Home » We’re Rescuing A 375,000 Mile New York City Taxi That We Bought For $800 On Copart. Pray For Us

We’re Rescuing A 375,000 Mile New York City Taxi That We Bought For $800 On Copart. Pray For Us

Cab Copart Top1
ADVERTISEMENT

Few cars live a life as hard as a New York City taxi cab. They’re in operation constantly, they stop and go, they deal with all sorts of weather and infrastructure conditions, they have to handle thousands of passengers who like to spill things both natural and unnatural — taxi cabs are the mules of the car world, and buying a used one with 375,000 miles on it would be a terrible idea. But we just did, and it was against the advice of our nice and understanding new partners at Copart, who showed us scores of much, much nicer — honestly, downright gorgeous — alternatives. But we chose the cab; here’s why.

I should clarify right away that the whole point of this was for us to demonstrate that there are amazing project cars on Copart (We even asked you, dear readers, to help us find some running projects and you came up with a bunch of great options). We wanted to show that Copart is a single-source gearhead destination where enthusiasts know they can get cars in all kinds of conditions, including great runners like this sweet Nash 600 Airflyte or this Magnum PI-worthy Ferrari 308 that we definitely should have purchased instead.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom
Nissan Nv 200 Taxi Copart 7
Photo: Copart

Did we do any of that? Nope. David found this cab and once we saw it none of us at The Autopian could let it go. The curiosity was too strong. Plus, it’s a car I’ve never seen for sale before. A custom NYC NV200 taxi is an extremely rare vehicle and it’ll be super cool when we get done building/fixing it.

To the eternal credit of Copart, when we told them we purchased an NV200 Taxi instead of, say, this sweet Buick Gran Sport, they just laughed and said they’d love to see what we come up with.

It Was $800! How Could We Not Do It?

Nissan Nv 200 Taxi Copart 5
Photo: Copart

We ended up bidding on a lot of different and interesting vehicles before ending up with the NV200. This includes the aforementioned Nash, the Mercedes El Camino thing, and the World War II Jeep.

ADVERTISEMENT

There are always great deals to be had at Copart, which is why there were usually at least a few people also bidding against us for the various cars and trucks we were looking at. Every car we ended up bidding on sold for a price I considered to be a really good deal, but this is the Internet and we wanted an insane deal.

Nissan Nv 200 Taxi Copart 2
Photo: Copart

It’s here that I should also probably warn you that searching Copart and bidding on cars is so fun that, like Pringles, once you pop you can’t stop. I’m told there’s a variety of illegal drugs that are similar. The issue we quickly ran into was not a lack of cars, but way too many potential options.

Amongst a bunch of potentially interesting cars that David found one night was the Nissan NV200 Taxi. He posted the link to Slack around midnight in California and I looked at the link a little after 4:00 AM. Perhaps it was the bright yellow paint or maybe the late-night feelings, but we all understood quite quickly that this cab must be the next Autopian vehicle.

How To Buy A Car On Copart

Nissan Nv 200 Taxi Copart 4
Photo: Copart

Understanding Eligibility

One of the challenges of buying unique vehicles like the NV200 is that every state has its own laws about who can bid and buy different cars at auction. Copart has a relatively low-cost Membership, which brings a bunch of perks, and one big one is that it makes determining what you can/cannot buy extremely easy.

For instance, here’s what the page for that Ferrari 308 looks like for us when logged into the site:

ADVERTISEMENT
Ferrari Copart Screenshot
Screenshot: Copart

As you can see, there’s a bright green spotlight that says I’m eligible to bid.

Going Through A Broker Was Easy

For boring business reasons, I needed to buy a Nissan NV200 with front-end damage from New York as the representative of a California LLC. This could have been an enormous PITA because some states require a dealer license to buy a car, but Copart offers a lot of intermediary brokers (I used AutoBidMaster, but there are many others) who could make the transaction for us for a fee without needing a special license.

Understanding The Condition Of The Car

I was able to use the site’s built-in condition report option to get all the info on the van, which had a surprisingly high-value estimate of $11,810. I also learned that there was a front-end and side-impact, though the airbags didn’t go off. There was also an issue with the odometer, which didn’t matter for our purposes but was still good to understand.

