Anonymous wrote:The new safety features like Collison avoidance and blind spot monitoring are a major game changer and a new advancement worthy of an early upgrade. In fact the new cars of today with insurance safety discounts and zero percent finding cost less then used cars In the mid term. (Someone who is probably going to trade in early).
Anonymous wrote:The new safety features like Collison avoidance and blind spot monitoring are a major game changer and a new advancement worthy of an early upgrade. In fact the new cars of today with insurance safety discounts and zero percent finding cost less then used cars In the mid term. (Someone who is probably going to trade in early).
Anonymous wrote:DH and I typically buy a new car every 5 years, and keep each of our cars about 10. We figure after 10 years and about 100k miles we want something more reliable to haul around the kids. I am curious what other DCUMers do...we see some who lease and replace every 2-3 years, some replace a main car every 4 years while keeping a secondary car for 10-15. It's not a money issue for us - we typically pay all cash and don't buy anything flashy. Should we be keeping our cars longer? I am amazed that we can still typically get 40% or so of the car's original price as a trade-in 10 years later.
Anonymous wrote:In my family its almost a contest to see who can keep a car running the longest. My mom basically had one car my entire childhood (had an 82 corolla) and my dad one for 14 years (89 volvo). My mom still has her "replacement" corolla ( 98) and my dad has an 03 accord..both still running strong. Our household consists of a 00 camry and a 12 pruis. We will replace the camry the second we have to put money in it over normal maintenance. My mom always had this theory that cars should last about how long dogs last.
Anonymous wrote:^^ Hondas and Toyotas are stolen a lot for parts. Even older models because the cars run for a long time and it's harder to get parts for them.