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Car market in 2023


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2022 Dec 17, 6:40am   9,148 views  81 comments

by BayArea   ➕follow (1)   💰tip   ignore  

I bought and sold a car in the past month as we upgraded our 5 seater SUV to a 7 seater to accommodate our family.

I can confirm that without question, used car prices are dropping. Cars are sitting on the market longer, dealers are more willing to negotiate, and buyer pools are decreasing compared to just 6mo ago.

We haven’t even scratched the surface of the repos coming in CY23 from the volume of people who took out big loans over the last two years at near 0 prime rate who are now underwater.

Also, the chip industry is catching up to the shortage that existed in the pandemic which is further flooding the market.

2023 will be a great time to buy a used car.

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61   B.A.C.A.H.   2023 Apr 11, 4:50pm  

RWSGFY says

GNL says

desertguy says

My one rule is to only buy a Lexus built in a Japanese factory - they seem to make the best product

How can you tell where it was built? I assume some website + VIN?

Japan-built cars have VINs starting with J. US-built - 1.


I had my US-assembled Camry for 18 years and about 170,000 miles. Only one single repair, radiator began leaking along a welded seam at about 120,000 miles. It was assembled in Indiana. I kind of regret selling it. I had inherited a (newer) POS BMW (Mini Cooper) from one of my kids and so had more cars than I wanted. (No, it was not "taking over the payments".) Had to rid of that one.

The other US-assembled Toyota I still have is a 2006 model Tacoma, assembled at the NUMMI plant in Fremont, California, that's now a Tesla factory. To date I have not had a single repair in 17 years and 97,000 miles. Just regular wear maintenance (brakes, etc).

My experiences with the US-built Toyotas suggest to me that the quality and reliability problems with US models is not due to the workers on the factory floors. It's the engineering, whose imperatives come from the management. Kind of like Boeing with its 737 MAX.
62   gabbar   2023 Apr 12, 4:07am  

B.A.C.A.H. says


Japan-built cars have VINs starting with J. US-built - 1.

I got a 20 year old rusty but reliable Toyota Corolla with VIN starting with J. However, are Subarus, Mazdas made in Japan are not as reliable? Why?
63   zzyzzx   2023 Apr 12, 5:44am  

Tenpoundbass says

Everyone I know with Chevy, Nissan, Kia, and Hamdani all at some point in their two to three year lease, have to take their car to the dealer to get repaired. Ranging from serious, to just minor stuff, but none the less, I have not had one experience.


If they are leasing new cars wouldn't the issues mentioned all be under warranty?
64   BayArea   2023 Apr 12, 6:22am  

gabbar says

B.A.C.A.H. says



Japan-built cars have VINs starting with J. US-built - 1.

I got a 20 year old rusty but reliable Toyota Corolla with VIN starting with J. However, are Subarus, Mazdas made in Japan are not as reliable? Why?


Google “Toyota lean and six sigma” production systems
65   WookieMan   2023 Apr 12, 6:25am  

B.A.C.A.H. says

My experiences with the US-built Toyotas suggest to me that the quality and reliability problems with US models is not due to the workers on the factory floors. It's the engineering, whose imperatives come from the management. Kind of like Boeing with its 737 MAX.

This is probably true. The MAX was an absolute failure, BUT most of it was due to pilot error. Engineering wasn't great, but it was solvable with a good pilot. You can hand fly a plane and unfortunately some foreign pilots didn't know how to do that and override the MCAS system. The MAX was all over the US during that time and no accidents. It's probably racist to say that though. Know how to fly the damn plane without automated systems. They didn't. People died.
66   desertguy   2023 Apr 12, 6:41am  

gabbar says

desertguy says


a new GX with the last of the V-8's

When did they build the last of the V-8's?

The LX has already transitioned to a twin turbo V6, same with the LS. For the GX, 2023 is last year of the production run with a V8, which started in 2009, which is one of the reasons the 2022 and 23 are so bullet proof. Next year complete redesign.
67   desertguy   2023 Apr 12, 6:43am  

RWSGFY says

GNL says


desertguy says



My one rule is to only buy a Lexus built in a Japanese factory - they seem to make the best product

How can you tell where it was built? I assume some website + VIN?



Japan-built cars have VINs starting with J. US-built - 1.

Also, sticker on door jam (usually drivers door) will tell you country of origin and the actual factory where assembled.
..
68   Tenpoundbass   2023 Apr 12, 7:03am  

zzyzzx says

If they are leasing new cars wouldn't the issues mentioned all be under warranty?


Of course, but I expect a new car to not have a single issue where a mechanic is involved, for at least 4 years.
Aside from maintenance, or damaged caused by an accident.
69   BayArea   2023 Apr 12, 7:42am  

desertguy says

gabbar says


desertguy says



a new GX with the last of the V-8's

When did they build the last of the V-8's?


