Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t consider a RR, BMW, Mercedes, Porsche SUV, etc. to be impressive or worthy of notice. They’re driven by soccer moms all over this area. Lol to people feeling self-conscious driving around a Mercedes.
One or two $1,000-1,500 car notes or lease payments is nothing to sneeze at.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The OP must not realize in today’s market cars like BMW, Mercedes, Land Rover, Porsche, Volvo, are not exotic, especially the basic consumer lines like the X5, GL, Cayenne, 5 series and E classes, and nobody GAF. You can find tons of these on any air force base driven by E-5s. A married couple making a combined 120 a year can happily afford any of these.
No effing way can a married couple making 120k afford any of these. They can afford a used Mazda/Toyota. We make double that an have an Odyssey (that I love and wouldn’t trade for any SUV)
No my friend, a used Toyota is what someone making 25k a year can afford (think your high school janitor). It's normal for new college graduates starting at 50k to buy a new car for $25k. So why wouldn't somebody making 100k be able to buy a $50k car?
Exactly. I’d rather buy one of these proper cars than some front wheel drive Toyota or Honda that feels like it’s made out of aluminum cans.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t consider a RR, BMW, Mercedes, Porsche SUV, etc. to be impressive or worthy of notice. They’re driven by soccer moms all over this area. Lol to people feeling self-conscious driving around a Mercedes.
Anonymous wrote:I side eye those that drive fancy luxury cars but send their kids to crappy public schools.
+1. Public school, baby!Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I side eye those that drive fancy luxury cars but send their kids to crappy public schools.
You're side eyeing me, then! And life is great, baby! Don't worry about my family, worry about yourself my friend!
Same here. Keep kidding yourself that your child is getting a better education just because you paid more for it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I side eye those that drive fancy luxury cars but send their kids to crappy public schools.
You're side eyeing me, then! And life is great, baby! Don't worry about my family, worry about yourself my friend!
Anonymous wrote:I side eye those that drive fancy luxury cars but send their kids to crappy public schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The OP must not realize in today’s market cars like BMW, Mercedes, Land Rover, Porsche, Volvo, are not exotic, especially the basic consumer lines like the X5, GL, Cayenne, 5 series and E classes, and nobody GAF. You can find tons of these on any air force base driven by E-5s. A married couple making a combined 120 a year can happily afford any of these.
No effing way can a married couple making 120k afford any of these. They can afford a used Mazda/Toyota. We make double that an have an Odyssey (that I love and wouldn’t trade for any SUV)
No my friend, a used Toyota is what someone making 25k a year can afford (think your high school janitor). It's normal for new college graduates starting at 50k to buy a new car for $25k. So why wouldn't somebody making 100k be able to buy a $50k car?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, I do not care what other people think of my car nor the judgements they may make about me. I also don’t care about the cars other people choose to buy and drive. I care about how people drive, not what they drive.
This. I don't really notice what other people drive or worry about assumptions people make about my cars. They work really well and are fun to drive - a porsche and a BMW. They are also over 10 years old but look in great shape.
It must be exhausting to worry about so many things like this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Or do they want and like all the eyeballs on them and people assuming they're made of money? I'd honestly feel incredibly awkward randomly rolling up to work in an expensive car. I'd worry it could hurt my career and perception with colleagues, superiors and clients. Once on a business trip I was randomly given some super expensive Mercedes SUV rental and it felt like everyone was gawking whenever parked.
I think Tesla has mastered the fancy-but-subtle styling/branding – but so many people have fancy and flashy Range Rovers, Yukon Denalis, Escalades, BMW X7s, Porsche SUVs, expensive Mercedes sedans and SUVs, G-Wagons, Bentley SUVs they're practically a dime a dozen.
At the very least I feel like I'd need a second lower-key car when I didn't want anyone to notice me.
OP - it sounds like you are wanting to buy a Tesla or something else but worried about how it would make you look?