Home » How Would You Have Spent $300,000 At Pebble Beach?

How Would You Have Spent $300,000 At Pebble Beach?

Facelvega (1)

Monterey Car Week was a blast, and not just because I got to watch David’s face light up as our simple country boy took his first taste of caviar (don’t worry, this didn’t change David, on the way home he enthusiastically burst into our Mazda CX-5 loaner with teriyaki beef jerky and classic nacho cheese Doritos). I also had the opportunity to take in a few auctions in the presence of co-founder Beau Boeckmann and his pals, who are all experts on the subject.

Of course, some of us lack the scratch necessary to participate so let’s assume, as a thought exercise, that your Aunt Milty handed you $300,000 on the condition that you had to spend it at Pebble Beach. You see, your Aunt Milty was a helluva gal, but she earned all that money tending to her haberdashery in Mamaroneck and never got to enjoy it. She doesn’t want you to make the same mistake. Enjoy life! Buy a car that runs.

We’re going to set a few ground rules:

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  • Add 20% to the final cost to account for buyer’s premium, taxes, et cetera if it’s not listed.
  • If a premium is listed just take the premium
  • If there’s no sale price listed, take the lower estimate and add 20%
  • You can buy as many cars as you want or as few, so long as it adds up to $300k or less
  • We’ll assume you brought your friends with you so you don’t need to worry about transportation, et cetera

To help, here are links to some of the main auctions. A couple require logins to see results:

In order to give you some encouragement and guidance, I will show you how I might spend the money, although I keep finding new cars and changing my mind:

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 1991 Corvette ZR1 – Mecum Auctions (LOT F103)

Screen Shot 2022 08 08 At 7.29.05 Am
Photo courtesy of Mecum Auctions

I have a soft spot for C4s and a red ZR1 is near the top of my list of Corvettes I will one day own. It’s got the strange and wonderful quad-cam V8 developed by Lotus and built by Mercury Marine. By modern standards its 405 horsepower isn’t a ton, but it’s plenty for what this is supposed to do.

Final bid: $35,200

That’s $42,600 with the 20% add-on and leaves me with $257,400.

1984 Ferrari 400i – RM Auctions (LOT 304)

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400i
Photo courtesy of RM Auctions

I’m a family man and I’d be a poor father/husband if I got something I couldn’t bring my two loves along in. Like ice cream cake at a 1st grader’s birthday party, Pininfarina 2+2s from this era are irresistible to me. They are the Fudgie the Whale of Italian coupes. I’m slightly partial to the Fiat 130, but a 400i will do quite nicely. It’s exotic without being showy, retro without being ironic, and it has pop-up headlights so I can forgive the GM-sourced 3-speed.

Sale Price: $89,600

That’s $107,520 with the 20% add-on and leaves me with $149,800.

1968 Porsche 911 2.0 Coupe – Bonhams (LOT 112)
Porsche911purple
Photo courtesy of Bonhams

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A 911 is always going to feel like the right purchase and a classic short-wheelbase original with under 75,000 miles is hard to ignore. Porsches are plentiful, of course, but this one is within a reasonable range and I’m just a complete sucker for the burgundy-over-black color. I could easily live with this.

Sale Price w/ Premium: $104,160

So that’s $45,640 to spend.

2000 Ford Excursion – Mecum
Fordexcurision
Photos courtesy of Mecum

With the money left there are a lot of interesting choices, but now I have now put together a fleet of German, American, and Italian two-doors. Camping with my family is something I enjoy and, reasonably, one of these vehicles may need a tow at some point. This was part of the low-mileage collection, which would be hilarious above 100,000 miles for almost anything other a Powerstroke turbo-diesel. I got to take a peek at it during the auction and it seemed in good shape. The price is also fair, compared to recent sales.

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Sale Price: $29,700

That’s $35,640 with the 20% add-on and leaves me with $10,000 to spend on some new tires and gas.

Check out those listings at the top of the post, and show us in the comments a list of cars that you’d like to buy for a total of $300 large.

[Editor’s Note: I had the chance to watch an absolutely incredible auction go down at RM Sothesby’s. The car was beautiful, the price was out of this world, the buyer was interesting, and the room — oh god, you could hear a pin drop. It was tense, but exciting. I can’t wait to tell you more. Until then, humor us with your theoretical car purchases! -DT]

Top photo courtesy of Bonhams

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dblues48
dblues48
2 years ago

Well, this is embarrassing – I do not know what that gorgeous machine is that y’all teased us with at the top… and then NEVER mentioned! Somebody please enlighten me. Pretty please?

