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240 Wagon story and question - What is this worth now? 200 1990

In 2000 we bought a 1990 240 5spd Wagon for $8000 that appeared to be in excellent condition and had 121,000 miles on it. It drove really well but it was due for strut cartridges and shocks and some bushing replacements. We replaced a number of the rear suspension bushings with poly ones, and put on new KYB Gas-Adjust rear shocks and gas strut cartridges. Then it got a new timing belt and water pump around 125k miles. Since 2003 the car has only been driven on weekend trips, so 20 years later it still doesn't have 200K miles on it (193,300 t be exact).

During the bushing replacement I came to realize there was a lot more rust down there than we had realized at first. The car was single owner but from Minnesota. I did a complete brake caliper replacement a few years later and had to replace several bolts that broke off. From then on I decided to fix an area of rust each Summer if possible. I replaced the front control arms with a perfect set from a NW junkyard with all new bushings installed. There is no rust on parts from the local 240s so one can make good progress with this plan here in Seattle. The undercoating had protected the car from rust from bumper to bumper, but the bits tucked underneath the bumpers were rusty. As I replaced things I treated the body rust and repainted with urethane enamel mixed to match the color. The other main areas of body rust were the rear edges of the rear wheel arches. I did one side (passenger) by grinding out all the rusty metal and rebuilding with metal screen epoxied in place and covered with JB Weld mixed with fiberglass. It looks good, holds the mud flaps nicely, and will not rust again. The other side wasn't as bad and has not been done yet. At this point the rear axle itself is something that still has a lot of surface rust, and so are the bump stop mounts and some other small bolts and brackets under the car. It would not be hard to get a set of trailing arms and axle and transfer the poly bushings over to get yourself a car in about the same shape as you might find native to this area.

In 2017, in preparation for a drive down through Central Oregon and California to the see the Solar Eclipse and the Redwoods, I did the big job of pulling the dash and replacing the heater core and fan and resistor, fixing all the vacuum control lines and protecting them from the heat of the resistor with some hi-temp gasket material and foil, and completely replacing/rebuilding the A/C system. New Nissen radiator in addition to the new A/C condenser. It is back to OEM specs and filled with new R12. Works quite nicely, as do the heating system and vents. In late 2022 I had to deal with a gas leak that turned out to be the rubber hose connecting to the gas tank sensor and fuel pump rotting out. I put in a new sensor/pump and all new hoses.

I am now preparing to sell it and am curious what your opinions of it's value are.
At this point it is still a project car, one that drives well and has had most of the de-riguer big jobs done on it. I just don't have time for this anymore so I am preparing to sell it. It has been in a couple of traffic accidents where I could not afford to get nice body work done so there are a couple of dented corners that are painted but not fully straightened and it needs new hood hinges. It runs/drives very well, looks pretty good, but it is not perfectly straight or rust-free. The windshield is still original and fairly sand-blasted, and there is a crack in the inner glass layer, so the windshield would be worth replacing, as would the rear shocks, which have always been too soft. It is rolling on original 14" wheels with a set of Michelin Defenders with low miles on them, and I have a set of 15" volvo rims, two with studded snow tires and two with brand new General Altimax Arctic (studless) snows. I also have a set of the old style 2-piece wheel covers to use on the extra wheels. It gets 28-30mpg on the freeway where it happily cruises at 80 mph if you want, and it has a 1 1/4" receiver to pull a small trailer or mount a bike rack.








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    240 Wagon story and question - What is this worth now? 200 1990

    Hi Broos,

    Even with pictures, it's a guessing game to estimate car value.
    You can put an ad in your local Craigslist and test your best guess with local buyers.

    I wonder if your 240 still has that same timing belt that you replaced in 2000?

    Bill








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      240 Wagon story and question - What is this worth now? 200 1990

      Yes, so it has about 70k on the timing belt. It is due for a new one.

      On craigslist I find some nice generally restored 240 sedans, some even with fairly low miles, like less than 150,000, on them. These seem to be in the $5k-9k range. I found only 2 wagons, one has over 225k miles and is an automatic. It looks pretty nice but A/C doesn't work. They are asking $3500.00 for that one.
      The other wagon I find is also an automatic, isn't running at the moment because it needs a catalytic converter. Over 150k miles. It looks decent. They are asking $1500

      Neither of these ads mentions rust issues. One also comes with mounted snow tires (the $3500 one). They also don't say how many miles are on the timing belt.

      It seems like it comes down to 5-speed, everything works, some rust repairs needed vs. fairly pretty automatic, no A/C, and probably fan/heater will need attention.

      Should I be asking $3000?








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        240 Wagon story and question - What is this worth now? 200 1990

        I owned a 240 wagon with a 5 speed and loved it. I'm not that far but north of the border near Vancouver. i do not see many with the 5 speed, most were automatics so I'd say that bumps up the value a thousand or so.

        covid shutdowns caused a lot of people to look for car projects that they wanted to work on so that increased the value, plus the fact that new car dealers weren't releasing many new cars so people had a hard time finding decent used cars. and that may have affected the price.

        our government seems to be supporting Tesla with rebates using cash from taxation, and I see a lot of them on the road but I doubt any will last very long. Id be in support if they were green and used common parts that I might find at a wrecker but the trend seems to be to make every part different every year and expensive and that quick retooling policy prevents aftermarket suppliers from selling you parts at reasonable prices. I'm not sure how bad Tesla is with it but I suspect it's the case with most newer cars, even most of the wreckers here closed because the parts are so different that no one fixes much , they are mostly disposable cars now. on a positive note Teslas do have a feature that your door handles fold in when you drive to increase maintenance costs and I bet that saves a lot of battery life, new batteries for all these new electric cars are going to be expensive and limit their lifespan.

        an advantage that your car has is that it can be fixed, parts are pretty available and not crazy. a lot of the parts fit a lot of different models so you can get them still. I just bought a timing belt for my 240 on rock auto for about 12 bucks and a new head gasket kit was under 100 Canadian, I think about 80 for the kit, which is decent.

        3 k seems a bit low but 3 K there is 4 K here it's about 75 cent exchange rate.

        id try a bit higher , see hat happens, lots of people like standard volvos and they became a bit rare on the used market. back in the 80's there were lots more than the later years. those transmissions are really durable not like new and cheaply made cars. It sounds like you have done enough maintenance that the next person is not buying a bag of hammers, but a nice project.

        we may be into an era where parts for cars made at this time are sitting in warehouses and the owners of those parts stocks are worried that they cars will disappear before they can unload the parts they own. they made so many and over such a span of time, that the parts are not a huge issue. some bits might take some looking but for the most part you can get all you need.

        some rust, yea they do that.











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          240 Wagon story and question - What is this worth now? 200 1990

          Thanks for sharing an opinion on this question Amazonphil.
          I think I will try you suggestion as a starting point. Or maybe my son will talk me into to selling it to him on the cheap.







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