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@Imhotrodcrazy wrote:I bought a 1984 chevy k10 1/2 ton new that I am still driving daily 35 years later. I have 217k miles on it and I still enjoy driving it. I keep the truck in excellent condition and get compliments on it all the time. I can't even imagine paying the prices that people are today. I have a friend who paid $70,000 for a new chevy pu. I wouldn't do it even if I could. I will be driving my truck till the day I die.
Or it dies 😁. Thanks for sharing this. I loved it. See, back then, they knew how to make vehicles that would last.
I gave up owning a car in 1999 and haven’t looked back. I’m lucky I live in a metropolitan area where public transportation is A-1, I can walk to work, and since the invention of Uber, I can get anywhere I want without monthly car payments, auto insurance, car inspections, emission inspection, property taxes, and car maintenance. Yep, I don’t miss it at all.
The thing with 72-month, 84-month loans, is the payments more than likely will out live the cheaply made car. So you’re paying for a car that you can’t afford to fix and can’t drive. Yuck!
@CreditInspired wrote:I gave up owning a car in 1999 and haven’t looked back. I’m lucky I live in a metropolitan area where public transportation is A-1, I can walk to work, and since the invention of Uber, I can get anywhere I want without monthly car payments, auto insurance, car inspections, emission inspection, property taxes, and car maintenance. Yep, I don’t miss it at all.
The thing with 72-month, 84-month loans, is the payments more than likely will out live the cheaply made car. So you’re paying for a car that you can’t afford to fix and can’t drive. Yuck!
I envy you. I hate making those ins. pymts (they're huge), hate keeping up with warranty work and working out all the kinks & flaws, keeping up with which tags I gotta buy this month...pita. Even parking waaaay out in a parking lot so no one bashes their door or shopping cart into mine is annoying. I got one beater that has been 100% dependable (wrangler yj) and holds it's value...all else, meh.
I always buy slightly used. Let the first owner take the hit. Last month, I bought a truck with only 39,000 miles on it for $24,000. It's in flawless condition and still has a warranty on the powertrain to 100,000. I still have the original window sticker from it. That truck was $51,000 new! So the guy who bought it new basically paid $27K (plus gas an oil changes) to drive a truck for 3 years? LOL. I also negotiatied by price and not payment. The dealer did ask "So... what are you lookin' to spend a month?". I literally said "Oh no, I know that game. Let's just talk about the out the door final price and I'll worry about my monthly payment later."
Putting on 30k - 35k a year is a lot of time in a vehicle therefore, economy is out of the question. 50k - 60k is the average cost of and it’s a perpetual vehicle payment, new vehicle every five years. Just part of the cost of doing business.
So many people seriously don't understand what they actually "need" out of a car.
Yes you have to have some patience for repairs every now and again with an older car, but it beats having car payments in just about any scenario.
I have a 2007 VW GTI bought used and less than a year old. 6 year note paid off in early 2013. I've put $7k in maintenance and repairs into it since then, but over 6 years that comes out to $97/month. Just turned 120,000 and wouldn't flinch at driving it cross country.
Just got my insurance bill . . . . $275 for 6 months!