The Bidding Is Intense But Fun

When the day came for the taxi to sell I got into the live auction on the site, which comes with super intense music and a robotic computer voice that lets you know if you’re the high bidder or not. This definitely adds to the drama and fun of it all.

Bentley Sale
Screenshot: Copart

As you can see, I might have bid on this sweet Bentley that was also there. I couldn’t help it! There’s a version of this post where, instead of a 375,000-mile Nissan NV200 Taxi we bought a rad Bentley (I also sort of want this one). Again, there are almost too many potential futures!

ADVERTISEMENT

Pulling The Trigger On The Cab

I was a bit nervous given that we knew just enough about this NV200 to get in trouble, but I bid anyway. My max bid was $575 and that, to me, seemed like a crazy steal. Perhaps because of the odometer issue, there wasn’t a lot of competition for the cab and we won it.

Or so we thought. A nice feature of Copart is that, if you don’t hit a reserve, the seller has the option to accept your bid or not accept it. In this case, the seller declined.

A couple of days later I got an alert that the NV200 Taxi was going back up for auction and, using the “Make An Offer” option, we floated them an offer of $800. This was accepted and just like that we, The Autopian, own an NV200 Taxi.

Because we used a third-party broker and because we had to pay for tilting/documents and storage for the van until we could get it picked up, the total cost of the vehicle was $1,790. If we were able to skip the broker we’d have saved about $300.

Copart also offers the ability to book a shipper through them or book one yourself. We booked one directly and Copart made it easy to get the info to the company picking up the van.

ADVERTISEMENT

We’re Going To Try To Rescue The Cab And Put It To Work

Nissan Nv 200 Taxi Copart 3
Photo: Copart

Right away you should know: The state of disrepair this cab is in will shock you. 375,000 of the hardest miles ever put on a car punished this Nissan to within an inch of its life, and fixing it is going to be a herculean challenge. Honestly, we don’t know if we can ever pull it off.

Jason has a vision for the cab that involves keeping a lot of its cab-ness (he wants to use it as an Uber, he wants to do a cross-country taxi ride with the meter running, he wants to take it back to New York), while also modifying it in a few fun ways that feel very Autopian. This meant that the cab needed to stay on the East Coast for now.

To have a fully operation cab we need to have a running cab and, from the condition report, we just know that it has a complete motor and transmission that should work. The cab’s been sitting for a few weeks, which means that some tinkering will likely need to be done to get it running. Rather than ship the cab all the way to David’s doorstep, it was much closer and more interesting to ship it to our own Stephen Walter Gossin in North Carolina.

The ball is in his court next and the goal there is to see if we can get it running well enough to get it to a Nissan dealer, who will inspect it and tell us everything that happens to a cab after 375,000 miles of abuse by New Yorkers.

What could possibly go wrong? Initial reports from Steph Walter Gossin say: Lots. Pray for us.

ADVERTISEMENT

Relateds

Share on facebook
Facebook
Share on whatsapp
WhatsApp
Share on twitter
Twitter
Share on linkedin
LinkedIn
Share on reddit
Reddit
Subscribe
Notify of
132 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Jatco Xtronic CVT
Jatco Xtronic CVT
1 month ago

YES! Finally, someone takes my advice. This is the best taxi ever to taxi, thanks to the Jatco Xtronic CVT it uses. Great efficiency, no need to ever service the thing (great for taxi use), and best of all, no annoying shifting for the passengers or driver to deal with. Now, all that continuously variable goodness is yours, and the readers by proxy, to enjoy.
I am very proud of you all for making such a worthy choice for the new Autopian car.

Mechjaz
Mechjaz
1 month ago

One of these days, I’m going to figure out what your angle is. If only there was some kind of sign or name right above everything you posted, some kind of clue to the code.

Alas.

M0L0TOV
M0L0TOV
1 month ago
Reply to  Mechjaz

I feel like maybe the Ford Tempo fan moved on to CVT’s.

Andy Individual
Andy Individual
1 month ago

I agree, this thing should have a few thousand yards left in it.

Paul B
Paul B
1 month ago

umm, what led to the biohazard sticker on the windshield?

You might want to budget for some disposable gloves.

