There is a '98 MCI 102EL3 at a local tow yard. There is some fire damage to the engine area and some fiberglass damage to the rear cap where the fireman opened it up with axes to check for fire extension. Its in the hands of the insurance company now and Im waiting for a call back from them to see what they want for it. The fire damage appears to be in the motor compartment upper passenger side and seems to be mostly wiring. There dosent appear to be any damage to the motor itself, none of the paint is blistered and it appears clean. The belts are intact with the exception of the serpentine belt snapped. Im assuming I would need a complete wiring harness to start with and go from there. Its got a DD in it, although Im not sure of what size it is. I went inside the coach and there is no oder of burning nor any indication of the fire inside or anywhere else besides the passenger side rear engine area and where the rear cap was slightly scorched, than customized by the fire dept. I planned on calling MCI in the am to get some prices on the harness. Is there anywhere else I might find one ? Also, any rough ideas what you guys would be comfortable paying for this coach (especially considering you can't hear it run ! ). Ive got two buddy's who are diesel mechanics and would be willing to help me with any repairs, so basiclly Ill be paying for parts...
The value is in the eye of the buyer.
First thing would be to figure out what a smilar coach in good shape is worth.
Next what do you figure the costs are to fix it.
If everything went wrong, how much could it cost to fix even if you paid dealer prices to do the repairs.
I'd probably want to pay less than the the value of the coach less the last figure.
My guess is you don't want it.
a bus that new with that kind of damage was totalled by the insurance company for a reason.
from what you say is wrong with it the insurance comapny should have fixed it if it was fixable.
most of these buses that catch on fire are not rebuilt....mostly due to the ammount of electronics in them, and the trouble to get them running right and reliably.
front end smashed into the back of a semi to the front axle....thats fixable
fire......not with my money
Again with what you say is wrong with it.......I'd say insurance comany is going to want 80k+...it wil part out for more than that
An E series of that year should have a Detroit Series 60 at 400 or 435 HP and most likely a Jake brake. I would expect a B500 tranny as they didn't do manuals and the ZF Astronic was probably not available back then. MCI also used Cat C-13 engines in the E series, but I don't know if they did that far back.
Insurance companies don't total buses unless the cost to repair is a pretty good percentage of the value of the bus. Can the insurance company detail the repairs needed and the estimate cost? You're getting the labor for mostly free so it might still be a good deal.
MCI is selling used E series from that era for $150,000 on up.
Hi JP,
Put asside the fire damage for a moment, 98' was the first year for the EL3 and they have been known to be electrical nightmares because
of the totally redesigned body and electrical systems. The past year, I have been shopping for an "E" and every mechanic I have talked to
advised me to stay away from the 98' and certain 99' serial #'s. Just passing on some good info......
Good Luck
Nick-
Don't know anything about this bus - But I do know that Insurance companies total almost ALL vehicles now due to fraud and liabilty issues - FWIW
Hello.
I'll back up Nick's comments about the 98's.
Unless the coach was in the hands of a premium carrier with top technicians who religiously applied all the updates, you will have issues to deal with...
That being said, most everyone else in the business knows that too, so that coach has two strikes against it's "value" ...in the hands of a caring, and electrically gifted busnut, a great opportunity?
As far as nimble goes, nothing in 45' turns like an MCI 102 EL3.
happy coaching!
buswarrior
While not for the faint of heart, I don't think that I would be trying to replace the whole wiring harness. If the damage doesn't extend too far, I might look at trying to replace the individual wires that burned. But I would only be looking at whether I could get to a good part of the harness to splice replacements to.
If the fire was started by overloaded wiring, this may not have much chance of success. And, it would depend on whether I could get the full wiring diagrams.
For what it's worth.
Tom Caffrey
Quote from: buswarrior on September 04, 2007, 09:44:33 PM
Hello.
I'll back up Nick's comments about the 98's.
Unless the coach was in the hands of a premium carrier with top technicians who religiously applied all the updates, you will have issues to deal with...
That being said, most everyone else in the business knows that too, so that coach has two strikes against it's "value" ...in the hands of a caring, and electrically gifted busnut, a great opportunity?
As far as nimble goes, nothing in 45' turns like an MCI 102 EL3.
happy coaching!
buswarrior
My S217 HDH does! And it's Setra to boot!
Nick and BW are 100% on the '98-'99 models as far as problem children go! Depends on how much time, $, & faith you wanna pour into something that is known for electrical & brake fires (happend once - chances are high it could happen again which is why ins co's ditch them rather than have the chance of a second time liability!)
All the others who posted are pretty much telling it like it is! How much can you afford from beginning to end? It's not impossible, but also not for the faint of heart either! Just depends on how serious you are, and what kinda budget your planning on! Personally I'd say find out what the insurance company valued the damage at and plan on spending that much or more (YES EVEN WITH FREE LABOR!) These almost always end up costing way more than expected to cost! FWIW ;D BK ;D
;D BK ;D
Hello
Is the EL3 multi-plex, can't remember when the switch started... all the J models are.
With some luck, maybe just the wiring to the modules needs replacing?
And from the wiring diagrams for these I've seen at the shop, you'll be buying a big magnifying glass first!
Maybe take them to your friendly UPS Store and have them enlarged, a couple of copies made and mount one set of them on the wall.
happy coaching!
buswarrior
Perhaps you need to talk to Sam Caylor at Caylor's Supply in Rantoul,Kansas.
Sam buys wrecked and burnt late model MCI Coaches so he would have a better idea of what a person would be getting them self into buy buying a burnt MCI coach.
Sam can be reached at 785-878-3405 ???
jlv
Well, after reading and absorbing all that you have written, and with the reasearch Ive done this morning, looks like Im going to pass on the coach..Thanks all again for the quick responses as usual !
Still would be interesting in know what price the ins co puts on it.
Bill
Hell, Sam Caylor will probalby buy this one!
I'd buy a Prevost...... 8)
The price is the decision maker. I'd buy that thing in a skinny minute if it was around here...and if the price was reasonable. The engine and trans is worth a small fortune by themselves. A total should be in the $30 to $40K range? About 25% of blue book.
The wiring can be dealt with. If the buyer has a knowledge base for such work. You won't need 9/10s of the wiring for a bus conversion.
The engine/trans can easily be made to safely function.
How much, and where did you say this coach was located???
Insurance companies will definitely total things these days. And most of the time an individual will not have an opportunity to buy the totaled item. Buyers that pay roughly 25% of book are often contracted to buy the machine. They win some and they lose some.
The problem with increased totals has more to do with semi-crooked shops giving bad-faith estimates for repair. We get lowballed all the time, and it's obvious that repairs cannot be made for what is quoted. But we occasionally lose a job due to such chicanary. Crooked (smart actually) dealers will lowball the estimate, get the unit all apart, and then file a "supplemental" for "hidden damage" which will adjust the cost of repairs way upward...often above retail book. When that happens, the insurance company is trapped. The insurance companies usually pay. Not always. They are getting wise to that approach.
Where did you say the bus was located? ;)
Best, JR
s the prode owner of TWO burnt el3's I'm not the one ask! One burnt in rear, one in front. Using the front burn for a parts bus. Know why the back burn happened. Very complex bus but doable to fix. Mine is fixed of the fire damage and along the road to being converted. Installing 2 slide outs, raised roof, ect. Roof done, rear slide done, starting on front slide. Not for the weak hearted or folks that will not see a long term project completed. Now - where did yoy say the bus was????
JimH