New Car Advice?
Comments
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*lulzcreepycoug said:Lolz!
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If I ever did go full size truck, then it would be a Tundra TRD Pro package. Those Toyota guysm have got their hooks in me.HuskyJW said:
Where do you put the dead animals?YellowSnow said:
I have a solid rear axle and body on frame vehicle. Drives like a truck.HuskyJW said:Men drive trucks
HTH
I don't need an open bed to haul around any shit. -
I suggest you do what I did and buy your wife a 70k+ car and then allocate about 26k for yourself to buy a suburu impreza, brand new, and then have a global pandemic happen where you drive it about once every 1-4 weeks.
Both paid off. So that the flaming money pile is just right there for you to laugh at. -
My condolences...haie said:I suggest you do what I did and buy your wife a 70k+ car and then allocate about 26k for yourself to buy a suburu impreza, brand new, and then have a global pandemic happen where you drive it about once every 1-4 weeks.
Both paid off. So that the flaming money pile is just right there for you to laugh at.
Mrs Snow wants an Audi Q7 to drive to the country club. FML.
I bought my Toyota 12 years ago. It was 3 years old with 22,000 miles on it. Certified pre-owned with a 7 year power train warranty. I paid 22K. Trade-in value is still $8.5 K because peeps want 4 Runners. So only $13.5K depreciation over 12 years. That's about as good as once can do at not pissing away money on cars. -
We finally suspended our insurance on the MDX. It just sits in the garage. We drive the Highlander everywhere. We really don’t need two cars.haie said:I suggest you do what I did and buy your wife a 70k+ car and then allocate about 26k for yourself to buy a suburu impreza, brand new, and then have a global pandemic happen where you drive it about once every 1-4 weeks.
Both paid off. So that the flaming money pile is just right there for you to laugh at. -
We? in the Sequoia club call those foreskinners.YellowSnow said:
My condolences...haie said:I suggest you do what I did and buy your wife a 70k+ car and then allocate about 26k for yourself to buy a suburu impreza, brand new, and then have a global pandemic happen where you drive it about once every 1-4 weeks.
Both paid off. So that the flaming money pile is just right there for you to laugh at.
Mrs Snow wants an Audi Q7 to drive to the country club. FML.
I bought my Toyota 12 years ago. It was 3 years old with 22,000 miles on it. Certified pre-owned with a 7 year power train warranty. I paid 22K. Trade-in value is still $8.5 K because peeps want 4 Runners. So only $13.5K depreciation over 12 years. That's about as good as once can do at not pissing away money on cars. -
Those ISIS fuckers would love to get their bomb-making hands on my Tacoma. 370,000 miles went by last week, and I just put new rubber on it because I'm going to get another 100k. The light on the dial that shows where the air is coming out doesn't work any more. Everything else does even though I sunk it in a huge mud bog this fall and filled it full of water.YellowSnow said:
Axe @dflea about ISIS Toyota truck mileage1to392831weretaken said:
2016 is after Honda fixed the VCM issues, so you shouldn't worry about that. I don't mind a company fucking up; it happens. I mind the way they do or don't take care of the customer after that point. I'm a reasonable customer, and I expect the same treatment from the manufacturer.YellowSnow said:
Wife drives a 2016 Acura MDX that only has 27K on it. No issues whatsoever to date. But I'm a bit worried that Honda's declining quality will rear its ugly head down the road. Plus the car was made by cousin fuckers like @SECDAWG down in Alabama.1to392831weretaken said:
Weirdly, I've never owned a Toyota. I've owned five Fords, four Hondas, three VAG (one each of Volkswagen, Audi, and Porsche), two GM, one Mazda, one Chrysler, and one BMW. My wife is a descendant of two generations of Chrysler dealers (grandpa passed down to uncle), but I would have swore I'd never own one of those even before I met her. Yet there one is in my driveway right now.YellowSnow said:
This thread can go where ever we want it to go. Initially it was making fun of Caribbean Messicans, but we can do GM hot talk.1to392831weretaken said:I know this thread wasn't made to be taken seriously, but a real take on new Chevrolets is that they're getting fucked by a poorly crafted tax incentive. A long time ago, I saw a meme that gave me media room big belly laughs. Took me a while to find it, but here it is:
That buck in the middle there is GM. They took electrification seriously, devoted billions to R&D, and were first to market with affordable plug-ins. The problem is that they're now fucked. Being first meant they hit their tax credit quota before any other manufacturer but Tesla (totally different customer target) had even really gotten started. Now, they're having to compete with all of the feet-draggers at a $7500 disadvantage.
