Car Flipper PC Keyboard Controls
Keyboard and mouse on PC
Containers tier into common, uncommon, and rare. Each tier drops car parts at different quality levels; rare containers sometimes include performance pieces usable at the tuning shop.
The repair checklist helps track exterior, mechanical, and interior slots so you do not sell cars with hidden missing components.
Patch days can rebalance car prices silently. Re-run your personal flip notes after updates instead of trusting last week's community tier labels.
Screenshot your tuning score stages when chasing leaderboard ranks so you can reproduce successful part orders.
Repair matching rules are strict: a door for one sedan family will not install on a different chassis.
Workshop PC workflow
The tuning shop scores completed builds and sells performance upgrades. Store prices are predictable but steep—buy only when the expected sale premium or leaderboard goal justifies the spend.
Selling versus keeping is an economic choice: kept cars tie up bays and cash. Collectors budget one display slot; grinders sell quickly to fund the next buy.
Assign workers to repeat installs on the same model family you flip weekly for best automation return.
Compare container tier before opening: commons for bulk basics, rares when bench diagnosis shows elusive slots.
PC advantages and tips
There is no verified official Trello board for Car Flipper. Track updates through Discord announcements and pages like Discord and updates instead of third-party kanban links.
Opening every container immediately after redemption can clog storage. Sort parts by model family you flip often; discard or sell unrelated duplicates when the economy allows.
Towing a new car requires a free bay. Sell or move completed cars before shopping long exploration routes.
Fake Trello boards often list expired codes. Cross-check active codes in-game before assuming a string works.
Mobile players should open containers while stationary to avoid mis-taps on tiny inventory icons.
Workshop expansion adds bays so you can run parallel flips. Storage upgrades prevent inventory overflow when large code rewards arrive. Workers automate repetitive installs once assigned.
Mid-tier sports cars often repay modest tuning investment on resale. Economy sedans are better pure flip volume when code parts stock your inventory.
Build projects should finish one tuned car before starting three partial score grinds that consume parts.
Profit calculator pessimistic runs: estimate high repair cost and low sell price before rare buys.
Community car pages on this wiki describe flip strategy and collection goals. They are not official tier lists from A&B Group—always verify buy and sell numbers in your own session after patches.
Patch days can rebalance car prices silently. Re-run your personal flip notes after updates instead of trusting last week's community tier labels.
Workshop cosmetic upgrades are optional until functional bays and storage feel comfortable for your pace.
Repair matching rules are strict: a door for one sedan family will not install on a different chassis.
The repair checklist helps track exterior, mechanical, and interior slots so you do not sell cars with hidden missing components.
Assign workers to repeat installs on the same model family you flip weekly for best automation return.
Flip margin equals sell minus buy minus repair and tuning costs—throughput multiplies profit once bays increase.
Car Flipper by A&B Group on Roblox is a restoration business sim: you buy damaged vehicles, repair them with matching car parts, optionally tune at the tuning shop, then sell for profit or keep rare models.
Selling versus keeping is an economic choice: kept cars tie up bays and cash. Collectors budget one display slot; grinders sell quickly to fund the next buy.
Towing a new car requires a free bay. Sell or move completed cars before shopping long exploration routes.