Ranwhenparked
Ranwhenparked
1 month ago
Reply to  Paul B

Just doing 375,000 miles as a NYC taxi might be enough to warrant that

For everyone’s peace of mind, do not turn on a black light anywhere in that interior, like I told my dermatologist, what you don’t know, can’t hurt you

NC Miata NA
NC Miata NA
1 month ago
Reply to  Ranwhenparked

I don’t know, the Autopian crew looks like they are the type who are always up for a rousing game of “Name that Bodily Fluid Stain”.

Manwich Sandwich
Manwich Sandwich
1 month ago

I recall one quirk of the Nissan NV200 when they came to North America is they have a weird tire size and load rating combo that resulted in tire replacement costs being waaaay higher than they should be.

And even today, your tire options for these is limited. On tirerack.com, it lists only 3 options… 2 winter tire options and 1 all season option.

The only difference is that now the cost of the tires has come down.

Collegiate Autodidact
Collegiate Autodidact
1 month ago

Yeah, and there was something about the way the NV200 suspension was engineered that caused the tires on the front wheels to wear out disconcertingly quickly which added even more to tire replacement costs. Maybe David Tracy or Huibert Mees could delve into that? There are dozens, dozens of us, who would indeed read such posts. (Actually, more like at least scores, scores of us, given how widely used NV200s still are here in North America for delivery and other commercial uses despite being phased out by Nissan for that market in 2021.)

TOSSABL
TOSSABL
1 month ago

I second a Huibert Mees article on the NV200’s tire longevity.

But, I would read one of his articles describing the optimal camber for tricycle rear wheels, so I may be biased.

Mechjaz
Mechjaz
1 month ago
Reply to  TOSSABL

Radial or ply?

Manwich Sandwich
Manwich Sandwich
1 month ago
Reply to  Mechjaz

My money is on ‘ply’

Harvey Park Bench
Harvey Park Bench
1 month ago

Doesn’t DT have a giant stash of tires for his i3 (they were a good deal, you know)? Wouldn’t those work?

Manwich Sandwich
Manwich Sandwich
1 month ago

I’m pretty sure BMW arranged it so that those i3 tires would spontaneously explode if they were put on the wrong vehicle.

On a more serious note, the Nissan NV200 has normal-looking 185/60R15 size. But what gets you is the weight rating which is supposed to be at least a ’92’.

By comparison, the OEM BMW i3 has a stupid 155/70R19 size which can be used all around. But originally those were just for the fronts and the back had a stupid 175/60R19 size.

And the load rating for this is in the 84-86 range.

And the tires DT bought were in the slightly-less-stupid size of 195 55R20, but mainly had the benefit of having tires that were vastly cheaper (when available)
https://www.theautopian.com/how-my-new-bmw-i3s-fixes-the-i3s-horrible-achilles-heel-saving-me-thousands-on-tires/

So those 19/20″ tires designed for the i3’s stupid oversized wheel well won’t work for the NV200’s undersized wheel well.

Last edited 1 month ago by Manwich Sandwich
Harvey Park Bench
Harvey Park Bench
1 month ago

Thanks for the in-depth explanation I definitely didn’t deserve!

Dan Roth
Dan Roth
1 month ago

I got one of these f*cking things TWICE as a media car. My co-workers thought it was hilarious both times. I was not amused. Yes, they asked me to drop them off to lunch.

FuzzyPlushroom
FuzzyPlushroom
1 month ago
Reply to  Dan Roth

Once sounds like a palate-cleansing saltine cracker between dishes. Twice, though, I wouldn’t rule out a prank.

Clear_prop
Clear_prop
1 month ago

Just for the clicks, you should have a CSI team go through it.

Followed by a crime scene clean up team of course.

Cleverusername
Cleverusername
1 month ago
Reply to  Clear_prop

As a NY-er, I enthusiastically second this motion.

No Kids, Just Bikes
No Kids, Just Bikes
1 month ago

I’m real interested in the breakdown in the price increase. Purchase price: $800 but out the door for $1790 is wild. What’s a set fee, what is a percentage, and what is storage out of all that?

MikeF
MikeF
1 month ago

Yeah, the fees are ridiculous. They are also super vague about the bidding process before you pay your membership (I like how the article makes this sound like a good thing…) and realize it’s way more hassle than it’s worth.

