Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Hey Guys,

Has anyone ever used a car broker to purchase a new car? I'm not talking import brokers. Currently in the market for a new/demo family car and someone has told me about car brokers and they can possibly save me money.

Personally this seems a little too good to be true, and you know what they say about that.

If they are not a big con, anyone recommend a good one which works in the Sydney area.

Your opinions will be highly appreciated.

Cheers

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/349160-new-car-brokers-good-or-bad/
Share on other sites

You want someone to buy a car for you?

Wait, is this a car buying service only?

I know DET offers this service, along with http://www.carsolutions.com.au/

I never met the carsolutions guy irl but he didn't do too badly evaluating my skyline. He seemed to evaluate cars a little nicer than some others have though.

Edited by SKITTLES

i have heard both good and bad stories from people using brokers (the bad resulted in the guy having to take the broker to court to cover about 30k worth of repairs because the broker had done a dodgy). some people use them because they are lazy or don't have the time to go to the auctions, etc, which is fair enough. i wouldn't do it just to save money though as with a bit of research you can easily do that yourself.

if you are good at getting a good deal when buying stuff then you are essentially paying someone to save you money and it sort of defeats the purpose. on the other hand if you have paid the asking price for everything you have ever bought then it might be worth looking into as what you pay them will more than likely be less than you save.

i have heard both good and bad stories from people using brokers (the bad resulted in the guy having to take the broker to court to cover about 30k worth of repairs because the broker had done a dodgy). some people use them because they are lazy or don't have the time to go to the auctions, etc, which is fair enough. i wouldn't do it just to save money though as with a bit of research you can easily do that yourself.

if you are good at getting a good deal when buying stuff then you are essentially paying someone to save you money and it sort of defeats the purpose. on the other hand if you have paid the asking price for everything you have ever bought then it might be worth looking into as what you pay them will more than likely be less than you save.

Just thought I'd ask, looks like nothing beats the good old haggle.

Car dealerships are a nightmare, went to a new car dealer last week and had to speak with " the manager" before they'd show me the friggen car!! Oh well no pain no gain

This broker system would be useful perhaps for women and inexperienced purchasers who are afraid of getting intimidated at yards and the hassle at auction houses whilst looking at as-new "Repos".

You mentioned, "...the good old haggle". It's quite a funny experience as you're walking out the door after 15mins of talking money, that the salesman makes a quick move out of his comfortable chair > walks 3 paces behind you > offers you car mats, fogs, metallic paint, upgraded sound, larger alloys - all for free; all because you checked your watch and it's near the end of the month!!!

LOL...

Just thought I'd ask, looks like nothing beats the good old haggle.

Car dealerships are a nightmare, went to a new car dealer last week and had to speak with " the manager" before they'd show me the friggen car!! Oh well no pain no gain

Yeah, aside from the "there's nothing aftermarket about this car" bullshit I copped, and the annoyingly time consuming sales pitch they did. Or the forged interests they had in the car and the whole "We'll save it for you" thing, it wasn't too bad.

One major thing I liked about the dealership was that they were going to give me two free services, and change the car to how I liked it (within reason). Speaking to the manager, he was going to give me four f**king grand for my Hyundai Excel as a trade-in, replace the missing foglight housing, do a major service, fill the tank, and give me a $500 gift voucher.

Kinda spewing I didn't buy the thing. It was around $16,000 but they didn't want to budge down on the price. Had to walk away :(

(white N/a 34)

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • To be fair passengers who aren't silly and have been in proper fast cars have often been pretty impressed once you hit 4th gear   
    • I suppose that's true. Barring almost any situation, I'll never sell so what the market does is kind of irrelevant to me. It's possible I'd make most of my money back. That spreadsheet I mentioned? Maybe I could make back more than what the car's total costs thus far are, but the parts and all that is possibly a different story... Thanks for reading. It was certainly a good moment and just makes the ties to the car that much stronger. It's exciting that the option will be there to bring it over, however I have some plans with a shop that may end up keeping the car there longer, not sure. Coupled with the fact I want to move there and haven't solidified any path yet. So in a way, it feels like I'm in a limbo state that is uncertain; time will tell.
    • No worries, everything worked out in the end. I just wanted to make the point that it doesn't matter where it comes from (I.E Australia), it can be broken or improperly built. I would still purchase from these companies in the future. B2R - Not certain how that finished, this was on a car I wired a few things and street tuned. I know the owner ended up shipping the motor back to Australia for investigation. Hopefully some of it is covered under warranty.  Turbosmart - I always pressure test everything that goes on my car. It's a habit from my career in oil and gas. I run two 40mm's and both had major leaks from the actuator to exhaust portion through the shaft. I returned both, they shipped me back two and one was leaking and the other had a 38mm top (40mm gate with 38mm actuator cap, no idea how that happens). Eventually after a lot of back and forth I found myself with two non-leaking gates. I believe this happens a lot more then people would like to believe but you would never know if you don't pressure test them prior to installation. Crank Motorsport - Issued a full refund and let me keep the seat rails. I turned them into scrap metal for other projects. GKTech - Shipped me out a replacement and asked that I modify it as per my idea and that they would do the same for a future revision. ATP - Can just needed a large shim to bolt up properly.  Haltech - They started an actual proper Beta channel for firmware's a few months back and stopped using the general public for testing. I'm now much happier.  Speedtek - f**k Speedtek. I would love to watch them burn.     
    • I've got a Turbosmart wastegate, ATP catch can, many GK Tech parts and Haltech everything. Everything's been perfect, sorry to hear your experience wasn't the same
×
×
  • Create New...