The LX has already transitioned to a twin turbo V6, same with the LS. For the GX, 2023 is last year of the production run with a V8, which started in 2009, which is one of the reasons the 2022 and 23 are so bullet proof. Next year complete redesign.


The GX had a V8 in the 03-09 model years too.

4.7L timing belt equipped V8
70   BayArea   2023 Apr 12, 7:44am  

Tenpoundbass says

zzyzzx says


If they are leasing new cars wouldn't the issues mentioned all be under warranty?


Of course, but I expect a new car to not have a single issue where a mechanic is involved, for at least 4 years.
Aside from maintenance, or damaged caused by an accident.


4yrs only?

If I have a major repair before 100k miles, I consider it a failure. In fact, I usually don’t buy cars until they are mostly depreciated and above 100k miles.
71   RWSGFY   2023 Apr 12, 7:57am  

BayArea says

desertguy says


gabbar says



desertguy says




a new GX with the last of the V-8's

When did they build the last of the V-8's?



The LX has already transitioned to a twin turbo V6, same with the LS. For the GX, 2023 is last year of the production run with a V8, which started in 2009, which is one of the reasons the 2022 and 23 are so bullet proof. Next year complete redesign.



The GX had a V8 in the 03-09 model years too.

4.7L timing belt equipped V8


These are good bargain because people tend to sell them cheap at 100-120K mark because that TB/WP job at a dealer is $$$. If you can turn a wrench, it's only ~$600 in geniune Toyota parts and 3-4 hours of work. Did it twice on my V8 'yota already.
72   BayArea   2023 Apr 12, 1:09pm  

I don’t replace timing belts (Toyota/Lexus recommends 90k mile intervals)

I understand the 4.0 V8 and 4.3 V8 and 4.7 V8 are interference engines and having the belt break would be a disaster (take out the engine). However, I’ve had too many 200k+ mile cars on original timing belts to consider paying $2k service for a $6-7k car. I’ll roll the dice while knowing the risk.

I’ve always wanted to say, “I broke the belt and Toyota is right to recommend the $2k TB service every 90k miles”. No matter how hard I’ve tried I’ve never been able to break one in my lifetime across many high mileage cars.
73   EBGuy   2023 Apr 12, 3:41pm  

BayArea says

However, I’ve had too many 200k+ mile cars on original timing belts to consider paying $2k service for a $6-7k car.

Hmmm.... what about the water pump? I usually have them replace the pump while they have things open for the belt job. Remember Andy Grove...
74   BayArea   2023 Apr 12, 3:45pm  

Nope

I’ve had water pumps go after 50k on some cars and never go on others. When they go I replace them. Sure, it could happen at an inopportune time but again, I’ll take that risk.

My current Lexus is 22yrs old and has 166k miles on the original timing belt and water pump.

If you are replacing a timing belt, you’d be crazy not to do the water pump at the same time.

Also, I’ve seen 200k timing belts that appeared to have no visible wear that I could detect by eye.
75   RC2006   2023 Apr 12, 4:21pm  

More likely to have water pump fail before timing belt, but yes if one fails might as well get the other done at the same time.
77   Eric Holder   2023 Apr 13, 1:29pm  

BayArea says


Nope

I’ve had water pumps go after 50k on some cars and never go on others. When they go I replace them. Sure, it could happen at an inopportune time but again, I’ll take that risk.

My current Lexus is 22yrs old and has 166k miles on the original timing belt and water pump.

If you are replacing a timing belt, you’d be crazy not to do the water pump at the same time.

Also, I’ve seen 200k timing belts that appeared to have no visible wear that I could detect by eye.


Sometimes it's not the belt itself - it's a pulley or water pump which seizes and kills the belt (and the engine if it's interference design). But the recommended intervals ARE very conservative indeed: for example some cars have recommendation for TB change at 60K outside of CA and 105K miles in CA. Same fucking belt in the same fucking engine. With low-revving Toyota V8 I can see it going 2x the recommended distance no prob.

Another point is there is no recommended interval for WP change on chain-timed engines.
78   BayArea   2023 Apr 13, 10:11pm  

Yes, that is 100% right.

Timing belts have been known to snap due to seized water pumps.
80   RedStar   2023 Jul 24, 10:32am  

Supposedly C8 Corvettes have dropped to MSRP as of this month
81   HeadSet   2023 Jul 24, 11:38am  

RedStar says


Supposedly C8 Corvettes have dropped to MSRP as of this month

Ford dropped the MSRP of F-150 Lightnings by $10k across all models.

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