![]() ![]() I'd rather work on refurbishing an older car, though. But that seems to me to be the most 'realistic' route. The older cars have a general similarity that I get used to and can pretty much pull them apart and put them back together in about an hour of real time. Occasionally I'll buy a Maluch or a 2/3-star vehicle just for a change of pace. It's not like I do this kind of thing in real life. ![]() Seems kind of silly that you can sell a refurbished, rebuilt Honda Civic for $57K (which I did just today), even if it's loaded with performance parts. I don't like restoring the newer models (like the Honda Civic - not sure what the in-game name is, I replaced the data text files to do real-world vehicles). I wonder if taking it out to the drag strip is a help or not? I've not seen, though, that doing the Dyno room and setting the carb ratio correctly actually adds to the value I've tested this numerous times, getting a car up to 100%, then putting it in the Dyno Room, getting the carb up to 18%, doing a test run, and it's still the same value. I find the game relaxing and have no problem taking the time to strip down a car completely, repair what I can, sell the junk parts that I can't repair, then build it back up again from the ground up. ![]() What Hypertext Eye said is the best route to go. Funny thing, I once had a repair job for a Maluch, and they could have bought an entirely new car with what they ended up paying me! Standard Maluch is worthless for the time spent on it. And don't buy Maluch, unless it has a V6 engine. So when I'm restoring a car, I strip it down, empty swap the engine, repair everything that I can to 100%, buy performance and tuning parts (including wheels/rims, not swapping tires), replace anything I couldn't repair, put everything back together, and repair the body.Īlso when you're buying cars to sell, don't buy anything higher than 2 stars. Best practice is to pull out every part, then do an empty swap, because if you do a normal swap you'll have to replace parts with performance parts instead of just starting with performance parts.Ībout repairing parts: the car value increases all the way up to 100%, and then you get a restoration bonus on top of that. I'm not sure if swapping the engine helps, but I always did it. When I can, I use performance parts and tuning parts instead of standard parts because they seem to improve the value more.That's it. Release date january 8, 2023.Originally posted by Crono09:I've been buying cars at auction and restoring them. All Cheats inside from the first CHEATBOOK January 1998 until today. Covering more than 26.800 Games, this database representsĪll genres and focuses on recent releases. Gamer and want a few extra weapons or lives to survive until the next level, this freeware cheat database can come to the rescue. XBox, Playstation 1 and 2, Playstation 3, Playstation 4, Sega, Nintendo 64, Wii U,ĭVD, Game Boy Advance, iPhone, Game Boy Color, N-Gage, Nintendo DS, PSP, Gamecube, Dreamcast, Xbox 360, Super Nintendo) easily accessible from one central location. Spotlight - New Version CheatBook DataBase 2023Ĭheatbook-Database 2023 is a freeware cheat code tracker that makes hints, Tricks, Tips and cheats (for PC, Walkthroughs, Visit Cheatinfo for more Cheat Codes, FAQs or Tips! Help out other players on the PC by adding a cheat or secret that you know! Submit your codes! Having Codes, cheat, hints, tips, trainer or tricks we dont have yet? ![]() Note: “moneyplease will not work unless you enter “devmode.on“. The codes indicated below to trigger the corresponding effect.Īccess the computer and click on the Bluetooth icon, located near the Hints and Tips for: Car Mechanic Simulator 2015Īccess the computer and click on the Bluetooth icon, located near the top Car Mechanic Simulator 2015 Cheats, Cheat Codes, Hints, TipsĬar Mechanic Simulator 2015 Cheats, Codes, Hints and Walkthroughs for PC Games. ![]()
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