I'd be pissed if I were them.
I am descended of three generations of Chevy dealers. I wouldn't touch one with a 10 ft pole now.
If I every get a new and larger SUV, I'm rolling Sequoia style like @creepycoug .
Things change quickly in the automotive world. Whereas for the longest time a Chrysler transmission was a ticking time bomb right off the showroom floor, they now use the exact same German ZF transmission that Honda and Acura uses. I talked my wife (then-girlfriend) into selling her Jetta prior to it eclipsing 100K miles so that she could still get good money for it before every electrical system in the car started going to shit, yet wouldn't hesitate to buy a new one today if they made what I want. Perhaps the biggest automotive crime against a company's customers is Ford's 3-valve modular engine, a crime they never took responsibility for. What vehicles did this affect? Oh, only every single Ford vehicle with a 90 degree engine in it that was sold from 2004 to 2010. So millions. Poor design in the oiling system when upgrading the engine from two valves and fixed timing to three valves and cam phasing leads to premature failure in all of these engines if not babied by the book (if anybody's interested in what it looks like, I could show you pictures of the inside of mine). Yet would I buy a Ford truck today? Fuck yeah I would; the new ones are great.
The two biggest myths in the automotive world that I've personally encountered are that BMWs are unreliable and expensive to maintain and Hondas are super reliable and high quality. To the former, I have never encountered a four-wheeled vehicle that's more logically assembled and easy to work on than my E46 BMW was. If you're dumb enough to take it to the dealer, you will indeed get bent over for maintenance. Independent shops cut that cost in less than half and do at least as good of a job, and doing things yourself is even better still. And the car was so easy to work on that I didn't mind doing things myself.
To the latter myth, there is only one car company who I absolutely won't do business with again, and that's Honda. They're the only ones who have fucked me and then rubbed it in and asked, "How you like them apples?" Once again, it was a case of a manufacturer upgrading their engines and fucking it up, the engines failing prematurely at a high rate as a result, and then the company not taking responsibility because the price tag was too high. In this case, they were sued and lost, forcing them to own up, but only if the customer was savvy enough to look up the problem and hold them to it. (In other words, I pity the fool whose Honda V6 with VCM, which they sold hundreds of thousands of during the affected years, shit the bed a year out of warranty and they don't own a code reader and suck at Google.) By 2012, "reliability" just stopped being that big of a concern with new cars. Everything is built so well and precise that it just comes down to design failures or not, and every company is susceptible. Yet here's our 2012 Honda needing new axles (shitty CVs) at 30K, an engine rebuild at 60K, and another engine rebuild at 70K. When I asked American Honda to buy it back from us at fair market value so that I could upgrade to a newer one without the problems (a win-win for everyone, I thought), they told me to fuck off. When I asked them why they would pass up a deal that would cost them peanuts and release a pissed off former customer out in the wild to talk shit at every chance, the response was (and I quote): "Oh, I think Honda's reputation will be juuuuuuuust fine."
Fuck those guys. The Chrysler (manufacturer I swore I would never buy from) that replaced it is better in every way. Circle of life.
Long story short, the most unreliable piece of shit I've ever encountered was my dads' Chevy Caprice Classic wagon that they bought when I was bout two years old. This was before lemon laws, and that thing was a legit lemon. They paid many multiples the purchase price of the car on repairs over the decade or so they owned it, starting nearly right after they drove it new off the lot. I didn't give that two thoughts when I bought a new Chevy three or four years ago. Things change, and it's been a great car, minor niggles aside.
I've had my 2006 4 Runner since 2009 and have had ZERO issues with it. It's remarkable how many 2nd, 3rd and 4th gen 4 runners you still see on the roads. You hardly every see 20 year old Fords and Chevy's still going strong.