CaptainZoll
CaptainZoll
2 years ago
Reply to  dblues48

it appears to be a Facel Vega.

tincanman
tincanman
2 years ago

Great Exercise. Found these. My mantra is “cars I can appreciate as they appreciate” I compiled a long list to choose from. A Ferrari, a Porsche, 2 Alfas and a survivor Benz would put a smile on my face.
Auction LOT PRICE Make/model
Quail 47 $70,000.00 Porsche 912
55 $42,000.00 Alfa Romeo Guilia Super
103 $38,200.00 Alfa Romeo GT Veloce
Gooding 102 $33,600.00 Mercedes Benz 280C
104 $112,000.00 Ferrari 308 GTB gold

Crossley_7
Crossley_7
2 years ago

Gotta be that Skyline Hakosuka to start, they’re just so good at being all the cool. I would follow it up with that minty green BMW 2002 Targa and probably have 20k left over for snacks and consumables

Myk-El
Myk-El
2 years ago

Datsun 240Z @ $52,000
Sunbeam Tiger @ $95,000
Jensen Interceptor drop top @ $45,000
Citroen ID20 Wagon @ $63,000

I figure that leaves $45,000 for running costs for a bit.

Brummbaer
Brummbaer
2 years ago

Call me eclectic, but my Aunt Minn is going to have to cough up at least another $200K before I can even begin shopping.

SlowCarFast
SlowCarFast
2 years ago

I’ve been on a V12 grand touring kick for several years. The Lamborghini 400GT or GTS are high on my list. The Islero is a better car, but the lines on the earlier 350 and 400GT models are just too fine!
https://www.bonhams.com/auction/27509/lot/40/1967-lamborghini-400-gt-22-coupe-chassis-no-01276-engine-no-1475/

That’s if I’m going to choose a single car. If we’re allowed to split that cash, I’d probably be more conservative. At one time, I wanted aBMW e28 M5 next to a Porsche 964 RS in my garage. I’d start by revisiting that option.

parsko
parsko
2 years ago

Daily Driver: 73 Volvo P1800 Wagon – $47,040
Weekend Driver: 73 BMW 2002 – $67,200
For the Winter commute: 90 LR Defender 90 – $41,440
Cause my dad had one: 56 Austin Healey $159,600 w/ Prem

Not sure if I qualify with your tooooo many rules, but that all adds up to……… $315,280. Aunt whatever her name is gave me my inheritance too, so I’m good.

King Caddy
King Caddy
2 years ago

https://rmsothebys.com/en/auctions/mo22/monterey/lots/r0136-1983-ferrari-512-bbi/1271254

Much as I’d love a cheap driver’s quality car, if you’re giving me $300,000 for a collectible, I’m going to get a collectible.

Now, I’m not a Ferrari guy, but the 512BBi is a beautiful shape, the beginning of the Flat-12 story, and this is key: NOT RED. Also having a Zegna interior is even better.

PaysOutAllNight
PaysOutAllNight
2 years ago
Reply to  King Caddy

I couldn’t possibly buy that 512BBi. That crooked passenger side amber lens on the front is giving me a full-on OCD trip that’s causing me to find so many other flaws. It’s been through a restoration with under 21,000 miles, and still shows multiple flaws in photographs! Imagine what you’d find in person.

Sure, the flaws are probably reflected in the price, but to be that far from clean and straight for that much money would bother me every minute of ownership.

I think that major defect is a product of a plastic nose cone. I don’t think anyone knew how to make a good, enduring plastic nose in the 1980s, boutique brands like Ferrari included. So for the same money, I’d much rather have a “lesser” car from the 1970s or earlier.

JakobKsGarage
JakobKsGarage
2 years ago

I would go for the Ferrari 400. Even though prices has risen some in the recent years, you still get a lot of classic Ferrari for your money.

With never Ferraris getting more and more wild and crazy designs, those toned down Pininfarina lines just gets more and more beautiful. Just a very stylish car.

– And it kind of has back seats! Like a Porsche! Cooool…

wolfpack57
wolfpack57
2 years ago

1. Nuova fiat 500 – 15k
2. 68 ‘vette vert – 58k
3. Lola t290 – 110k
4. ’32 ford Gilmore Special – 33k
5. ’66 Meyers Manx – 68k

Alternatives –
’59 Caddy ‘vert
240z
68 Chevelle
https://www.goodingco.com/lot/1986-ford-mustang-probe-gtp/?filtersInput%5BauctionType%5D%5B0%5D=Live%20Auction&filtersInput%5BauctionYear%5D%5B0%5D=2022&filtersInput%5BliveAuctionVenue%5D%5B0%5D=Pebble%20Beach&sortBy=ENDING_SOONEST&pageNumber=3
’27 Rally ABC

BigPeteJeep
BigPeteJeep
2 years ago

How Would You Have Spent $300,000 At Pebble Beach?

On the hookers, of course.

Wayward Drifter
Wayward Drifter
2 years ago
Reply to  BigPeteJeep

I wish hookers would prorate. I only need 30 seconds… maybe less. That would save me a lot of money.

BigPeteJeep
BigPeteJeep
2 years ago

And you think the cars are expensive…

05LGT
05LGT
2 years ago

I had a plan. It was reasonable. Then this one came across the block and .. deez jumped. I need her, and any $$ left over goes straight to her tires and pads fund.
1999 Acura NSX ‘Zanardi Edition’
THE QUAIL AUCTION
19 August 2022, 11:00 PDT
Carmel, Quail Lodge & Golf Club
Sold for US$240,800 inc. premium

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