Hi Wayne and club, The car that is referred to here is my car and I felt that I should let the posts run their course before responding and/or commenting. The $160K bid was real.I was the one standing on the stage introducing my car and feeling rather stupid that the car was not there (as it was supposed to have been). The bidding was real.a phone bidder (who I spoke with before and after the sale) was the high bidder and was ready to go higher had someone in the audience advanced the bid (which did not happen). The auction company did the ethical thing and passed the car at that moment rather than 'shill-bidding' it so the phone bidder paid my reserve. Why didn't I sell the car post-block to the phone bidder? I almost did but decided that I would rather have a shot with it live.that bidder will be back. A couple of clarification about the car itself: 1. The car is an original mardis gras red car. 2. I have all of the documents with the car. 3. It is 100% numbers matching and correct. I don't disagree with Wayne's comments about the reasons for rarity.whether it is color, cost, or some other option that was odd, some just did not sell. Why didn't the F Special or the G 'code 281' sell? Why didn't the two-tone C sell? Maybe no one wanted them..maybe the cost of the option (in this case: manual transmission) priced people out of the market. I can't speak to the F Special because I am not familiar with the original pricing, but a G stick car cost roughly $3,000 in today's dollars for the heavy duty stick shift vs the 727 Torqueflight which was standard equipment in those days on the letter car. I can say that it is a widely known fact that many 'clone' G stick cars exist as does at least one F Special that was mentioned right here on the server a few weeks ago.so someone must have liked them enough to pay 'tribute' to them.. I am a purist and prefer manual transmission cars.but if I had to pay a 3K premium today, I would likely opt for the automatic .. I can think of another Chrysler that did not sell.it had a super powerful motor that was impossible to keep running, a transmission that was balky, a clutch that constantly failed, horrible build quality, terrible resale values and in 1971, Chrysler (Plymouth) could only manage orders for a meager 10 or so..it was called the hemi 'Cuda. I spent the day yesterday with someone who is very very familiar with the F specials and also has owned several period and correct Facel Vega's.he indicated the Pont-a-Mousson transmission was a very fussy unit prone to break down under hard driving treatment which is why Chrysler went to the in-house unit for '61. There was a long dialog a few months back in Old Cars Weekly about the '60 4-speed and how one car kept coming into a dealer in the mid west for transmission repairs. The in-house unit was only offered on the 300 G as I understand it. Other Chrysler models received a medium-duty version that looked identical but carried a different stamping on the housing and different model number from the manufacturer. I believe the model used in the G is the T-87 (this is from memory and might invite a lot of chatter if I am wrong..). the A 745 was used on many Chrysler family of passenger cars but not the letter cars. Why would Chrysler offer the A 745 as standard equipment on many cars, but as a $300 (1961 dollars) option on a G? It does not make sense even for a strange Chrysler corporation in 1961. The $300 got you the upgraded T-87 tranny and a heavy duty clutch. The fact is; either car, driven correctly, is a fabulously performing automobile. Finding one of either 'in the weeds' today is enough at this point to generate significant national automotive media attention. Only a hand full of each exists, and one cannot find them no matter how hard they may look! Andy, you gave me an interesting idea when you noted the failed efforts of the G at the '61 Flying Mile..maybe we could get a G stick and an F stick together for track testing and see if one of the mags would do an article (no, this is not a challenge for a race) with the track results...I would be willing to have my G participate. It certainly wouldn't hurt the interest in these cars.. I do respectfully ask that this reply be posted on what ever lists the original post appeared on (Chrysler 300 Club Intl and ForwardLook email lists) because it called into question the actions and integrity of a very well respected and highly regarded auction company. Many thanks. John _____ From: Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Wayne Graefen Sent: Saturday, December 16, 2006 9:56 AM To: Undisclosed-Recipient:; Subject: [Chrysler300] 300G manual trans promo GARBAGE The Feb. '07 issue of Hemmings Classic Car has a plug in its p. 100 Auction News about a 3 speed manual trans 300G hardtop coming up at World Wide Group's Houston auction next May. I have to assume that this article is a press release from www.thewwg.com auction company. I went to their website to send them a comment on the overwhelming falsehood with which they are promoting this car. On their site, the car is presented as "Mopar's Holy Grail!". There are NO email links in WWG's web site and no phone numbers for the company. There are links to forms and nothing else. They give no way of contacting them other than to consign your car or purchase a $50 catalog! In the Hemmings car/auction promo, it says that the car was "virtual bid" to $160,000 while not even present at their Hilton Head, SC, auction in early November and that "you can throw your value guide out the window for this one". This is totally ridiculous. It is shameless. This is auction company shenanigans at their worst and severely damages the hobby when believed and acted upon. A stick 300G is absolutely no big deal. Granted they only built 14 but because no one wanted them. A stick G has a standard 375HP engine. The manual trans was grossly inadequate for the HP and torque of that engine and probable to break. The only thing desirable about the particular car promoted is that it is red, if you like red, and I wonder whether even that documents as original. A lot of cars get painted non-authentic "Resale Red" to attract attention at auctions. I would hope that every reader of this post understands there is a great deal of shill bidding that goes on at auctions. Bids with no real money behind them. Phony bids. Bids placed by people who work for the auction companies in MANY cases. I've watched many auctions in person and I would estimate 40-50 percent of the bids taken by the auctioneer are completely false and are used strictly to pump up the price until it meets reserve so the car can sell or to pump it up to the level the auctioneer feels the car deserves to sell at. Phone bidding is the most obvious questionable practice! Or shill bids are placed by friends of the seller or the seller himself! Most states allow and protect the use of shill bidding under law! Yes, I could look up the company's phone number and try talking to them. They have negated their integrity in print. I'd rather inform you of the problems with this auction company and car so that you can tell your friends and this car can miss its reserve by $100,000 or more with a suitable bid for what the car truly is - just another G among many. Be an informed buyer at any place and any time that you make an offer or bid on a car. To not do so can have dire financial consequences. Wayne Graefen (Owner of a documented 300F Special with 400HP and Pont-a-Mousson full synchro 4speed manual trans that truly is rare (1 of 9) and is truly considered by many to be "the holy grail" among Chrysler 300 Letter Car collectors) Sent to the Chrysler 300 Club Intl and ForwardLook email lists and a few friends [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]