As for Toyota, I always wanted an old 22R-E based pickup. Was my dream truck in college. My girlfriend at the time had one, so I drove it all the time and was envious of it relative to my shitty work truck ('78 Ford Courier). That motor was pretty much bombproof, and Toyota stuffed it in a lot of things.
More recently, I was bragging at work at how reliable my BMW had been. At that point, I had put about 250K miles on it (traded it in with over 270K). I had replaced the VANOS seals (cost of seals and an afternoon), replaced the accessory belts and tensioners once (cheap and an afternoon). Replaced the water pump while I was in there (an extra four bolts and a cheap water pump), replaced the fuel pump ($130 and 10 minutes), and replaced the CCV (biggest PITA job I did, but still less than a day). All told, I had about $1K in repairs and five or six afternoons of work in to get a quarter of a million miles out of my car. One of my coworkers says, "Oh yeah?"
He bought a new Corolla about the same time I bought my BMW. He lives a bit further away from work than I do, so he says, "I've got 350,000 miles on mine, and I've changed the oil."
Another friend of mine recently traded in his Tundra. He bought it used with low miles and traded it in with nearly 400K on the ticker. Amazing.
This is my first Toyota truck. It's been worth every penny and then some. I might name it "Race Bannon". That way it will never die. -
Toyota’s are nicecreepycoug said:
We? in the Sequoia club call those foreskinners.YellowSnow said:
My condolences...haie said:I suggest you do what I did and buy your wife a 70k+ car and then allocate about 26k for yourself to buy a suburu impreza, brand new, and then have a global pandemic happen where you drive it about once every 1-4 weeks.
Both paid off. So that the flaming money pile is just right there for you to laugh at.
Mrs Snow wants an Audi Q7 to drive to the country club. FML.
I bought my Toyota 12 years ago. It was 3 years old with 22,000 miles on it. Certified pre-owned with a 7 year power train warranty. I paid 22K. Trade-in value is still $8.5 K because peeps want 4 Runners. So only $13.5K depreciation over 12 years. That's about as good as once can do at not pissing away money on cars.
I just like my trucks made with wrenches not chopsticks -
I like American cars because it's better to keep the jobs in the USCMA.
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The Throbber has a CX9 - best fucking snow car EVER. AWD, throw some studs on that bad boy...like a snow leopard chasing down its prey.1to392831weretaken said:
Mazda is so massively underrated.PurpleThrobber said:We are an Asian car only family - Toyota, Mazda and Nissan.
Never have any issues with them. Ever.
@RoadDawg55's peeps make sweet rides. -
4 Runners are nice but you pay for the name somewhat. Engine is a little dated but very reliable. Tacomas are nice trucks, I'd consider getting one next time. I'm a Toyota fan for a reason, no problems with them, they run well, and keep their value if re-selling is your thing.
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I drive a 1985 Jeep Scrambler that belonged to my Dad. Will quite literally climb up a mountain, as I've done it. When the solar flares come I will laugh at all you idiots as I drive right on by while you fight over dog meat in the streets like Venezuela or some shit.
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This thread is useless. I have to buy a car next month. What do I get. I don't drive anyone else in the car ever. No girls ever see my car until we've already smashed so I don't care about it from that perspective.
I just want to buy and forget about it and not look ghetto.
I don't haul or move shit either. -
I bought a new Sentra in 16 for 17 grand. Oil changes and new tires in 5 years
Runs great. 40 mpg. No payment
Car payments suck the life out of you -
100% this. The most important poont in this thread.RaceBannon said:I bought a new Sentra in 16 for 17 grand. Oil changes and new tires in 5 years
Runs great. 40 mpg. No payment
Car payments suck the life out of you
One of my two dads put 300k miles on an '86 Acura Legend whilst building a $1m house - when $1m meant something ...
Why borrow money - pay interest - on a depreciating asset?
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You will also have bullets and beans. So there's that too!Swaye said:I drive a 1985 Jeep Scrambler that belonged to my Dad. Will quite literally climb up a mountain, as I've done it. When the solar flares come I will laugh at all you idiots as I drive right on by while you fight over dog meat in the streets like Venezuela or some shit.
