Elkins45
Thread starter
You miss the point.id say buy lower brand vehicle that is newer. you could probably find a much newer corolla or civic for a similar price.
You miss the point.id say buy lower brand vehicle that is newer. you could probably find a much newer corolla or civic for a similar price.
Only if you’re a glutton for punishment.Skip the Lexus and treat yourself to a Jaguar XJ of the same vintage.
no, I got the point. its just a moot one. there is nothing special about an old mass produced vehicle. you should always want the newest most reliable vehicle possible. a vehicle is a tool, and the best tool is the one that works with the smallest about of attention as possible. you want something that all you have to think about is getting in a turning the key.You miss the point.
I currently own three cars and two trucks. There’s no shortage of working vehicles at my house. I’m just amusing myself with this purchase.no, I got the point. its just a moot one. there is nothing special about an old mass produced vehicle. you should always want the newest most reliable vehicle possible. a vehicle is a tool, and the best tool is the one that works with the smallest about of attention as possible. you want something that all you have to think about is getting in a turning the key.
with all the maintenance cost, and insurance. you would be way ahead financially with one newer vehicle. if you sold everything you would be ahead even with a small note on a newer vehicle. I've had old vehicles, I was spending around 1000 a year on parts on the low end.I currently own three cars and two trucks. There’s no shortage of working vehicles at my house. I’m just amusing myself with this purchase.
My wife drives a 2019 RX 350 that I don't drive much anymore but I did drive it into Boston last night to the Bruins game. It was built in Canada and has 60k easy miles. There are quite a few squeaks and rattles, the driver door buzzes with the stereo bass (the passenger did this when it was new and they added foam to remedy it and that mostly took care of it but 55k miles later my wife doesn't care enough to bring it in), the transmission has quite a few hard shifts, it needed its first brake job at 30k miles and now it needs its second at 60k miles. The engine runs like a top with no oil consumption. The steering feels "loose" compared to when it was new. I'm sure it will run for many hundreds of thousands of miles but I was surprised how "loose" it feels in general at 60k miles. My Tundra at 55k miles still feels like new.100%. MIL’s 24 RX was built in Canada and I am not impressed at all. Her precious 13 ES was built in Japan and the build and paint quality are significantly higher. For instance, the amount of dirt in the paint finish is astounding….almost as bad as my Ram.
There are plenty of older vehicles that don't require extra maintenance. Part of this is defining "old" and you better believe I'd take an old Lexus over many "new" vehicles all things equal.with all the maintenance cost, and insurance. you would be way ahead financially with one newer vehicle. if you sold everything you would be ahead even with a small note on a newer vehicle. I've had old vehicles, I was spending around 1000 a year on parts on the low end.
but they aren't equal one has ten years of heat cycling and one just rolled off the line.There are plenty of older vehicles that don't require extra maintenance. Part of this is defining "old" and you better believe I'd take an old Lexus over many "new" vehicles all things equal.
For sure, but there are some 10 year old vehicles with 10 years of good maintenance that can be more reliable than a brand new vehicle riddled with recalls and issues straight from the factory.but they aren't equal one has ten years of heat cycling and one just rolled off the line.
I am with you on that. Anything built in the last 4 years especially.For sure, but there are some 10 year old vehicles with 10 years of good maintenance that can be more reliable than a brand new vehicle riddled with recalls and issues straight from the factory.
I haven’t spent $1000 total on parts for every vehicle I own combined in the last 10 years, and that includes the consumables. Other than brake pads the only parts I’ve replaced are a belt idler, a wheel bearing, and an ignition switch for a truck I barely consider as mine.I was spending around 1000 a year on parts on the low end.
I don't see how that is possible. a oem alternator now is several hundred dollars alone. oem wheel bearings are similar.I haven’t spent $1000 total on parts for every vehicle I own combined in the last 10 years, and that includes the consumables. Other than brake pads the only parts I’ve replaced are a belt idler, a wheel bearing, and an ignition switch for a truck I barely consider as mine.
Your point about insurance is valid for sure, but with a nice new vehicle I would have to carry full coverage but with old clunkers I’m fine with just liability. I’m currently only carrying full coverage on the two newest ones. The others are just a few hundred per year combined. Besides, if I get a decent Lexus I’ll sell one of the toasters.
Aren’t those items cheaper on older cars?I don't see how that is possible. a oem alternator now is several hundred dollars alone. oem wheel bearings are similar.
The OEM Mazda tensioner was around $150 and the Scion hub assembly was around $100 but it wasn’t OEM. I also realized I left off a $60 Denso 02 sensor I just replaced on the older xB.I don't see how that is possible. an oem alternator now is several hundred dollars alone. oem wheel bearings are similar.
not particularly, 2010 Honda accord alternator was $800. that was back in 2019. tried the 200 dollar o Reilly special. it failed in six months.Aren’t those items cheaper on older cars?