a chevy dealership near my house actually just got burned to the ground not too long ago.Someone bought a new car and had to pay thousands in dealership fees (which happens quite often..., but I've heard this particular dealership's 'fees' are a bit extensive....)
So he burned the dealership to the ground.
Moral of the story, dealership fees, taxes, insurance, etc. will add up, and I dont think it would be worth it.
Besides, you have no credit. How are you going to walk out with a new camaro :lol:
and 30 days or 300 miles ... that makes me think they won't accept the camaro back after 60 days or if it has over 600 miles. Which for the price your going to pay, doesn't equate to much joy riding...
this.. he has assetsthey give you 4000 miles...and there are ways around no credit in buying a vehicle...
That one is pretty sweet lookingthe hell with the camaro im all about this 2010 impala ss![]()
And there's how they get you. "Oh thats a used Camaro. They only bluebook for 15k". 5k in cash to cough up. //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/fyi.gif.9f1f679348da7204ce960cfc74bca8e0.gifThe customer will receive the purchase price of the vehicle itself after any rebates, discounts, plus applicable sales taxes that were actually paid. The customer's buyback price does not include anything else. For example, the buyback price does not include any other taxes, licensing, titling or registration fees, insurance, accessories, dealer fees, extended warranties, finance charges, negative equity or any other expenses incurred by the customer at the time of taking delivery of the new vehicle.