Lancia Motor Club

Model Technical and Interest => Aurelia => Topic started by: Parisien on 03 October, 2013, 01:19:32 PM



Title: Aurelia (?)/ Appia wheels anyone?
Post by: Parisien on 03 October, 2013, 01:19:32 PM
http://www.subito.it/accessori-auto/cerchi-e-crick-lancia-siracusa-74798526.htm

Amended accordingly William

P


Title: Re: Aurelia wheels anyone?
Post by: Sebastien on 03 October, 2013, 02:39:34 PM
Have you seen that there is also in the lot:
one presumably Aurelia jack
and parts for B12 indicator lights? :)


Title: Re: Aurelia wheels anyone?
Post by: Parisien on 03 October, 2013, 02:45:06 PM
I only looked at first photo!!!.....Must check what he wants....cheers Sebastien....you've made my day........again......:)




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Title: Re: Aurelia wheels anyone?
Post by: Richard Fridd on 03 October, 2013, 05:07:58 PM
Is that one of the rare distributor caps in one of the photos?


Title: Re: Aurelia wheels anyone?
Post by: williamcorke on 03 October, 2013, 05:31:50 PM
I mailed him a few days ago, pursuing some of these parts, but haven't had a reply.

FWIW I don't think those are Aurelia wheels, but could be wrong.  Perhaps Appia Coupe, as suggested?



Title: Re: Aurelia (?)/ Appia wheels anyone?
Post by: chriswgawne on 04 October, 2013, 06:11:36 AM
All sorts of interesting original parts there but as always with subito.it I wouldn't part with cash without previously seeing and inspecting the parts and also meeting the vendor. And ideally money and item change hands at that meeting so you know exactly what you are getting for your money.
As a matter of interest, my experience is that of the more interesting items for sale on subito, a remarkably high % are in Sicily. Coincidence or am I just an old cynic?
Chris


Title: Re: Aurelia (?)/ Appia wheels anyone?
Post by: DavidLaver on 04 October, 2013, 08:17:23 AM

There will be an effect from the nearest parts being bought up first and the stuff all the way down south still there.

There will be an effect where they are not trusted to deal remotely so the treasure remains buried.

Thinking of my rural upbringing "city folk" tend to be more inclined to do the deal and move on.  The deeper into the country you go the slower the pace of life, the longer the view, and the more such items are treated as holy relics to be held onto until an appropriate ransom can be extracted.  Space tends to be at less of a premium - old barns and sheds rather than paying through the nose for a lockup or the spare room being chocker.  The price tends more towards "so your car won't run without it" rather than "I'm clearing out".

...and then the world famous ethics...   Lots of good Targa Florio stories of spare engines being stolen to order, whole garages cleared out after an argument over a restaurant bill, restaurant bills looking like ransom notes, cars stripped to the bones having stopped on the course.

If it was me?   I'd be nervous turning up with enough cash for that haul let alone doing it via a money transfer and hoping.

David