
      @frankfarago2825 2 роки тому

      Lincolns were never any good, nor are they now. FoMoCo, remember? Mercury was way better. But FoMoCo killed that one, emember? If you really want a Lincoln, get one that is made in China. Better overall.

    • @BRAINFxck10
      @BRAINFxck10 10 місяців тому

      ⁠@@frankfarago2825wrong, Continental are great cars the MKII was one of the best built American cars ever made and Town Cars can easily reach 500,000 miles, and this year Consumer Reports named Lincoln the most reliable American car brand, all the Lincoln’s they surveyed were made in North America none of that made in China slave labor crap.

  • @Jgeneraledger23
    @Jgeneraledger23 7 років тому

    I remember back in HS, you could find cars like this EVERYWHERE for like $800-$1400, it was like shooting fish in a barrel.

  • @jeffreycraven8154
    @jeffreycraven8154 3 роки тому

    My best advise on antique cars, buy one fully restored, and never buy anything after model year 1972.

  • @genemccormick7567
    @genemccormick7567 6 років тому

    Hey Tyler I sold my 4 door like your coupe for $4000 on ebay and had it shipped from Vancouver to Paris. Those overseas buyers love big cars. My 57 and 62 Cadiilacs
    went to Saudi Arabia.

  • @BigRobChicagoPL
    @BigRobChicagoPL 7 років тому +1

    A reliable land yacht is the 1986 Cadillac Fleetwood Brougham. I know what you all are thinking but thal OLDS 307 v8 is actually quite the trooper! I've owned mine now since 2013, putting 10k miles on it (91k total right now). I had invested zero into the thing and have been daily driving it as my only car. I always stayed away from fords.

    • @lilsammywasapunkrock
      @lilsammywasapunkrock 7 років тому

      Robert Niemczyk my last car was a 1986 mercury. i put a hole in the oil pan offroading and decided not to fix it. if had just shy of 350k miles. only time it stranded me was when the original fuel pump locked up at 318k miles. it cruised good and got 25-28mpg highway, not bad for a v-8. best $500 i ever spent, although i only put 90k miles on it in 5 years.

    • @BigRobChicagoPL
      @BigRobChicagoPL 7 років тому

      Yours sounded like it was strong too. Too bad it went bad but at that many miles something is going to go wrong. My father owns 2001 Hond Odyss that took him 16 years to get 100k and the thing had a trans fail right after getting to 100.

    • @trillrifaxegrindor4411
      @trillrifaxegrindor4411 7 років тому

      that's from sitting and not being driven enough,combined with dry rot and overly slow,intown driving
      you definitely cant blame the vehicle oir the transmission for the failure.

    • @BigRobChicagoPL
      @BigRobChicagoPL 7 років тому

      I blame wear and tear. Honda is still a heck of a good car and we had it rebuilt

  • @josephvanlandingham7776
    @josephvanlandingham7776 6 років тому

    It's a beautiful car.I have a 1989 Lincoln town car I bought for 200 dollars and I have fallen in love with her. She has her issues but I am willing to deal with them. Love your channel. I think a Plymouth fury would look good in your collection

    • @leejackson4724
      @leejackson4724 6 років тому

      joseph vanlandingham no dude, an old Mopar is the last thing this poor guy needs..

  • @TheBrokenLife
    @TheBrokenLife 7 років тому

    He speaks the truth when it comes to these terrible land yacht cars...
    I had an uncle that flat out gave me '76 Cadillac Fleetwood in about the same condition as Hoovie's Lincoln and had something like 75,000 miles original miles on it. Literally every time I drove that car SOMETHING broke and all of it was weird (because ancient Cadillac) and expensive. Doing all of the work myself, I spent $1800 repairing that car over about 9 months. It took almost a full year to sell it without taking a loss, and we're talking about a running and driving car for less than 2 grand!
    The segment of society that the car attracted was, well, unsavory and cheap. I had some guy offer me like $450 for it, after tire kicking it for like 2 hours, which at that time was well below scrap prices at the time.
    I finally sold it to a 17 year old kid that was in love with giant land barges. I told him as-is, no warranty, etc but if needed my help to get part warranties for all of the new stuff honored I'd help him out. Not more than 18 hours later he called me because the car wouldn't even crank over. The battery was less than 2 months old... I never heard from that guy again and I only saw the car one other time after that. I assume it got crushed when the next owner figured out that it was impossible to maintain, impossible to drive (500 inch motor that got about 7mpg in town), and worth absolutely nothing.
    Never ever buy one of these cars.