My friend’s $1850 motorcycle became $2695 by the time he picked it up. Environmental Fee (15), Virtual Bid Fee ($95), Gate Fee ($95), Title Pickup Fee ($20), Storage ($5+10+15), Buyer Fee ($620)

Chris D
Chris D
1 month ago
Reply to  MikeF

That kind of BS will keep a lot of people from ever using Copart, or from ever using it a second time.

No Kids, Just Bikes
No Kids, Just Bikes
1 month ago
Reply to  MikeF

Sounds a bit like flying Frontier. I understand a fee for making something a bit more convenient. But it sounds like they’re just soaking you on these. Title Pickup? What, is it cheaper if they mail it to me? Virtual Bid? Is there another way to do it? What crap.

Cleverusername
Cleverusername
1 month ago

This is the kind of content that has kept me coming back here and spending less time at the increasingly political and decreasingly actual car oriented Jello-picnic place…

Cryptoenologist
Cryptoenologist
1 month ago
Reply to  Cleverusername

I stopped engaging with the old lighting site when it started:
A) crashing and reloading multiple times on pages due to the insane number of ads
B) Kinja stopped working for me and I couldn’t comment and participate.

That was a while before this outfit got started, so once they got up and running I was super stoked. Still miss Bradley and Rob a bit though!

Collegiate Autodidact
Collegiate Autodidact
1 month ago

Ha, yeah, that website has become virtually unreadable, especially on mobile devices, but speaking of Bradley check out what he had to say about Copart’s founder: https://jalopnik.com/billionaire-copart-founder-willis-johnson-is-privately-1847198880

lastwraith
lastwraith
1 month ago

Their mobile site is an absolute joke. Ads galore and even with an ad-blocker, the “infinite scroll” loading of articles will inhibit your ability to click on the button for comments at the bottom.
You have to click the comment shortcut at the top and then click the button at the bottom.

Bizness Comma Nunya
Bizness Comma Nunya
1 month ago

I bought a project van on CoPart once……ONCE……

Cleverusername
Cleverusername
1 month ago

You shouldn’t hang me on a hook, Johnny. My mother hung me on a hook once… Once…

Bizness Comma Nunya
Bizness Comma Nunya
1 month ago
Reply to  Cleverusername

Classic

Shop-Teacher
Shop-Teacher
1 month ago

I’m not gonna lie. The disappointment I’m feeling that this is your chosen project is palpable. I’ll give y’all the chance to pleasantly surprise me, but at this moment I am decidedly uninterested.

Ted Fort
Ted Fort
1 month ago
Reply to  Shop-Teacher

Agreed, kind of. If this was a MetroKing or something, I’d understand. Even a real NYC Crown Vic is kind of iconic. But this feels… disposable? Doing a condition report might be interesting, but that’s a single post. That said, you can buy a high-top/roof bed for these, so a cab themed camper build could be neat? We’ll see!

Shop-Teacher
Shop-Teacher
1 month ago
Reply to  Ted Fort

Oh, I’d be completely game for a MetroKing or a proper NYC Crown Vic.

Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
1 month ago

So cheap prices can sometimes get you into hack?

Last edited 1 month ago by Canopysaurus
Utherjorge, as this site circles the bowl
Utherjorge, as this site circles the bowl
1 month ago
Reply to  Canopysaurus

I’ll allow it

B3n
B3n
1 month ago

I’m really curious if this poor thing still has the original CVT and if it still works.

Vic Vinegar
Vic Vinegar
1 month ago
Reply to  B3n

Where is our resident JATCO CVT enthusiast?

lastwraith
lastwraith
1 month ago
Reply to  Vic Vinegar

Isn’t he just going to say that Jatco CVTs are indestructible and surely this one has made it the entire time without even needing maintenance service?

TOSSABL
TOSSABL
1 month ago
Reply to  lastwraith

Of course it did! After all, it was sealed from the factory with a Lifetime Fill(TM)

That Guy with the Sunbird
That Guy with the Sunbird
1 month ago

As said on Bluesky, this is the quality content I follow this site for.

Sam Gross
Sam Gross
1 month ago

Please tell me it has the glass roof.

VNY Pilot
VNY Pilot
1 month ago
Reply to  Matt Hardigree

No

Cars? I've owned a few
Cars? I've owned a few
30 days ago
Reply to  Matt Hardigree

This might not be one of your better considered partnerships.

