I've been looking for a camper for some time now, but obviously I'm cheap so I've not found one yet.
I came close a couple of weeks ago, the bus was a nice looking '59 devon and it was around £18k. This particular bus was advertised on a Saturday and it was sold on Monday and it seems like there was a lot of other interest in this bus as well. It wasn't perfect, but it wasn't tatty either, just a nice usable camper. I've also seen fully restored campers for around the £30+ mark and they seem to be advertised for sale for ages and ages, plus others that are advertised at the mid 20k range and every month they have a 'price drop'. This got me thinking, why was there so much interest in the £18k bus whereas others just sit there not selling?
According to a couple of guys on the SSVC site, the £18k bus needed 'thousands' spent on it to make it 'correct', so it was a fair price - not a cheap bus.
But is this correctness important? Me personally, I'd prefer something usable, I don't want to pay more for a 100% correct and fully restored bus that I'm afraid to use. I think this is fairly common and might be the reason so many were interested in the '59. So are a lot of these buses now being 'over restored' for the market?
Are people trying to cash in on the collector market and get the most from their bus (or Beetle for that matter) by restoring it to the highest standard and asking top dollar for it, whereas that market is extremely small and the bigger market may well be down a notch or two?
Rob Amos
Happiness is a stock VW