We kept running into the same problem. Even when the donor vehicle we needed might have been sitting in a wrecker nearby, it was still hard to find online. And when we did make the trip, too often the part was already gone, broken, or the wrong color.
That whole experience felt broken. It was frustrating, time-consuming, and completely unnecessary in the internet age.
PullScout is meant to make self-service salvage yards easier to search, easier to understand, and a lot less of a gamble. We want people to know what is in the yard, how fresh the listing is, and whether a trip is actually worth making before they load tools into the truck and burn half a day.
The best yard intel usually comes from the people already walking the rows. That is why PullScout is not just a static directory. It is built around fresh photos, condition notes, check-ins, notable finds, and direct requests that help turn scattered yard inventory into something much more useful.
PullScout is for part hunters, DIY owners, restorers, flippers, and the regulars who already know the yard rhythm. It is also for partner yards that want better visibility and a better digital experience for serious customers.
For part hunters, PullScout should mean better odds and fewer days lost chasing bad leads.
Fresh photos, reports, and requests should make listings more trustworthy than a stale inventory page alone.
Useful donor cars, unusual trims, and notable finds should be easier to spot before they disappear.
Partner yards should get cleaner pages and a more useful connection to people who are ready to make the trip.
The goal is simple: build the most useful place on the internet for people trying to answer one question before they leave home: is this yard worth the trip?