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:1:And the Fiesta with the dual clutch trans. We have several in my family and all have had problems.
I buy Subarus at about 100,000 miles, and run them to 250,000+. Purchase price is $3500 to $4500 and the first timing belt has already been replaced (about 80,000 miles). This leaves room in the budget for a clutch (about $900) and if necessary a brake job. Get a Legacy or Forester, not a WRX, and you can pretty much be assured that it never ran on testosterone.
I had the same problem a few years ago. I had to make a 300 mile round trip every weekend in my F150. Been doing it for two years. After we did the math we figured out that I can drive that F150 a long way for the price of a new car. Cheaper to pay for the gas in the F150 then it is to pay for two vehicles and buy gas, insurance, up keep and plates for both of them. Plus in the summer time I can ride my bike.
Plus, disposing of an old car and buying a new one is a much bigger strain on Earth's resources than burning a few hundred extra gallons of gasoline.
Is his F150 pickup truck paid for? will the car payment of the new car be more or less than his gas expenses? You can buy a lot of gas for a $300 car payment..
Good cheap, economical fun car?Buy a ten year old Mazda Miata.It will be less than your $9000 budget and return MPGs in the 20s, while actually being fun to drive.
Well, 1. Is this true today? A heck of a lot gets recycled - the steel, the wiring, I think even the plastics.and2. Just because you trade or sell a working vehicle doesn't mean it gets disposed of. It usually gets sold to someone else who keeps it running which is the most efficient method of recycling.
Recycling is definitely a mitigating factor. I don't know how much. It takes time and energy and chemicals to recycle things that don't have to be used if the car is still on the road. And the guy that buys your old car has an OLDER car that he's probably going to junk, unless someone buys THAT car and junks theirs. At any rate, someone's junking a car.The biggest non-mitigating factor is what it takes to produce a NEW car .... and that's quite a bit that doesn't have to be mined, refined, etc if you're still driving the old one .....Lannis
I hear you but isn't that a pretty thin thread of logic. I.E. your buying a new car enables someone to junk an old one.I mean, if the old one is that bad off it's gonna get junked either way.
That's the way we behave today because we have huge amounts of money and desire for new cars. But if we decided we were going to make things last longer, and spend our money keeping them running right rather than trashing them and buying a new one, we wouldn't be mining and refining and pumping and melting quite as fast, which in many ways would be a good thing. It's just the way I roll. As I've mentioned before, I put my money where my mouth is - two new cars in 40 years, I take care of them and the old ones with a goal of a quarter-million miles per car, and my household average fuel economy is over 40 MPG. I think the world would be a better place if everyone behaved like that, although I'm under no illusions that it will happen. But you only do what you can ....Lannis
My debate is with the "we".We as a society? Not gonna happen. Some people will always have the money and desire for new cars.Others are not, and by necessity WILL keep the old ones running as long as they can.What happens in between is, well, in between. But I doubt there's a 1st world nation or a growing 2nd or 3rd that doesn't have similar groups and a desire for the new.That doesn't mean that every old vehicle gets trashed every time a new one is bought. Though I guess some percentage must, or the number of operating cars in the world just grows exponentially.
I just picked up a used Toyota Yaris for my daughter to replace her VW Golf with a 180,000 miles on it. Nothing was wrong with the Golf yet but at the miles she had on it it was time for an up grade. The Yaris is a four door hatch back with an automatic and drives quite nicely and should be in your price range. It has a timing chain instead of a belt so you do not have that replacement cost down the road.
I have an 08 Honda Fit. Can't say enough good things about it. Tons of room, well equiped for the price( ac,cruise,power windows and locks). Just keeps going and going. Still on the original battery even!
Let's see here.....$9000 @ 3.00 a gallon = 3000 gallons of gas @ 10 miles/gallon = 30000 miles divided by 1000 miles per month = 30 months...Worse Casepretty close to 3 years and I bet his F150 gets more than 10 miles/gallon.Unless it's just a good excuse to get a new car...Nothing wrong with that!!As a side note my wife drives 500 miles/week to get to and from work.....2012 Honda civic coupe 38-40 MPG 120k no problems
I'd use numbers more like this:$9000 used car / $2.00 per gallon gas = 4500 gallons of gas @ 14 miles per gallon = 63,000 miles / 1,500 miles per month = 42 months.But that's not counting the fuel cost of the new car, which would make the "cost" of the car over the same time be much more. Lets says the economy car returns 28 mpg.63,000 miles at 28 mpg is 2,250 gallons of gas. At our $2.00 per gallon, that's $4,500 on top of the $9,000 spent on the car. (Another $4,500 that could be spend on fuel for the truck!)The cost to own the $9,000 28mpg car for 63,000 miles will be at least $13,500 when you add fuel.Basically, it will take nearly a decade before buying the $9000.00 28 mpg car to save gas over the $0.00 14 mpg truck would actually save any money. And either one would've been traded off by then, anyway.If the pickup is in good order, and if it's paid for, I don't see the economics of buying a car to save money on gas...
There are a few unknowns that make this calculation difficult.