Anonymous wrote:2022 Toyota rav 4 hybrid
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get an accord or corolla. Best cars you can get, they have the fewest issues and last forever.
My first car was a Corolla so this advice is close to my heart. With all of the SUVs on the road, I wonder whether to get a higher profile car for better visibility. But our "youngest" car is 14 years old, so we are looking closely since most of the safety features have been updated a couple times over.
Anonymous wrote:The newer cars have all the safety features. Sensors when you’re too close, backup cameras, overhead cameras, braking alerts, bind spot sensors and so forth. I feel like it will cause less scrapes and accidents. But they come at a cost. I am torn whether kids should learn the hard way in case they drive a car that doesn’t have the features or is it better to have them with it since they are new drivers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get an accord or corolla. Best cars you can get, they have the fewest issues and last forever.
My first car was a Corolla so this advice is close to my heart. With all of the SUVs on the road, I wonder whether to get a higher profile car for better visibility. But our "youngest" car is 14 years old, so we are looking closely since most of the safety features have been updated a couple times over.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS got our old minivan that had been totaled in a hailstorm (baseball sized hail, do not recommend) and we bought back from the insurance company for something like $2500 in 2018.
Can you explain this?
It got totaled and you "bought it back"?
And it's still driveable?
Thank you
Anonymous wrote:DS got our old minivan that had been totaled in a hailstorm (baseball sized hail, do not recommend) and we bought back from the insurance company for something like $2500 in 2018.