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If the dealearship is the only one who touched that plug they are responsible for fucking it up, period.
I’ve never heard of a plastic oil pan
Keep in mind that the threads on the plug are softer than the threads in the oil pan. It’s that way by design so that the plug fails before the oil pan fails.
My first choice make is Toyota Rav4.
I am in the market for a new vehicle. My first choice make is Toyota Rav4. But Toyota dealer is quoting a Toyota Rav4 at MSRP plus 3000 in accessories that I don't want.
What do you think about this Mazda CX-5. This is the first offer that I got from a local dealer
Maybe you can find one with 10,000 miles (used).
I am in the market for a new vehicle. My first choice make is Toyota Rav4. But Toyota dealer is quoting a Toyota Rav4 at MSRP plus 3000 in accessories that I don't want.
What do you think about this Mazda CX-5. This is the first offer that I got from a local dealer
At minimum a new car will give up your GPS location all the time. At worst it may come with a shut off switch that can be remote activated.
If that sticks down too far or just enough, it also looks like to would very convenient to get broken off as well
DooDahMan saysIf that sticks down too far or just enough, it also looks like to would very convenient to get broken off as well
You can get it without the hose nipple attachment as well. That said, I wouldn't recommend it for your off road vehicle.
Eric Holder saysOff-road vehicle would have that thing hidden behind a skid plate anyway.
What to you think the odds are that someplace in the country one or more people are driving around with the skid plates just because....
Tracking devices are cheap and can be taped to the undercarriage of a car, aren’t noticeable, make no noise, and have low power consumption so battery last quite long.
I just scored a pretty good deal on a pretty good car. A 2013 Toyota Camry XLE with 49,000 miles on it. Owned by a little old lady and hasn't been driven in about 2 years. $11,800. 4cylinder gets 25/35 mpg.
$11 Thousand dollars for a 9 year old Toyota, is only a great deal in LaLa Land, and Joe Biden is the Mayor.
WineHorror1 says
I just scored a pretty good deal on a pretty good car. A 2013 Toyota Camry XLE with 49,000 miles on it. Owned by a little old lady and hasn't been driven in about 2 years. $11,800. 4cylinder gets 25/35 mpg.
Do you want to sell it for a profit?
$11 Thousand dollars for a 9 year old Toyota, is only a great deal in LaLa Land, and Joe Biden is the Mayor.
You crack me up, unless I misunderstand you. Here is what they're going for...
I have drove Mazdas now going on 20 years. I've leased over 12 over the years.
Now I'm at the point, they all look the same, and so does about every other car on the market, in their associated class.
I've leased every one of those Mazdas. I'm looking for a pick up truck to buy outright.
Year don't matter, though the older and better shape the better. I want one bench seat, two windows, nothing behind the bench seat but the truck wall and rear window.
WineHorror1 says
You crack me up, unless I misunderstand you. Here is what they're going for...
:I know that's what they are going for, and we're in LaLa Land and Joe Biden is the Mayor of LaLa Land.
A 9 year old Toyota or most any car for that matter, should be worth a penny over $5 grand.
WineHorror1 says
You crack me up, unless I misunderstand you. Here is what they're going for...
:I know that's what they are going for, and we're in LaLa Land and Joe Biden is the Mayor of LaLa Land.
A 9 year old Toyota or most any car for that matter, should be worth a penny over $5 grand.
I had a college reunion this past weekend.
Rather than drive separately, my good buddy picked me up in his $250,000 exotic.
I kept thinking about how his first year depreciation will be more than my annual mortgage amount. Seems to make him pretty happy and he can afford it though.
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- large buy in price commit
- road-trip charging anxiety
- battery losing efficiency over time (and with weather)
I currently drive a 21yr old Lexus sedan - 2001 GS430
This was a $55k luxury car when new and I picked it up for $12,500 back in 2011 with 90k miles in a condition that looked like it had just rolled off the showroom floor. It has 165k miles today and is worth about $6-7k if I had to guess based on condition/mileage. I can probably drive the car another 5yrs and I estimate it will be worth the same amount given that it’s fully depreciated.
The car still looks sharp, gets about 20mpg, and still keeps me happy.
My friends think I’m batshit insane to make as much money as I do and drive a car this old but I have strong convictions about not buying shiny depreciating assets to impress other people. Additionally I prefer to put my money into investments, travel, family than things like cars or jewelry.
I estimate that I drive about 150 miles per week for work which translates to about $200 of gas per month.
I may not drive quite enough for the economics to make sense to go electric given my current reference point. I guess I need to also consider that a 21yr old car won’t run forever although I’ve seen these cars go well over 200k miles, even over 300k in some cases.
It’s remarkable how reliable this luxury Toyota has been. It’s never left me stranded, never had any high dollar repair - only brakes, tires, and some suspension bushings. Also had a check engine light once during the 10yrs I owned it… turned out to be a $80 oxygen sensor that was replaced this year (labor included). Not a drop of oil in my driveway and AC still blows ice cold. I wouldn’t have believed it if I didn’t experience it.
In a strange way, I’m almost eager to keep driving it just so I can see how long I can stretch this out…
What car do you drive and where do you stand on the gas vs electric topic?