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Last post on May 22, 2013 at 10:26 AM
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Car Buying
#86175 of 91791 Re: ANOTHER SALES STORY [abacomike]
by mako1a
Dec 05, 2012 (8:46 pm)
I made a few bucks at the suction on the car
Suction Auction, what's a little typo among friends.
I think you have trade-in guys, price deal guys and payment guys.
Kind of like the 4 square...when one goes up, the other goes down.
The difference is the same.
#86176 of 91791 Re: ANOTHER SALES STORY [abacomike]
by stickguy
Dec 05, 2012 (8:53 pm)
why the wholesale? You said it was low miles and "in the wrapper", and you would have put it on the lot for 27K. So instead of wholesaling it at 22.5K, why not just put it on the used car row and sell it for more than that?
#86177 of 91791 Re: ANOTHER SALES STORY [stickguy]
by abacomike
Dec 05, 2012 (8:59 pm)
why the wholesale? You said it was low miles and "in the wrapper", and you would have put it on the lot for 27K. So instead of wholesaling it at 22.5K, why not just put it on the used car row and sell it for more than that?
I wholesaled it for almost $24K. Whenever I can make some quick money, I used to grab it. Remember, I had $27000 into the car and it could take 30-60 days to sell it on the lot.
#86178 of 91791 Re: ANOTHER SALES STORY [mako1a]
by abacomike
Dec 05, 2012 (9:09 pm)
Suction Auction, what's a little typo among friends.
Remember, I'm posting from an iPhone with a tiny keyboard and I type quickly. During the morning and early afternoon, I post from my desktop where I can touch type much more quickly.
Yes, each customer comes at you from a different perspective. The job of the salesman is to overcome as many of the customers objections to buying the car he selected that very day. The more objections you overcome, the better chance you have of selling the customer a car that same day. It is also the manager's job to try to overcome objections that the salesman could not overcome. In this case, his objection to buying had to do with what I was offering for his trade. So I overcame that objection.
There was nothing shady about what I did. I merely said, "...if you want me to give you retail value for your trade, then would you pay full retail for the new car?" It didn't work out all the time, but sometimes it did.
#86179 of 91791 Re: Computer is finally fixed! [abacomike]
by robr2
Dec 06, 2012 (5:51 am)
One of the very few lessons I have learned regarding computers over the past 15 years is that when it jams or gets infected with a virus which I have tried to repair, it is more cost effective and much less stressful to just junk it!
The problem with that is a solution is that most people don't back up their important files and wind up losing financial data, photos, work related items, et al. It then becomes more expensive trying to recreate all of that.
My brother who runs an IT department has a phrase: "Run in circles, scream and shout. You should have made a backup."
#86180 of 91791 Re: Computer is finally fixed! [mako1a]
by robr2
Dec 06, 2012 (5:52 am)
If you've ever needed a really strong magnet, take the hard drive apart, bend the disk in half twice to render it useless and remove the magnets
I prefer to put hard disks on my workbench and drill a few 1/4" holes right through the casing, disk, electronics...more fun and less hazardous.
#86181 of 91791 computers
by tjc78
Dec 06, 2012 (6:16 am)
I fix / upgrade mine until I feel that it is too old to use anymore. I backup both my home and work computers all the time. If they died I wouldn't lose a thing.
Hardware is much cheaper today, but I couldn't see tossing a good machine that just got a nasty virus or some corrupted files. I'm computer savvy enough to fix just about any problem, or since I'm backed up I'll just suck it up and reformat clean and re-install Windows.
Imid posted GREAT advice and I pretty much do the same things he mentions in his post above.
One thing I do to really keep your web-browser performing well is to have it set to "delete all temp files/cookies/history on exit" this really helps to keep the "junk" files down your PC.
Here are a few of my favorite programs to help keep your PC clean.:
AVG Free anti-virus (Driver mentioned Avast, great program too)
Spy-Bot search and destoy
Malwarebytes
CCleaner (formerly Crap Cleaner)
Secunia PSI to help keep your drivers, etc up to date.
Diskeeper to keep your hard drive defragmented.
#86182 of 91791 Re: FINALLY, I GOT MY CAR BACK [explorerx4]
by tjc78
Dec 06, 2012 (6:20 am)
Explorer,
How has your truck been to you? My buddy has a similar vintage to yours and his has about 170K on the clock. It puked up its transmission at 130K, and he has had a lot of little issues (alternator, suspension, paint peeled on the hood). Has yours been about the same?
He is running it until it blows up, but I was just curious. I know he maintains it by the book.
#86183 of 91791 Re: Computer is finally fixed! [imidazol97]
by imidazol97
Dec 06, 2012 (7:01 am)
>I'd get a backup system in place. Myself, I use DriveImageXML and make a backup to an external hard drive.
No one commented but on the suggestions I need to make clear something I said. The term backup is used for a system that makes copies of files that have been changed during a time period or of just a group of files regularly. That is available as part of Win7.
I used the word backup, but what I prefer working with what should be called drive images, which also is available in Win7. With a drive image, the external drive is not connected to the PC in event of an attack or major problem. But the drive image can be overlaid on a new installed hard drive or over a problematic old one that has been reformatted.
Avira has not let me down and it's free. But I check to be sure it's updating and gets run every 3 days. I had XP system failures with AVG when I was using it (free). One virus or malware turned off the antivirus. Another time ADobe Reader had virus weaknesses that got past AVG. A third was caused by diskperfect or diskeeper, two defragmention programs.
I have 4 external hard drives, 1 Terrabytes, 1.5 Terrabytes, 1.5 Terrabytes, and 2 Terrabytes. I have each drive image on more than one external. I never unplug and external drive until the system has shut down. Many users report failures on externals in the reviews on hardware sites, but I believe it's related to the handling more than endemic failures in the externals.
Had a call a couple weeks back from a longtime acquaintance who knows little about computers but had a no boot on their old PC. They had no usable method for recovering photos and all else. From what she said her now ill husband may have used a backup style program sometime. But I couldn't take on trying to help because I was tied up here. And I've been burned trying to help folks at little or no charge in past.
I've probably bored everyone now, but folks need a nap as we get older.
#86184 of 91791 Re: computers [tjc78]
by verdugo
Dec 06, 2012 (11:36 am)
I backup both my home and work computers all the time. If they died I wouldn't lose a thing.
Amen!!! I'm paranoid myself. This is my setup:
* Home PC has a RAID 0 disk array, so I always have an exact copy
* Home PC that does incremental back ups daily to an internal drive and does full back up once a week. Photos and videos get backed up in real time. I use SyncBack.
* External hard drive that i back up once a week and that I keep in a fire-proof safe at home
* I back up things as well to a cloud service (MS Sky drive)