
CM.com: Tell us about the Corvettes that were at the Barrett-Jackson auction.
MV: Corvettes had a very nice, well-rounded showing of years from 1954 all the way up to 1998 representing all the major body style changes.
CM.COM: Give us some the best examples and some of the disappointments and surprises that you saw there.
CMV: I didn't see any disappointments except for having my own inventory back in Anaheim priced way under market! There was a very well represented white 1954 roadster that we used on a Speedvision narrative. That car, with no Bloomington or NCRS credentials, sold for a whopping $48,000. I think that's a high mark for a nice '54 that wasnt a Bloomington example. There was also a very nice red 1960 Roadster that sold for about the same amount, again with no certification. The high mark for a production Corvette at Scottsdale was the 1968 L-88 coupe, a Bloomington example that I believe was also a