Nick B.
Nick B.
1 month ago

My brain wants to make a joke about a taxi and OnlyFanbelts, but it’s too tired to come up with anything.

Mike Harrell
Mike Harrell
1 month ago

The cab’s been sitting for a few weeks, which means that some tinkering will likely need to be done to get it running.

You’ve got just under three weeks to get it to Scranton:

https://24hoursoflemons.com/rally-details/?id=424

Cryptoenologist
Cryptoenologist
1 month ago
Reply to  Mike Harrell

This was way too expensive. Limit is still $500.

The reality is that $500 used to get you WAY more car than it gets you today, so they should really adjust for inflation. When Lemons started in 2006 the average new car price was ~$24k. It’s now ~$48k. So that $500 should be more like $1000 today.

In reality I think they have become much more lax on the price limit, they used to crush cars that were egregious, I think they just have penalty laps now.

Mike Harrell
Mike Harrell
1 month ago

You’re thinking of the racing series. There’s never been a dollar limit for the rallies or the concours. Showing up at either of those with something expensive can be either hilarious or sad, depending on the circumstances, but is perfectly fine either way.

As for the racing series, the last time the teams voted to crush something was in 2011 and even then the “winner” was a photocopier that one team had brought as part of their Office Space theme, not one of the cars. I managed to snag an internal mirror that survived the assault but I still haven’t figured out what to do with it.

TOSSABL
TOSSABL
1 month ago
Reply to  Mike Harrell

I don’t recall you having any vehicle in which it would work affixed to the inner side of the glovebox door ala hookers & blow so perhaps as a vanity mirror on a sun visor?

Mike Harrell
Mike Harrell
1 month ago
Reply to  TOSSABL

As it was part of the copier mechanism its dimensions are 1.25″ by 11.125″ so it would make a rather awkward vanity mirror. I’m not sure whether I’m more vain or less vain than that but it seems like the wrong size either way.

EXL500
EXL500
1 month ago
Reply to  Mike Harrell

Born and raised in Scranton, went to college in Carlisle. Erie? Did very well to stay far away (in fairness Presque Isle is beautiful.)

Hugh Crawford
Hugh Crawford
1 month ago
Reply to  EXL500

My family quite enjoyed that train museum in Scranton.

EXL500
EXL500
1 month ago
Reply to  Hugh Crawford

It is pretty impressive. It was the countryside out of the city that I loved best. More recently the hotel that used to be the Lackawanna station.

Hugh Crawford
Hugh Crawford
1 month ago
Reply to  EXL500

The Lackawanna terminal on the Hudson is a fun ferry destination from Manhattan. All ferry destinations are fun. One of my kids saw the big Lackawanna sign and said “Does that mean the people in New Jersey are not motivated?”

EXL500
EXL500
1 month ago
Reply to  Hugh Crawford

I know that terminal well. I lived in Manhattan for 35 years, 33 of them in Chelsea.

Sklooner
Sklooner
1 month ago

Just call in a PDR guy and your good to go, and a hazmat team

Icouldntfindaclevername
Icouldntfindaclevername
1 month ago

Too bad Copart doesn’t list what something sold for like BaT does.
Good luck on getting it running SWG

Baja_Engineer
Baja_Engineer
1 month ago

there are several ways to do so. If you haev a Copart account and lost a bid to someone else, you’ll see what it sold for on your watchlist.

Also some sites like EpicVin will pull off the last price it sold for. Not exactly accurate, though as it might have changed hands after the auction

Data
Data
1 month ago

They’re not sure if they can pull it off and yet Project Cactus is a very high bar to surpass. Especially when David was like well the car is kinda crap so we’ll just use the parts car.

Fuzzyweis
Fuzzyweis
1 month ago

Wondering if this could be a yearly thing where the end you sell it and see if you made anything, and then go and buy another one, like a bargain basement Wheeler Dealers.

Freddy Bartholomew
Freddy Bartholomew
1 month ago
Reply to  Fuzzyweis

The Wheeler Dealers never added the cost of their own labor. It seemed like false accounting. It was fun though with the original crew.

Fuzzyweis
Fuzzyweis
1 month ago

Yeah especially when Ed had a full shop with all the tools, but I really enjoy the earlier seasons.

EXL500
EXL500
1 month ago
Reply to  Fuzzyweis

I like it with Ant Anstead because I think he’s dreamy.

