11-02-2018, 04:47 AM
One way to put value on a Newell is looking at other Newells of similar years and features. The part that makes it hard is "no two Newells are alike". This method gives you a ball park of what a coach in the year range you are looking for sells for. Pay particular attention to what coaches sell for, not what they are listed for.
My preferred method to evaluate a coaches value is to look at lots of Newells, get a feel for what is available and evaluate a coach's value by what I am willing to pay. This method took me two years to do the research and then find a coach that was appointed how I wanted it and in the shape I insisted on.
No where can you see more coaches with more varied features than at the factory in Miami, OK.
Good luck in your search................................
My preferred method to evaluate a coaches value is to look at lots of Newells, get a feel for what is available and evaluate a coach's value by what I am willing to pay. This method took me two years to do the research and then find a coach that was appointed how I wanted it and in the shape I insisted on.
No where can you see more coaches with more varied features than at the factory in Miami, OK.
Good luck in your search................................
Steve Bare
1999 Newell 2 slide #531