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agreed. i drove a new 2004 Toyota Sequoia (or, more accurately, my wife did) and took to to 3 fiddy. basically raised the kids in that thing. she was fucking work horse. and honestly, we took shit care of it. id' go 30k without thinking of changing the oil. about the only preventive maintenance I ever did on tim was the timing belt/chain, which the Japanese auto makers scare you into doing on tim. Only did it that one tim btw. At some point while moving my kid out of an apartment with a big U haul trailer in tow, white liquid was blowing out of the hood on the freeway driving back. Got back, the radiator had finally had it, drove to the Kirkland Toyota dealer hoping the freeway air would keep it cool enough, it didn't, bitch was running with the needle firmly in the red on the temp gauge, replaced it, got another 60 to 80 out of her, and then when I started smelling weird shit that made my eyes water, I figured it was tim. Sold it to some dude for 800 and I still see it driving around town.pawz said:
100% this. The most important poont in this thread.RaceBannon said:I bought a new Sentra in 16 for 17 grand. Oil changes and new tires in 5 years
Runs great. 40 mpg. No payment
Car payments suck the life out of you
One of my two dads put 300k miles on an '86 Acura Legend whilst building a $1m house - when $1m meant something ...
Why borrow money - pay interest - on a depreciating asset?
Intend to do the same with the two I have now. And I will never, ever own another BMW again. I had a coupe, beautiful and fun to drive, that I got 150 out of and it was pain, suffering and $$ the entire fucking time. Never again. I just don't care enough. -
I'm with @PurpleThrobber here: get yourself a good Japanese car. Go simple or go cool, you have that option, but go Japanese. JMHO.Pitchfork51 said:This thread is useless. I have to buy a car next month. What do I get. I don't drive anyone else in the car ever. No girls ever see my car until we've already smashed so I don't care about it from that perspective.
I just want to buy and forget about it and not look ghetto.
I don't haul or move shit either. -
Mazda's are criminally underrated. For some reason, they are the least expensive of the Japanese line-up. Toyota and Honda (their luxury analogues) carry a higher sticker and get away with it. I haven't owned one but every person I know who has loves their Mazdas and swears by then. Subaru is like that too.PurpleThrobber said:
The Throbber has a CX9 - best fucking snow car EVER. AWD, throw some studs on that bad boy...like a snow leopard chasing down its prey.1to392831weretaken said:
Mazda is so massively underrated.PurpleThrobber said:We are an Asian car only family - Toyota, Mazda and Nissan.
Never have any issues with them. Ever.
@RoadDawg55's peeps make sweet rides. -
Lesbo confirmed.haie said:I suggest you do what I did and buy your wife a 70k+ car and then allocate about 26k for yourself to buy a suburu impreza,
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Unless you’re truly rich, no one with some sanity should be blowing money on depreciation. Buy something that will run strong for at least 15 years and take care of it. Amazing how many pours you see driving spendy trucks.creepycoug said:
agreed. i drove a new 2004 Toyota Sequoia (or, more accurately, my wife did) and took to to 3 fiddy. basically raised the kids in that thing. she was fucking work horse. and honestly, we took shit care of it. id' go 30k without thinking of changing the oil. about the only preventive maintenance I ever did on tim was the timing belt/chain, which the Japanese auto makers scare you into doing on tim. Only did it that one tim btw. At some point while moving my kid out of an apartment with a big U haul trailer in tow, white liquid was blowing out of the hood on the freeway driving back. Got back, the radiator had finally had it, drove to the Kirkland Toyota dealer hoping the freeway air would keep it cool enough, it didn't, bitch was running with the needle firmly in the red on the temp gauge, replaced it, got another 60 to 80 out of her, and then when I started smelling weird shit that made my eyes water, I figured it was tim. Sold it to some dude for 800 and I still see it driving around town.pawz said:
100% this. The most important poont in this thread.RaceBannon said:I bought a new Sentra in 16 for 17 grand. Oil changes and new tires in 5 years
Runs great. 40 mpg. No payment
Car payments suck the life out of you
One of my two dads put 300k miles on an '86 Acura Legend whilst building a $1m house - when $1m meant something ...
Why borrow money - pay interest - on a depreciating asset?
