04-14-2026, 07:58 PM
(This post was last modified: 04-14-2026, 08:17 PM by Iron Tarkus.)
(04-14-2026, 06:28 PM)Eric.B Wrote: You didn't give me a specific design to look at. Also a save pre-ww2 would be helpful too.So it's just as simple as more competition? I guess rating matters a lot more in 2nd gear. It seemed almost impossible that the competition has such highly-rated cars with low prices. I just don't know how they can have such high rating cars for so low. It's almost like they are cheating. Also I can't finance yet, It's not available yet. The 30s I know will suck in sales because of the depression.
Looking at your "Falkland" model, in Baltimore there are around 35 other sedans for sale in the area? Your model is in the middle when it comes to sales reported in the buyer rating chart. Even though your buyer rating is quite low.
I'm showing 2674 units sold. 2437 used units sold. And 9 models not shipping anything (though they will still be getting back order sales.) I am not in my office right now, so I can't use my tools to see how many units this is.
So let's say around 2800-3000 units Sedans are being sold in Baltimore each month. Those numbers might be a little bit low for post war US, but they're not too far off.
Looking at your buyer's rating, you take a 25% drop for not having customer financing. That would also hurt the sales of your vehicle. Your overall vehicle rating is also quite low. The top selling cars are in the 80s, your car is in the 60s. The same is true with other ratings as well.
If you have a copy of your 1930s save to show me the difference in sales. That would be helpful. But beyond that. I'd say it's competition. Lots of it.
