Posted on 10/03/2019 10:59:03 AM PDT by Red Badger
You have obviously never driven a Ford Shelby GT500 or a Ford F-150 Raptor.
The last year C7 will be mark down a lot. I got my 2013 C6 Grand sport for $15k off, because the local dealer wanted all the C6 gone. That same dealer has mess load of C7 on the lot.
“Yeah, but in an hour or so you have to buy another one!................... “
I was waiting for that one. :)
I just bought a fully restored 1948 Plymouth Special Coup. My next car will likely be a ‘48 Lincoln V12.
Tire pressure sensors are mandated by law. Backup cameras are mandated by law. No, you wont be doing without them and they arent free.
You do realize this was propaganda? It’s from Yahoo. The underlying seed that is planted is a false fear of an approaching recession. Get it?
“I really cant understand how cars got so expensive.”
The answer is called legacy costs. That’s all the medical and retirement costs of present and former workers amortized over each vehicle. This is why the value of the vehicle drops at least 33% the moment you drive it off the lot. That 33% is the legacy cost and is not involved in the vehicle’s content. Foreign manufacturers are at an advantage as they can afford more content for the same sales price due to the socialist nature of their home market.
Yeah, blame the bolt turners.....
Time to shock the sticker prices in reverse. Dont buy new.
Basic math says if you kept that for 100,000 miles you spent $1.00/mile just for hardware. Might as well rent a HD pick truck when you need one.
We were in several new car dealerships over the weekend.
The prices are insane; just your average sedan, regardless of make, is +30G’s.
THEN YOU ADD THE DEALER’S CRAP CHARGES ON TOP OF THAT.
When you add full coverage insurance costs on top of a huge car payment then it’s totally unaffordable by the average consumer who makes less than $50k.
And leasing is crazy, too. 30k miles for 3 years lease and a huge charge for any mile over that, plus you have to use the dealer for all maintenance, at your cost.................
It was a new, presumably non-registered, non current year vehicle. This is how it works with car, truck, motorcycle, etc., rolling inventory. Treated as brand new but discounted.
I just got 17% off MSRP — under 20k — on a new 2019 Fiesta ST. Will best many Mustangs around a road course.
Government mandates. Gotta meet stringent economy and emission standards. Chi ching. SUVs were practically invented by CAFE laws that carved out exemptions for them. Latest and greatest direct injection and variable valve timing, etc. dont get you to the new CAFE targets. Stop-start gets a little further but gotta make the starter and oiling systems more robust. Still cant get there though so now we have to add on many thousands of dollars worth of electric motors and batteries to supplement or replace the engine.
Then there are safety systems. Seat belts, airbags, ABS, traction control and stability control are all standard now. Now backup cameras are mandatory with giant dash screens in every car. New vehicles getting a whole suite of sensors and cameras to automatically brake when you follow too close, or buzz when you drift out of lane and enhance your vision at night but are building up to self driving capabilities. All that tech costs money.
Cars are engineered to last longer too. When I was a kid getting 100,000 miles was an achievement. Now we take it for granted that cars should never have a problem before then. I have a truck at 220k miles I expect to keep for years to come. My vehicles range from 11 to 27 years old and all run strong and reliable. That kind of quality engineering doesnt come cheap (but it is worth every penny)
Jeep Gladiator Recalled, Sales Stopped To Fix Rear Driveshaft Issue
I’ll stick with my 2003 Accord, thank you very much.
My new car was under 20k as stated. 6 speed manual, turbo intercooler, etc. I didn’t want the back up camera particularly, or the screen at all, but over the past month I have come to like it. Can parallel park the car within an inch of where I want it. The Android/iPhone integration (maps, etc.) is nice also. I don’t mind the tire pressure sensors except when they have to be replaced ($). Had to get the summer performance tires off right away as it was getting squirrelly on onramps with cooler temps out.
We just bought a 2004 BMW Z4. It has a few issues but none realy bad, needed tires, a starter and brakes, but is really fun and only cost $7k out the door.............
This isn't it, but looks just like it.................
Yup!
Toyota would do VERY well if they’d bring back their little pickups with zero bling.
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