Intend to do the same with the two I have now. And I will never, ever own another BMW again. I had a coupe, beautiful and fun to drive, that I got 150 out of and it was pain, suffering and $$ the entire fucking time. Never again. I just don't care enough. -
The Vette makes em wet. Up your smashing game.Pitchfork51 said:This thread is useless. I have to buy a car next month. What do I get. I don't drive anyone else in the car ever. No girls ever see my car until we've already smashed so I don't care about it from that perspective.
I just want to buy and forget about it and not look ghetto.
I don't haul or move shit either. -
C8 Corvette.Pitchfork51 said:This thread is useless. I have to buy a car next month. What do I get. I don't drive anyone else in the car ever. No girls ever see my car until we've already smashed so I don't care about it from that perspective.
I just want to buy and forget about it and not look ghetto.
I don't haul or move shit either. -
pat pat little Benny.BennyBeaver said:
Lesbo confirmed.haie said:I suggest you do what I did and buy your wife a 70k+ car and then allocate about 26k for yourself to buy a suburu impreza,
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NTTAWWThaie said:
pat pat little Benny.BennyBeaver said:
Lesbo confirmed.haie said:I suggest you do what I did and buy your wife a 70k+ car and then allocate about 26k for yourself to buy a suburu impreza,
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This thread delivers
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Just perused Mazda's website and came away a little disappointed. Seems their fuel economy has dropped nearly 10 mpg across the board. My brother's 3 gets 40 mpg. Nothing they make gets over 31 combined now. I still think they have one of if not the best design aesthetics for any car you can buy under $60K (maybe higher), and they're dead-nuts reliable, but I commute 70 miles round trip, so I look for cars that are easy on the fuel.creepycoug said:
Mazda's are criminally underrated. For some reason, they are the least expensive of the Japanese line-up. Toyota and Honda (their luxury analogues) carry a higher sticker and get away with it. I haven't owned one but every person I know who has loves their Mazdas and swears by then. Subaru is like that too.PurpleThrobber said:
The Throbber has a CX9 - best fucking snow car EVER. AWD, throw some studs on that bad boy...like a snow leopard chasing down its prey.1to392831weretaken said:
Mazda is so massively underrated.PurpleThrobber said:We are an Asian car only family - Toyota, Mazda and Nissan.
Never have any issues with them. Ever.
@RoadDawg55's peeps make sweet rides.
I'm excited to see more ~$40K long range electrics hitting the market. Many Luddites still shit on electric, but to them I say, "Don't knock it 'till you've tried it." Quiet, torque for days, way fewer expensive parts to break or expensive maintenance to do, brakes last forever, and never having to stop at the gas station. Here in my corner of Washington, at 10 cents per kWh, it's like driving for free. In somewhere like Wenatchee, where it's under 3 cents? What idiot with a commute doesn't have one?
I used to be a "car guy." I went full fast strategy and bought a 3-Series new first thing after getting hired at my current job. It was my first new vehicle. Why did I get it? Rear wheel drive (steering input at both ends of the car), inline six (natural first and second order balance), manual transmission, back seat, under $40K. Thanks to broadening my horizons to include other expensive hobbies like home-ownership, I've stopped giving a fuck about any of that shit, and all I care about is lowest TCO. Even the cheapest, shittiest cars on the market today have creature comforts that parallel the most expensive car I've owned. For me, car purchases are a spreadsheet exercise: Purchase price minus depreciated value plus expected maintenance plus consumables over predicted length of ownership. Lowest wins. A $40K electric stacks up surprisingly well against all but the cheapest and most efficient gas car--IF it's from a manufacture that still qualifies for the tax rebate (to bring things back to my original post).
Whoever posted the picture of the Mustang Mach-E above is onto something. If you have to have a car that "looks like" an SUV (because, let's face it, only @Swaye actually uses his SUV for S and/or U...), you could do a lot worse. $36K after rebate for a luxury-adjacent car that will drive your eyes into the back of your skull on acceleration, pretty much run for free as long as you own it, and allow you to never have to stop at a gas station again. And, thanks to the tax rebate, you're calculating resale depreciation from a price $7500 above what you paid (IOW, six or seven years down the road, I'd rather be selling what started as a $40K long range electric than what started as a $25K Corolla).
