Normally selling a used car comes with the unpleasant reality of depreciation. But that doesn’t apply to supercars, as indicated by the sale offer of an uber-rare Aston Martin Vulcan hypercar.
When the British car company created its 800-horsepower, track-only Vulcan, it produced only 24 models, hand-selected who could own the car, and slapped a $2.3 million price tag on the speed demon.
Not that you can get one for that price today, since the first U.S. registered Vulcan received a hefty price increase. In fact the seller, Cleveland Motorsports, is asking for almost 50 percent more than the Aston Martin MSRP and wants $3.4 million.
The car in question comes in Fiamma Red and somehow makes other track-only cars like the Mclaren P1 GTR and Ferrari LaFerrari FXX K look a little less alluring.
The fact remains that it’s a second-hand vehicle. But does that really matter when it comes to something as rare as the Vulcan?