Anonymous wrote:
I bought a 1975 450Sl Mercedes convertible in 1992 for $7,500 and it got totaled in 2012. I had it 20 years, put around $12K worrth of repairs and maint in it over 20 years. My insurance was on average $100 a year as a collector car. When totaled it was appreciated so I got paid out $18,500. I also paid like $25 bucks a year registration and inspection as a classic car.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We just bought a luxury car, a Tesla S P100D. Paid cash. We don’t have a mortgage, education is fully funded, etc. Retired.
Can’t take the money with you when you are dead so why not?!? Love our new car! Worth the money.
Great choice!
Anonymous wrote:Anyone who spends that much on a car is bad with money. Full stop.
Anonymous wrote:As someone who's been riding in luxury vehicles a lot (other people drive me), I can definitely tell the difference in ride quality between a Toyota Highlander and an Acura RDX or Mercedes GLS. It adds another layer of insulation between you and the elements, so to speak. You also get all the nifty little things that's "shit this is nice" but not "my life depends on having this!" (panoramic roof is magical in the Model 3 and some other brands).
Now whether that is worth it is up to each person. I personally am not at the income level to feel comfortable dropping more than $30k on a vehicle, so I don't. But I don't fault people who make 5x what I do to drop 3x what I do on their cars.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would someone buy a 70-150k car when a 35k car gets you around just fine? Seems like a waste to me. I have a friend who just bought a Mercedes and I don't think k I could bring myself to do it. I know everyone's values are different but if I got a raise, I would go on vacation and save some.
I bought a 1975 450Sl Mercedes convertible in 1992 for $7,500 and it got totaled in 2012. I had it 20 years, put around $12K worrth of repairs and maint in it over 20 years. My insurance was on average $100 a year as a collector car. When totaled it was appreciated so I got paid out $18,500. I also paid like $25 bucks a year registration and inspection as a classic car.
Net cost was $3,500 to keep it on road with insurance, maint and registration for 20 years. I laughed so hard at neighbors leasing cars for like $350 a month who were impressed at my mercedes. They spend $84,000 on lease payments alone over 20 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anyone who spends that much on a car is bad with money. Full stop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:-Comfort (seat warmers, softer ride, don’t feel potholes, etc)
-More features, including safety features
If you look at cars now, they have come a long way from cars with back-up cameras. DH just bought a $65k car because he has a ridiculous daily commute and it has features like auto drive in traffic (it slows down and speeds up, brakes for you if someone brakes fast), and sensors all around so you always know if there’s someone in your blind spot, or if a kid runs out into the street when you’re backing up, thinks like that. ..
Relying on auto drive is a bad idea. Sounds like he wants the car to drive for him. That's dangerous. He should take the train!
I have one like this. You have to keep your hands on the wheel or it will disengage. The car has faster reflexes than a human.
In the market for a new car. What kind of car is this please?
Anonymous wrote:If money was NO concern, meaning I didn't have to worry about kids college or retirement I would buy one. Why the heck not. Better leather seats, more fun to drive (sport/great acceleration), smooth ride... this isn't Russia.
Anonymous wrote:Why would someone buy a 70-150k car when a 35k car gets you around just fine? Seems like a waste to me. I have a friend who just bought a Mercedes and I don't think k I could bring myself to do it. I know everyone's values are different but if I got a raise, I would go on vacation and save some.