/woman in Japanese board meeting -
I don’t rock crawl per se but have used the shit out of my SUV over the years. Plenty of clearance situations in snow or off road. But yes you’re pretty much on the money.1to392831weretaken said:
Just perused Mazda's website and came away a little disappointed. Seems their fuel economy has dropped nearly 10 mpg across the board. My brother's 3 gets 40 mpg. Nothing they make gets over 31 combined now. I still think they have one of if not the best design aesthetics for any car you can buy under $60K (maybe higher), and they're dead-nuts reliable, but I commute 70 miles round trip, so I look for cars that are easy on the fuel.creepycoug said:
Mazda's are criminally underrated. For some reason, they are the least expensive of the Japanese line-up. Toyota and Honda (their luxury analogues) carry a higher sticker and get away with it. I haven't owned one but every person I know who has loves their Mazdas and swears by then. Subaru is like that too.PurpleThrobber said:
The Throbber has a CX9 - best fucking snow car EVER. AWD, throw some studs on that bad boy...like a snow leopard chasing down its prey.1to392831weretaken said:
Mazda is so massively underrated.PurpleThrobber said:We are an Asian car only family - Toyota, Mazda and Nissan.
Never have any issues with them. Ever.
@RoadDawg55's peeps make sweet rides.
I'm excited to see more ~$40K long range electrics hitting the market. Many Luddites still shit on electric, but to them I say, "Don't knock it 'till you've tried it." Quiet, torque for days, way fewer expensive parts to break or expensive maintenance to do, brakes last forever, and never having to stop at the gas station. Here in my corner of Washington, at 10 cents per kWh, it's like driving for free. In somewhere like Wenatchee, where it's under 3 cents? What idiot with a commute doesn't have one?
I used to be a "car guy." I went full fast strategy and bought a 3-Series new first thing after getting hired at my current job. It was my first new vehicle. Why did I get it? Rear wheel drive (steering input at both ends of the car), inline six (natural first and second order balance), manual transmission, back seat, under $40K. Thanks to broadening my horizons to include other expensive hobbies like home-ownership, I've stopped giving a fuck about any of that shit, and all I care about is lowest TCO. Even the cheapest, shittiest cars on the market today have creature comforts that parallel the most expensive car I've owned. For me, car purchases are a spreadsheet exercise: Purchase price minus depreciated value plus expected maintenance plus consumables over predicted length of ownership. Lowest wins. A $40K electric stacks up surprisingly well against all but the cheapest and most efficient gas car--IF it's from a manufacture that still qualifies for the tax rebate (to bring things back to my original post).
Whoever posted the picture of the Mustang Mach-E above is onto something. If you have to have a car that "looks like" an SUV (because, let's face it, only @Swaye actually uses his SUV for S and/or U...), you could do a lot worse. $36K after rebate for a luxury-adjacent car that will drive your eyes into the back of your skull on acceleration, pretty much run for free as long as you own it, and allow you to never have to stop at a gas station again. And, thanks to the tax rebate, you're calculating resale depreciation from a price $7500 above what you paid (IOW, six or seven years down the road, I'd rather be selling what started as a $40K long range electric than what started as a $25K Corolla).
/woman in Japanese board meeting -
As a guy who takes his vehicle off road and up mountains and into backwoods areas to hunt I am intrigued by the new Defender. I know the knock on Range Rovers is they are about as reliable at a Peterman offense, but old Defenders are nails. Not sure how I feel about IFS, as I am a big believer in solid live axles for real off road shit, but I hear they get good travel, and the torque numbers are impressive as shit. I also doubt seriously it is a body on frame construction, which hurts it in my eyes, but my guess, sadly, is that this might be the last generation of Jeeps that are "traditional" off road rigs.
I know we are talking about less than 1% of the car buying public that still actually wants a rig that can legit go anywhere and do anything (not some gravel road that some Seattle fag thinks is "off roading" in his Subaru), but it still sucks that real super capable off road machines are dying out. I guess Razor's probably have something to do with that as well. You can buy a purpose built little nimble trail runner now.
Whatever, give me live axles, body on frame, beadlocks and 4:1 transfer cases or give me death!
