My classic isn’t a classic for most people yet, but for me, it’s a kind of dream car – the centennial in my signature. Unfortunately, the cart has a series of mistakes. I’m with friends that a new mistake appears at every start. That’s what the cart remembers and pulls me over it today – by not starting it. Something like that happens, but this relationship is soon no longer a friendly one. I’ve had several classics in my life that often move in everyday life. The whole quartet, with family, house and boat, there is simply more, which absorbs time and energy, and I just don’t have the joy of eternal repairing anymore. On top of that, if you define your classics yourself, you don’t invest in rolling value retention, but just falsifies values. I don’t get my money back. What makes the decision “when to give up?” actually harder, because whether the car is in good or bad condition does not make the big bottom So, how do you do that? Are you enjoying driving, watching and enjoying balances with the need for car care, or are you still enjoying screwing? When is it enough? Is there a threshold from when you no longer want to invest money in a car? How do you do that? I’m usually the owner of a car, and it’s easier to shoot off a vehicle…I’m sure it’s idR. of the TÜV for me.