He told me that if I buy it and don't like it when I see it in person, I'm not obligated to complete the transaction.
This sounded better than, "If you buy it and back out, I'll sue you..."
He seems somewhat flexible. Which usually is better than a hardliner approach.
I wonder how much it will sell for.
I'm not fond of the interior with the couch and foward side door, but I guess you work with what you have.
What questions would you ask a builder of such an item to be confident it doesn't catch on fire or wires short out, or just one problem after another?
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"I have marveled often at the thin line that divides success from failure and the sudden turn that leads from apparently certain disaster to comparative safety." Ernest Shackleton, Antarctic Explorer, Sea and Land, 1874-1922.
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