Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:German cars are garbage. They charge exorbitant amount of money for their clunky nonsense. Perhaps, there was a time when they were a a lot of things at once; reliable, performant and pleasant . But, nowadays , i find german cars are for people who want the brand names, to say nothing of the fact that, in this area at least, german car drivers are also some of the worst and most obnoxious.
Having said all that, if you're going to buy a german car, do not buy used. There's an argument to be made that if used is what you can afford , then you can't afford it anyway. Buying a used german car is buying problems—literally and figuratively.
It's evident that you have never travelled outside of the country. Go to Germany. You'll change your mind. Plenty and German luxury cars with no problems.
Yeah ! You're right , I've never travelled outside of the country and i need to go *outside* of the country or, specifically to the country these brands originate from to get a shot at a car that isn't a money pit. That wasn't the clever nor convincing retort you thought it was . If anything, you just confirmed what i wrote .
How any more ways can you let us know that you're too poor to drive anything other than a toyota
We’re supposed to feel bad about driving Toyotas? Are you nuts?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:German cars are garbage. They charge exorbitant amount of money for their clunky nonsense. Perhaps, there was a time when they were a a lot of things at once; reliable, performant and pleasant . But, nowadays , i find german cars are for people who want the brand names, to say nothing of the fact that, in this area at least, german car drivers are also some of the worst and most obnoxious.
Having said all that, if you're going to buy a german car, do not buy used. There's an argument to be made that if used is what you can afford , then you can't afford it anyway. Buying a used german car is buying problems—literally and figuratively.
Take a chill pill. It's not that serious.
If you can afford the initial and maintenance costs of owning a German car, go for it.
Nonsense.
Either you don't like driving or you can't afford to maintain a German car. Or both. It's OK. There is a boring Toyota or Subaru out there with your name on it.
This is laughable. Given the price premium of most german cars , i find their design comically underwhelming. Enjoy the badge.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:German cars are garbage. They charge exorbitant amount of money for their clunky nonsense. Perhaps, there was a time when they were a a lot of things at once; reliable, performant and pleasant . But, nowadays , i find german cars are for people who want the brand names, to say nothing of the fact that, in this area at least, german car drivers are also some of the worst and most obnoxious.
Having said all that, if you're going to buy a german car, do not buy used. There's an argument to be made that if used is what you can afford , then you can't afford it anyway. Buying a used german car is buying problems—literally and figuratively.
It's evident that you have never travelled outside of the country. Go to Germany. You'll change your mind. Plenty and German luxury cars with no problems.
Yeah ! You're right , I've never travelled outside of the country and i need to go *outside* of the country or, specifically to the country these brands originate from to get a shot at a car that isn't a money pit. That wasn't the clever nor convincing retort you thought it was . If anything, you just confirmed what i wrote .
How any more ways can you let us know that you're too poor to drive anything other than a toyota
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:German cars are garbage. They charge exorbitant amount of money for their clunky nonsense. Perhaps, there was a time when they were a a lot of things at once; reliable, performant and pleasant . But, nowadays , i find german cars are for people who want the brand names, to say nothing of the fact that, in this area at least, german car drivers are also some of the worst and most obnoxious.
Having said all that, if you're going to buy a german car, do not buy used. There's an argument to be made that if used is what you can afford , then you can't afford it anyway. Buying a used german car is buying problems—literally and figuratively.
Take a chill pill. It's not that serious.
If you can afford the initial and maintenance costs of owning a German car, go for it.
Nonsense.
Either you don't like driving or you can't afford to maintain a German car. Or both. It's OK. There is a boring Toyota or Subaru out there with your name on it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:German cars are garbage. They charge exorbitant amount of money for their clunky nonsense. Perhaps, there was a time when they were a a lot of things at once; reliable, performant and pleasant . But, nowadays , i find german cars are for people who want the brand names, to say nothing of the fact that, in this area at least, german car drivers are also some of the worst and most obnoxious.
Having said all that, if you're going to buy a german car, do not buy used. There's an argument to be made that if used is what you can afford , then you can't afford it anyway. Buying a used german car is buying problems—literally and figuratively.
Take a chill pill. It's not that serious.
If you can afford the initial and maintenance costs of owning a German car, go for it.
Nonsense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:German cars are garbage. They charge exorbitant amount of money for their clunky nonsense. Perhaps, there was a time when they were a a lot of things at once; reliable, performant and pleasant . But, nowadays , i find german cars are for people who want the brand names, to say nothing of the fact that, in this area at least, german car drivers are also some of the worst and most obnoxious.
Having said all that, if you're going to buy a german car, do not buy used. There's an argument to be made that if used is what you can afford , then you can't afford it anyway. Buying a used german car is buying problems—literally and figuratively.
It's evident that you have never travelled outside of the country. Go to Germany. You'll change your mind. Plenty and German luxury cars with no problems.
Yeah ! You're right , I've never travelled outside of the country and i need to go *outside* of the country or, specifically to the country these brands originate from to get a shot at a car that isn't a money pit. That wasn't the clever nor convincing retort you thought it was . If anything, you just confirmed what i wrote .
How any more ways can you let us know that you're too poor to drive anything other than a toyota
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've always owned German cars and currently have a POS Mini Cooper S, a MBZ E55 and a Porsche Cayenne.
As far as reliability they're not in the same league as say a Toyota or other Japanese brands. I also own a couple Toyotas, that are not troublesome but is just an appliance. Takes you from point A to B without any drama. German cars are NOT boring, and if you're not a DIYer, don't buy one without a warranty.
Before buying go to the respective car forums, mbworld.org, audizine, bimmerfest, etc., and research the SPECIFIC model you're interested in. Spend sometime on 6speedonline, pelican parts.com+, and hear owners experiences.
oh, and to the OP, I'd choose a MB. Go here and research.https://mbworld.org
Anonymous wrote:My most reliable car (23 years old, 350k miles) has been a Toyota. We’ve owned several German cars and they all needed expensive repairs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:German cars are garbage. They charge exorbitant amount of money for their clunky nonsense. Perhaps, there was a time when they were a a lot of things at once; reliable, performant and pleasant . But, nowadays , i find german cars are for people who want the brand names, to say nothing of the fact that, in this area at least, german car drivers are also some of the worst and most obnoxious.
Having said all that, if you're going to buy a german car, do not buy used. There's an argument to be made that if used is what you can afford , then you can't afford it anyway. Buying a used german car is buying problems—literally and figuratively.
It's evident that you have never travelled outside of the country. Go to Germany. You'll change your mind. Plenty and German luxury cars with no problems.
Yeah ! You're right , I've never travelled outside of the country and i need to go *outside* of the country or, specifically to the country these brands originate from to get a shot at a car that isn't a money pit. That wasn't the clever nor convincing retort you thought it was . If anything, you just confirmed what i wrote .
Anonymous wrote:German cars are garbage. They charge exorbitant amount of money for their clunky nonsense. Perhaps, there was a time when they were a a lot of things at once; reliable, performant and pleasant . But, nowadays , i find german cars are for people who want the brand names, to say nothing of the fact that, in this area at least, german car drivers are also some of the worst and most obnoxious.
Having said all that, if you're going to buy a german car, do not buy used. There's an argument to be made that if used is what you can afford , then you can't afford it anyway. Buying a used german car is buying problems—literally and figuratively.
you're definitely not a car person.