A salvage title means that the vehicle was declared as totaled for some reason. It does not mean that the frame was bent or anything more than an insurance company decided to pay the value of the car instead of paying to repair the car.
Cars are salvaged by insurance company for a lot of reasons, but it's not necessarily because the car is unsafe or has frame/structural damage.
Since cars are totaled when repair costs exceed 50-75% of the car's value (depending on what state you're in), an older car can be totaled for simply cosmetic reasons since they're worth less and easily totaled - even $2k in cosmetic body work will total an otherwise mechanically sound older car like a '95 Volvo or Honda . Now a newer car that's been totaled is a problem since it could have sustained over $15k in damages and that's major. It all boils down to why it was totaled/salvaged. Without a pre-purchase inspection by a pro I would not buy a salvaged car. If the car checks out don't pay more than 60% of it's clean-titled value.
im not sure in california, but in Texas you can not. Any car that has a salvage title is for a reason most cases the frame is bent now you can still operate vehicle, but you may notice that your runing through tires more frequently.
No, the warranty is void on a salvage vehicle.
Not that easy to find a salvage car since it is rare for salvage cars to still be out on the market these days, but you could always ask your acquaintances for contacts who have salvage cars to sell.
Still Frame was created in 2001.
Nothing if the baby is still living then what ever cracked the egg didn't kill the baby it just cracked the egg
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If you mean Randy Savage no he is still alive
Still Frame - 1988 was released on: USA: 1988
If it's still salvage about 20% of the value of a comparable clean titled car. If it's reconstructed/roadworthy about 60%
A frame in animation is a still image that belongs in a sequence of still images. Watch a cartoon and then pause it. You'll basically will see a frame of that cartoon.
no! because it will get cracked.
The best thing to do when buying a used car is to run a Carfax or, if the car is titled to the state you live in call the DMV with the VIN or title number. There are ways to hide a salvage title from state to state so do the legwork! If you still like the car and are pretty sure it has a salvage title it may still be an ok car, especially if it's older since it doesn't take much more than cosmetic damage to total an older car. Just have a good pre-purchase inspection and don't pay more than 60% of the value of a comparable car with a clean title.