Ghost Cars – If You Didn’t Save Them, You Won’t See Them

I was corresponding with a blog reader buddy about the 2015 Mercedes S65 I had on hold and he was surprised it was out there – didn’t see it on the CarMax web page when searching for V-12’s. It reminded me of the peculiarities of searching and tracking unicorns on CarMax.com and the app. They operate differently but on both one can save cars to your profile as favorites. Once there, you still have visibility on the car regardless of status. On the phone app, a car might say “Currently Unavailable” after being saved with no further information. On my laptop, though, more information is provided on saved cars that are not “currently available“. The listing will share if the car is “reserved” or “shipping“, and if being transferred will indicate where it’s going. On the laptop web page it will also indicate whether a car is “sold” – but it doesn’t delete them.

For very special cars I’ll leave them in my saved section even after being sold and get pleasantly surprised when they sometimes show up again after being returned. On both the app and the web page you can see the latest price for the vehicle even if it’s unavailable, but only on the menu showing all the cars you’ve saved. Once you click on the car the price is “N/A”. Because of all this rigamarole I’ve been including the stock number and VIN when I blog. You can always search by the stock number and find cars that are “currently unavailable” and don’t show up when searching by brand, type, cylinders, etc. With that, here are a couple of “ghost” cars that remain in my saved file but haven’t been offered for sale in a while. They may or may not show up again as available.

Here’s a rare one, a 2017 Alpina B7 that was on the net briefly then went underground while being transferred to Raleigh, North Carolina. Not a lot of B7’s in the USA (a few hundred imported yearly?) and while it has the same horsepower as the V-12 M760i, Car and Driver described the B7 as “the quickest dealership-sold BMW we’ve ever tested, with 60 mph arriving in 3.4 seconds.” Say’s it’ll do 193 mph. FWIW here’s the link to the Car and Driver review, and it has a nice recap of how Alpina came to be.

Picture above could be the interior of the M760i or even the 750 – only real giveaway is the logo on the steering wheel and the cool Alpina graphic embedded in the speedo. This B7 is loaded with Apple CarPlay, adaptive cruise control, the Driver Assistance Package, Executive Package, and Luxury Package.

The Alpina B7 leverages the 4.4 liter twin turbo from the 750 but adds boost, special pistons, Alpina intake, exhaust, and intercoolers to get the 600 hp. It’s mated to an eight speed ZF automatic transmission.

Only 400 2017 Alpina B7’s were imported to the USA, and they were priced at $137,000. As noted, the ad says N/A for a price, but in my saved file it shows it’s selling for $59,998. That’s a helluva deal. Track this 2017 Alpina B7 here in Raleigh – currently reserved for some lucky buyer. Or maybe not?

Stock # 23467006  VIN # WBA7F2C39HG543846

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Bevy of Bargain Boxsters – 2008 Unicorns

2008-porsche-boxster-photo-173511-s-986x603The Porsche Boxster, like the Mazda Miata, gets maligned as not a serious sports car…usually by folks who don’t follow sports cars.  And yet the Miata made Car and Driver’s 10 Best Car List 17 times, and the Boxster 14.  I’ve driven a Boxster and I get it.  (I would drive a Miata but at 6’4″ I just don’t fit.)  The mid-engined boxer six cylinder is a pleasure to to push, and the handling, braking, and shifting are, as the Germans would say, präzise.  Here’s the 2008 Car and Driver award for the Boxster.  I’ve picked a pair of 2008 Boxster unicorns for my friend Doug, a gentleman in need of a vintage-feeling sports car.  They’re 10-year-old cars with very, very low miles – driven only a few thousand yearly.  I would still highly recommend the MaxCare bumper-to-bumper warranty for a few grand more – it will pay for itself in the first year no doubt.  Here’s my two picks:

This second generation (987) 2008 Porsche Boxster checks all the boxes with a five-speed manual transmission, 2.7 liter flat six, 245 hp, and at under 2,900 pounds accomplishes 0-60 in under six seconds.  Not a rocket, but the Boxster is as much about handling and braking as it is acceleration.  And it will hit over 160mph – and get 28mpg (just not at the same time).  This three owner car has circulated between Potomac, MD, Washington DC, and McLean, Virginia – affluent areas where my guess is the owners have not skimped on service – all while being driven less than 2,000 miles yearly.  I’d still get the MaxCare warranty.  Find it here in Dulles, Virginia.  If the link is dead it’s sold, on hold, or being transferred.

2008 Porsche Boxster $26,998 20k Dulles

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My backup plan would be this 2008 Porsche Boxster in Los Angeles.  It does everything the one in Virginia does, except it’s $3,000 cheaper and has double the miles – a whopping 45,000, which is still stupid low for a 10 year old car.  It’s cheaper because it’s an automatic.  Yeah, I know…..if it was a real sports car it would have a manual.  But the Tiptronic automatic is as good as it gets for the times.  It has a place in these parts as a daily driver, in traffic, juggling coffee and a cell phone and a bagel.  I know – it’s the same transmission I have in Etta, my 2008 Porsche 911 Carrera unicorn.   And it shifts pretty damned quick in manual mode, holding gears when pushing through an apex, or going through the gears on the highway commute.  And I can vouch for the Bose stereo – replace the radio with a modern one, but PLEASE keep the amp and the speakers!   It’s a two-owner southern car, spending its time in Texas and California.  Find it here in Los Angeles.  Same deal on the link.

2008 Porsche Boxster $23,599 45k LA