Rippstik
Rippstik
1 month ago

Interested if anyone on staff will actually get a taxi license or document the process of how to get licensed to drive a cab.

ImissmyoldScout
ImissmyoldScout
1 month ago

New revenue stream, “Cash Cab, Autopian style” where you have to pay for a part needed for repairs to get a ride in the cab.

JDE
JDE
1 month ago

I gotta wonder how many X-Tronic CVT’s that thing has chewed up at this point.

JDE
JDE
1 month ago
Reply to  JDE

Wonder if a Juke Manual trans would work in that bread box.

Eggsalad
Eggsalad
1 month ago
Reply to  JDE

For all the flak that the Nissan/Jatco CVT gets, I have to believe they did okay in taxi service. NYC cab companies are notoriously cheap, and if they were replacing CVT every year or so, they would have found different cars to buy as cabs.

As for a manual swap, I believe the NV200 was derived from a contemporary Nissan Versa, so a manual swap might not be all the difficult.

Art of the Bodge
Art of the Bodge
1 month ago
Reply to  Eggsalad

The NV200 was sold with a Manual.

Eggsalad
Eggsalad
1 month ago

Wikipedia tells me it was sold in certain markets with a manual, but I can’t find any evidence that it was sold in the US with anything other than a CVT.

Art of the Bodge
Art of the Bodge
1 month ago
Reply to  Eggsalad

Probably not, but it means that the parts are available.

TOSSABL
TOSSABL
1 month ago
Reply to  Eggsalad

<shudder>
-visions of a hopelessly down-and-out guy whose entire career was devoted to keeping those CVTs rolling. Like Nicolas Cage’s Leaving Las Vegas protagonist.

Wait: keeping absolute junk functioning is pretty metal: I’d buy him lunch just to hear the stories.

Cars? I've owned a few
Cars? I've owned a few
30 days ago
Reply to  Eggsalad

The Toyota/Ford Explorer Hybrid had a pretty decent reliability record back in its day.

Creative Username
Creative Username
1 month ago
Reply to  JDE

I wonder if NYC Yellow Cab would provide Autopian with the service records. That could be an interesting read.

PlugInPA
PlugInPA
1 month ago

Does this mean we’ll see SWG articles more than three times a year?

Stephen Walter Gossin
Stephen Walter Gossin
1 month ago
Reply to  PlugInPA

Things that ain’t easy:

-Pimpin’
-Being green
-Finding time to write

It’s a new year over here and you can expect much more content from this guy in ’25 – cheers, my dude!

Last edited 1 month ago by Stephen Walter Gossin
Data
Data
1 month ago

On the Simpson’s Grandpa Simpson wanted more Matlock (I guess CBS finally answered in an unexpected way). So to paraphrase The Simpson’s, I want more SWG JAG articles. 🙂

Harvey Park Bench
Harvey Park Bench
1 month ago

Yasssss

TOSSABL
TOSSABL
1 month ago

Bring it!!

Ash78
Ash78
1 month ago

I would have expected a splatter-painted Crown Vic from a site called CopArt, but what do I know?

This is fantastic and I can’t wait to see how it goes!

I’d like to see a whole Autopian comedy series titled “NYC’s whitest cab driver!” and every passenger is creeped out by the smell of Glade Plug-ins and the stereo is playing Dave Matthews just a little too loudly. Not the studio albums, either, I mean a 15-minute version of Two Step and the passengers have to yell to be heard. And the front seat is covered with crumbs from a few Hot Pockets.

Church
Church
1 month ago

searches for reference to Gambler 500, finds nothing

Wait, what? Why the heck not?!

Mercedes Streeter
Mercedes Streeter
1 month ago
Reply to  Church

I pitched running a Gambler 500 as a use for the van. It was quickly voted down given what happened to Ski-Klasse. I think the rest of the team wants to have some fun with it before tossing me the keys. That’s fair given my history… 🙂

Space
Space
1 month ago

Did I miss the farewell story to Ski-Klasse? Last I heard there was some fluid leaking that was a minor inconvenience. Is it gone?

Jesus Helicoptering Christ
Jesus Helicoptering Christ
1 month ago

Is there a follow button?

I need a follow button for anything related to this cab.

1 2 3
132
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x