  • @MarkGelderland
    @MarkGelderland 7 років тому +1

    You should've kept it; it's a beautiful classic

  • @adnamamedia
    @adnamamedia 7 років тому +1

    I would love to buy that Lincoln!

  • @Wolfie-tc5my
    @Wolfie-tc5my 7 років тому +33

    First off, stop calling yourself idiot in each video you make. You totally made a habit of calling yourself that way. You seem to be doing pretty well overall. Besides, you seem way more knowledgeable than many car enthusiasts about fixing cars and bringing them back to life. How many cars do you currently own? Just curious. Cheers.

    • @HooviesGarage
      @HooviesGarage  7 років тому +50

      I don't count them. Counting would be the first step in admitting there's a problem...

    • @MrVibriocholerae
      @MrVibriocholerae 7 років тому

      Hoovies Garage lmao

    • @Wolfie-tc5my
      @Wolfie-tc5my 7 років тому

      That's such a good point! Totally brilliant!

    • @MarcoVenustus
      @MarcoVenustus 7 років тому +12

      But he's an idiot.

    • @bradlemmond
      @bradlemmond 7 років тому

      Hoovies Garage You're not an idiot, you might have a small impulse control problem, but not as bad as David Tracy, who is not an idiot.

  • @bohemialite6371
    @bohemialite6371 7 років тому

    Don't get me wrong I still love your videos Man keep on doing what you're doing and God bless you staying humble..

  • @corneliusdrvanderbilt822
    @corneliusdrvanderbilt822 7 років тому

    I had a Lincoln Town Car, 4 doors and all the shebang that come with. Yep, it was '78 model. They are great cars to drive. The first thing I did was to take it to a good mechanic and asked him to sort it out. It cost me around $1,000 all told, total costs $3,800 in '86. I drove it for 6 years. I left it to a friend. American cars are not that road hugging like their counterpart German or Swedish but they are cheap to buy and not really that expensive to use. Yes, they are a bit heavy on oil.

  • @pudgylittlehamster
    @pudgylittlehamster 7 років тому

    It Happens when you buy classic vehicles it happens sometimes. It won't be his last. It's all about the how big of a loss it's what matters and can you recover.

  • @onlyinthehood2243
    @onlyinthehood2243 7 років тому

    Just drove from Dallas to Elon, North Carolina to attend an award ceremony for one of my twins in college. Forgot about the collapsed hwy 85 in Atlanta and got stuck in 2hour backup. So a trip I have done in 16.5 hours turns into 20! Forgot to mention construction backup also in Mississippi and Charlotte. Plus loosing my Ass in Casino in Shreveport on the way! FELLOW IDIOTS UNITE! THANKS FOR THE LAUGHS BRAH!!!! KEEP THEM COMING, GOT TO DRIVE BACK SUNDAY😂😂😂

  • @buddyanddaisy123
    @buddyanddaisy123 6 років тому

    It strikes me that the 1970s "floaty ride, 100% disconnect" style car might well come back! I was recently driving in Boston, MA-on the Southwest "expressway"-you are lucky to exceed 30 MPH. And traffic volume is expected to increase by 30% over the next 10 years. So your highly tuned, 160 MPH-capable BMW is completely wasted on such roads-far better to have a land barge like that '70s Lincoln.

  • @billgund1206
    @billgund1206 7 років тому

    One way to save money is to do your own wrench turning. Most of what you described could be done with some skinned & singed knuckles. Then again, fire damage adds a whole new set of problems.

  • @michelizappala3009
    @michelizappala3009 6 років тому

    The video going through the tunnel wearing leather jacket was pretty cool. Not worth 6k but still pretty cool..

  • @iamelvisman68
    @iamelvisman68 7 років тому

    remember last video when I said you weren't an idiot? I think I might take that statement back lol still giving those thumbs up tho.

  • @javiespadero9843
    @javiespadero9843 7 років тому

    No problem Hoovies. The are million of people in the world without a car. You're lucky for having several cars.

  • @EvilModPixie
    @EvilModPixie 7 років тому

    I have access to a 1977 Lincoln Continental with 70K original miles. Dirt cheap and runs, not to far off being restored to a show car. Personally I want to build it but a collector like Hoovie, right in my hometown backyard would be just a great. Hit me up in Andale!

