SpentGrains
Well-Known Member
What was your point?
Simply looking at the economics of well used cars from the same perspective.
What was your point?
Minor nitpick, but mortgage interest does not "compound."
The only time mortgage interest compounds is with a negative-amortization loan. That is, with each payment, the remaining outstanding balance actually gets BIGGER. The payment doesn't even cover the interest portion. Such loans are extremely rare.
It's not the rich who are responsible for bidding home prices up to such a level where a loan has become a requirement - it's ourselves.
Lot of truth to that with a Honda - that's my daily driver, a 2002 Accord. Sunroof, leather, the works. 4 cylinder with a 5 speed. She'll turn 130,000 miles next month (Mom owned it until 2008, and only put 50,000 miles on it). The only thing I've done to that car is replaced the timing belt, plugs, new set of tires, and flushed the brake system. Still has original pads and rotors. I figure at 130,000, the car isn't even half used up yet. I'd have no problem buying another one brand-new if/when it dies.To address the OP, I'm def a fan of the used/not new car. I've worked on cars my entire life, I'm 32, and have bought/sold about 30 for relatives and fun/profit. That being said, about every 5 years my mom gets a new Honda. For anyone that has a job over 60k, it doesn't make sense to nickel/dime your daily driver. For about 25k now, you can get a car that will give you close to zero out of pocket costs/headaches for at least 3 years. When she is sick of this car, I'll sell it for probably 10g in 2015, and we'll do it again.
I just took the wheels off to inspect the brakes etc as car just turned 50k, and they basically look new. If you buy a used car, whether off lease, or private sale, there will always be a surprise or 2 that will come up. Now for someone like me, I'm cool with that, but my 65 year old mother, not so much. There are plenty of good lease deals out there, and there are some horrific ones. My cousin just went way over mileage on his lease, and had to pay to buy care. Obv a retarded financial move, but he also has to deal with nagging wife, 2 kids, and makes a ton of money so he doesn't care. Its all relative, if I did that on a lease car, I would kill myself in shame. To each is own.
Simply looking at the economics of well used cars from the same perspective.
Nah. Try apples to bowling balls. At the time I started looking for a house, a college buddy of mine was also searcing. Me in Northwest Iowa, him in Minneapolis. He'd email me a listing of a $150,000 house in the city, and I would find a comparable house (on a larger lot) here for $35-$40,000.OT: If my rent was $300 a month I would never move, apples to oranges I know.
The only good thing out here is the weather, so our cars stay rust free.
Beater cars have done me well for the last 10 years. However, thanks to federal and state vehicle retirement schemes the price for beaters has been driven to artificially higher prices. These schemes are also a major contributor to people buying into cars they cannot afford. Can you blame the general public for this behavior if their own government not only condones it but encourages it?
Now I run a 2003 corwn vic ex-police cruiser.
Let's also address the economics of buying a beater at the "Buy Here Pay Here" dealers that many people buy from.
Think 3-9% is crazy for a new car? (most new cars are under 3% currently) Try 19-29% for a beater. This is how much they can charge poor schmucks that finance through them with no other means. Can't make the payments? Repo it, bring it back to the lot, and sell it again.
The other shady tactic they can use is the pre-computed interest loan, which I didn't even know existed until recently.
"It's got a cop motor, a 440-cubic-inch plant. It's got cop tires, cop suspensions, cop shocks. It's a model made before catalytic converters, so it'll run good on regular gas. What do you say? Is it the new Bluesmobile or what?"
"We're 105 miles from Chicago, we have a full tank of gas, half pack of cigarettes, it's dark out and we're wearing sunglasses. Hit it."
My favorite movie, hands down. Did you know it took a week to rig the bluesmobile up to disintegrate outside the Cook County building after that awesome car chase?
I'd say they got their money's worth out of that Dodge though, wouldn't you?
Those things are friggin' sweet!
Does it have a Ford 9" rear end?
woknblues said:I don't think so. I think a 3.27 rear end, unless I don't know what the hell I am talking about, and that happens a lot.