Be Cash and Sale Conscious: Always have lots of change available and count it before you start your sale so you will know exactly what you made. Singles and five dollar bills always go faster than you think they will. Make sure you slowly count out change to buyers in front of others. Have receipts available for those who want them and make sure that all the signs, flyers and ads for your sale state that items will be sold “as is” with no refunds possible for any reason. Never count up your cash during the sale or in front of buyers. If anyone asks how much you made, tell them you not able to share that information. Cash is king, no checks for any reason.
Once you have made the choice not to fix your car, you then have to decide how to dispose of it. You do not want to sell a potentially dangerous vehicle to an unsuspecting person. If that is the case, selling it to a private person should not be an option. That will narrow your choices down to selling it to a junk yard or donating car to charity.
Local Online Classifieds: Try searching an automobile site if you happen to come across a sign board in your locality. There is a particular board meant solely for auto parts listings. You might be successful in finding exactly the car component you are seeking or get to know some car buffs too. These folks might be able to assist you on this. All you need doing is exchanging a few emails.
Find a inspiring old salvage door at your local antique store, 2009 volkswagen jetta, thrift store or a yard or estate sale. Any regular passage door will work but the truly great project will have at its nucleus a multi-panel, chipped paint or interestingly detailed salvage door. Be sure the door is “solid core” which means that the entire door is solid wood rather than a “hollow core” which is basically a frame with outer skin of laminated wood and hollow in the center. A hollow core door will not give you places to secure the bench or structural integrity against the elements.
Online, you can find used auto parts to suit your needs. However, if you want to buy a new auto part, which is a mechanical one, then you have to consider the difference in wear between the adjoining ones. The older your vehicle is, the greater the difference. Therefore, in this case it is better to look for used pieces. If the car is just a few years old, then you can go for factory original parts.
But there is more to an auto part than just the part itself. The make and model and year of your car will have a great impact on how much the part will cost to replace and how easy the part is to get.