Yes, Corvettes are a great value proposition in smiles per mile. Also, they do not hold value are everywhere But he's in a free country with his own money, so do what you want, I say! |
+1. Get one while you both can get in and out of it without back issues. |
Thank you! Applause! |
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| Meh car. Bet his sidepiece is a looker, though! |
| The Corvette car club has found the thread. |
| OP, your husband will definitely get embarrassed. The only excuse to have this car is to take it to the track and then claim he races it. |
| Let him do what he wants. Every woman here just seem dull and controlling suggesting alternatives. |
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My DH recently bought a sporty car. We can afford it now and he has been a lifelong car enthusiast. Both of us like to go for long drives in it. Unfortunately, I cannot drive the car because it is a stick shift and it has been decades since my last stick shift. It makes my DH soooo happy.
OP - let your DH buy it. Screw what others think. You have one life to live. |
+1. Weird optics for DC; ostentatious and gauche. Nobody of sound mind here wants that kind of extra attention and nobody is impressed by such a car when literally everyone in your social circle has a $1M+ if not $2M+ house |
I do not think the title means what you think it means🙂 |
Yes, I understand metaphors. Enjoy driving your boring econobox. |
+1. People will be haters, gonna say what they want. If he likes it then he needs get it and enjoy it. The FACT is that high performance cars such as the vette, Porsche 911, etc which are stereotyped as mid life crisis items are unaffordable at earlier ages for 99% of the people. Heck, most most cant even afford the insurance premiums! Its only after one gets settled a bit at a later age (50 plus), with disposable income, no need for a back seat, the timing is right for the purchase. Go for it...ignore the losers here and elsewhere. |
| Im a 60yo man and have always owned a vette since I purchased the first one at age 35 and since that time just always traded in for the new gen. Still own a classic 67' split window which I enjoy taking to shows, etc. I must admit this latest "generation" not my cup of tea - just butt ugly and jsut too much plastic and poor build quality. If it were nicer looking, I would get one. There are plenty of men out there who just enjoy the car along with tons of women vette owners. |
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PP's are correct. Almost all new cars are "mid-life crisis cars" now, lol. 35-49 year olds are more likely to go for family vehicles due to life stage.
Here is the Google summary: The average age of a new car buyer in the U.S. is approximately 50 to 53 years old. This demographic has trended older over the past decade, with consumers aged 55 and older now accounting for nearly half of all new vehicle registrations, while the share of buyers aged 18–34 has declined. Key insights into new car buyer demographics: Average Age Trends: Data indicates the average age is around 50–51, with some analyses placing it slightly higher at 53. Aging Demographic: The 55+ age group has seen a 15 percentage point increase in market share since 2000. Declining Youth Share: Buyers under 34 years old represent only about 14% of the market, despite making up 30% of the adult population. Peak Buying Age: The highest rates of new vehicle purchases come from those aged 35–49 and 50–54. |