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I think most people would be surprised what modern studless winter tires can do. (@PurpleThrobber: Ditch the studs. They tear up roads, flatten and become pointless quickly, and don't really give you that much more traction these days. People run studless in the Michigan UP just fine.) I've been up to the Baker ski resort sledding hill in January in a sport package RWD 3-series (4" ground clearance) with no chains. Ditto two different minivans. I rarely encounter roads I need to drive on that aren't plowed, but I guess there are times where simply ground clearance over the snow is the difference between moving or not. Those are times it's probably best to stay home anyway.YellowSnow said:
I don’t rock crawl per se but have used the shit out of my SUV over the years. Plenty of clearance situations in snow or off road. But yes you’re pretty much on the money.1to392831weretaken said:
Just perused Mazda's website and came away a little disappointed. Seems their fuel economy has dropped nearly 10 mpg across the board. My brother's 3 gets 40 mpg. Nothing they make gets over 31 combined now. I still think they have one of if not the best design aesthetics for any car you can buy under $60K (maybe higher), and they're dead-nuts reliable, but I commute 70 miles round trip, so I look for cars that are easy on the fuel.creepycoug said:
Mazda's are criminally underrated. For some reason, they are the least expensive of the Japanese line-up. Toyota and Honda (their luxury analogues) carry a higher sticker and get away with it. I haven't owned one but every person I know who has loves their Mazdas and swears by then. Subaru is like that too.PurpleThrobber said:
The Throbber has a CX9 - best fucking snow car EVER. AWD, throw some studs on that bad boy...like a snow leopard chasing down its prey.1to392831weretaken said:
Mazda is so massively underrated.PurpleThrobber said:We are an Asian car only family - Toyota, Mazda and Nissan.
Never have any issues with them. Ever.
@RoadDawg55's peeps make sweet rides.
I'm excited to see more ~$40K long range electrics hitting the market. Many Luddites still shit on electric, but to them I say, "Don't knock it 'till you've tried it." Quiet, torque for days, way fewer expensive parts to break or expensive maintenance to do, brakes last forever, and never having to stop at the gas station. Here in my corner of Washington, at 10 cents per kWh, it's like driving for free. In somewhere like Wenatchee, where it's under 3 cents? What idiot with a commute doesn't have one?
I used to be a "car guy." I went full fast strategy and bought a 3-Series new first thing after getting hired at my current job. It was my first new vehicle. Why did I get it? Rear wheel drive (steering input at both ends of the car), inline six (natural first and second order balance), manual transmission, back seat, under $40K. Thanks to broadening my horizons to include other expensive hobbies like home-ownership, I've stopped giving a fuck about any of that shit, and all I care about is lowest TCO. Even the cheapest, shittiest cars on the market today have creature comforts that parallel the most expensive car I've owned. For me, car purchases are a spreadsheet exercise: Purchase price minus depreciated value plus expected maintenance plus consumables over predicted length of ownership. Lowest wins. A $40K electric stacks up surprisingly well against all but the cheapest and most efficient gas car--IF it's from a manufacture that still qualifies for the tax rebate (to bring things back to my original post).
Whoever posted the picture of the Mustang Mach-E above is onto something. If you have to have a car that "looks like" an SUV (because, let's face it, only @Swaye actually uses his SUV for S and/or U...), you could do a lot worse. $36K after rebate for a luxury-adjacent car that will drive your eyes into the back of your skull on acceleration, pretty much run for free as long as you own it, and allow you to never have to stop at a gas station again. And, thanks to the tax rebate, you're calculating resale depreciation from a price $7500 above what you paid (IOW, six or seven years down the road, I'd rather be selling what started as a $40K long range electric than what started as a $25K Corolla).
/woman in Japanese board meeting
There's this misconception that you're fucked in the snow without AWD. The reality is that, although AWD is useful for getting started and getting up hills, it does fuck all for helping you stop. That's where proper tires come in. Now, proper tires and AWD? Even better. ATBSJBS, I've driven about a half million miles, and a lack of AWD has prevented me from getting where I wanted to go... once I can recall.
That's just my situation, though. I'm sure if I had a long, steep driveway, I'd feel differently about it.