  • @kd1s
    @kd1s 6 років тому

    Yeah there are lots of flakes out there. One time I tried to sell a washer/dryer combo - the responses I got were priceless. Then I listed an apartment for a friend. The idiocy of that was incredible.

  • @forestlawrencegrading9154
    @forestlawrencegrading9154 7 років тому

    let me tell you about the night I took my 78 Lincoln out for a little test drive down a desolate Country Road I came to a complete stop with the gear shift selector in the D position I decided I would drop the pedal to the mat and hold it it shifted itself from first to second at 65 miles per hour from 2nd to 3rd at 95 miles per hour and I never let up the speedometer needle was at 120 and bouncing but I kept it matted the needle disappeared down into the dashboard with both hands firmly on the steering wheel I pulled myself up and try to look down to see where the needle went just them wind got in between the hood through some rust holes at the front corner and separated the hood right up in front of the windshield as I was slowing down got down around 45-50 the car was shaking violently after stopping and jumping up and down on the hood and getting it down low enough to see over I realized that I had separated all four tires

  • @kennethsouthard6042
    @kennethsouthard6042 6 років тому

    I learned to drive on my dad's 73 and several of my uncles had these and Mark IV and Vs as well. This was back in the 70s and into the early 80s. However, these cars fell out of favor pretty quick from that point forward. The Lincoln was basically a lengthened LTD platform as the car was no longer on its unique chassis after 1969. While it had different body and nicer interior than the LTD, you can see that Ford over time cheapened that up as well, while also raising the price of the car, (compare your interior to a 71 - 73 to see what I mean). I'll admit, they had a stately look for their time, but were outclassed by the Mercedes S class of the same era, that along with the poor handling and maneuverability and that 7 - 10 MPG, made these obsolete fast. This and Ford's response by dressing up Fox body cars to look like the Lincoln's of the 70s is to me what started the long slow death of Lincoln.

  • @scottcol23
    @scottcol23 5 років тому +2

    Hey you offer a great service! You buy someone's car with problems at or above market price. You then fix all the issues, and then sell the car back to the original owner for a few grand less than you paid when you picked it up. Jeez that is a sound and true business model if I've ever heard one before. In fact, I have a car with a few costly issues. ill sell it to you for $7K . You work your magic (shouldn't cost more than $5,500 to fix) then sell me the car back for... say... $4.700. DO we have a deal?

  • @ARAR148
    @ARAR148 7 років тому

    I have a 1982 cv80 scooter, nice classic, my back tire blew out when I was riding it, I pushed the heavy tank scooter home (like a 1960s Vespa) good thing I have brand new tires already

  • @andresherrera2146
    @andresherrera2146 6 років тому

    Putting money into repairs doesn't make the car worth what you've put in. The fire damage could have easily been repaired without the aid of a shop. New distributor cap, wires, possibly some new connectors. Replace the vent hose for less than 5 dollars....I could go on. The "fiddling" you describe after running the car out of gas is expected - the fuel bowl was probably dry as a bone. That doesn't mean the car "broke down". Lesson learned: don't buy an old car if you aren't willing / aren't able to get your hands dirty and learn, and NEVER expect to get back money you've put into a classic, unless it's an extremely collectible and desirable model.

  • @gonaone
    @gonaone 6 років тому

    Meanwhile in Finland, you send your car to junkyard, because of 20€/$ starting-position-sensor (or other vital part)
    cant be repaired/sold by no one. :D
    Local repair-guys says only "i don't know" because your car are so rare and old.
    So, be happy if you can life next to big spare-part warehouse

  • @rEdHoUsE_1969
    @rEdHoUsE_1969 7 років тому +21

    Let's see ... Hoovie ... buy's the car $9000 ... fixes all the issues $6000+ ... then sells it back to the guy that sold him the car .... for .... $6400 ... hmmm??

    • @garydunn3037
      @garydunn3037 7 років тому +7

      Yeah. I reckon this guy has more money than brains. lol.

  • @chris.honeycutt
    @chris.honeycutt 7 років тому

    Your videos are the best! Keep 'em coming.

  • @christianroman780
    @christianroman780 6 років тому

    I don't always buy lemons, but when I do, I buy back the lemons I sold to unsuspecting buyers after they have fixed them.