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25 new of 120 responses total.
jp2
response 15 of 120: Mark Unseen   Nov 17 14:15 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

keesan
response 16 of 120: Mark Unseen   Nov 17 15:41 UTC 2003

Don't assume that a used car (say 4 years old) would need the same amount of
repairs as the 1992 car you were driving.  WHat is the cost of a 4 year old
Toyota?
twenex
response 17 of 120: Mark Unseen   Nov 17 15:46 UTC 2003

Someone might be selling a 1>2 year old machine because they need to, not
because there is anything wrong with it. Any used car should come with a full
service history, manuals, and be checked for rust and a working gearbox, etc.
edina
response 18 of 120: Mark Unseen   Nov 17 15:50 UTC 2003

John, my mom drives a Cavalier - it's her 4th one.  If you want, give her a
call and ask her - she also got hers on the discount.
gull
response 19 of 120: Mark Unseen   Nov 17 16:18 UTC 2003

The main complaint I've heard about the new Saturns (other than the
styling, which I personally hate) is that they have extremely wide
turning radiuses for small cars.  I've jokingly suggested that since GM
is advertising the four-wheel-steering version of the Suburban as having
a turning radius "the same as a Saturn sedan," maybe they had to cripple
the sedan's turning radius a bit to meet that target. ;>
bru
response 20 of 120: Mark Unseen   Nov 17 16:56 UTC 2003

My saturn was a good car, very dependable, but after 60,000 it started using
oil.  on the other hand, a guy I worked with had the same saturn I had and
had 200,000 on it with no oil usage, but he did maintain the oil changes at
3000 which I did not.

I also loved my Cavalier.  It took a head on collission at 60 mph and the
passenger compartment stayed intact.  No one in our car was injured, everybody
in the other car was.  WE wore our seat belts, tehy did not.  (we were both
going about 30 mph on a very slippery road.)  They were driving a ford.
twenex
response 21 of 120: Mark Unseen   Nov 17 18:09 UTC 2003

Cavaliers were great. We had a GTX (or something) souped-up sports version.
(They *were* great because in Europe they've been replaced by the "Vectra").

We had an old Voilvo that took a collision coming out of a cul-de-sac w/i a
guy in a Renault 5 who was blind by choice (i.e. he didn't look where he was
going). Totalled the Renault, though IIRC the guy was ok; on the left side,
where he hit us, the Volvo's indicator light broke.
jep
response 22 of 120: Mark Unseen   Nov 17 18:34 UTC 2003

My brother works for Saturn.  A half year ago, when I asked him, he 
advised me to avoid the Ion.  I plan to talk to him and see if he 
thinks they're better now, but if he's not willing to heartily 
recommend it, I don't want one.

Discounts available to me for the Chevy Cavalier and Pontiac Sunfire, 
the two GM cars I am considering:

-- $4000 discount for the model (or they have these basic car specials
   which amounts to about the same discount)
-- about $2000 employee/family discount
-- 50% of the down payment up to $2000 (up to $1000 discount).  This is
   also for employees and family.
jep
response 23 of 120: Mark Unseen   Nov 17 18:51 UTC 2003

I have never in my life heard a good word spoken about the Jim Bradley 
dealership.  I went to them around 10 years ago when I was thinking of 
buying a Saturn and became the only person I know who was ever treated 
shabbily by a Saturn dealer.

Not to hold a grudge, though... if anyone here can say anything nice 
about them, I'll probably at least talk to them.

Mary and John, do you buy your Hondas at Howard Cooper?  There *is* 
something to be said about Consumer Reports and probably everyone else 
saying the car you're buying is the best built car in it's class.
rcurl
response 24 of 120: Mark Unseen   Nov 17 18:55 UTC 2003

No one has mentioned the consideration of whether a car meets one's
desires for functionality for one's own uses. Mine have been a station
wagon (not SUV) with 4- or All- wheel drive, and a manual transmission,
at the lowest cost. That combination pretty much limited me to a Subaru. 


gelinas
response 25 of 120: Mark Unseen   Nov 17 19:31 UTC 2003

(Russ, I think you dropped a decimal point in the first set of equations in
#14.  You wrote, "$6500 / ( 1/280 gallons/mile * $2/gallon )"; shouldn't 
that be 1/0.280 gallons/mile?
gull
response 26 of 120: Mark Unseen   Nov 17 19:40 UTC 2003

I have a Honda Civic I'm selling, incidentally, but I imagine you won't want
it because it has airbags.
mary
response 27 of 120: Mark Unseen   Nov 17 21:56 UTC 2003

I buy the Hondas and John is a Toyata man.  I can't remember the
name of his dealer, it's on Jackson Rd., near Wagner.  I buy
from Howard Cooper but let it be known I'll travel elsewhere
for a better deal. 
jep
response 28 of 120: Mark Unseen   Nov 17 22:26 UTC 2003

All cars built in the last 10 years have airbags, Dave.  I've ranted 
against them in the past, but failed so far to provoke widesweeping 
sentiment banning them from all cars.  While my opposition seeps 
through the nation, I guess I'll just have to put up with their 
existence for a year or two.

Is it the car you listed in the classified conference?  I figured that 
would have been gone by now.
jep
response 29 of 120: Mark Unseen   Nov 17 22:50 UTC 2003

Oh, yeah... re Russ, resp:14: The price of a hybrid is around $3000 
more than for a gas car.  The federal government gives a $2000 tax 
rebate for buying one.  I seriously considered the hybrid Honda Civic 
but decided to wait a few years on the hybrids.  
twenex
response 30 of 120: Mark Unseen   Nov 17 22:52 UTC 2003

I'd be interested to know what's so wrong with airbags.
tod
response 31 of 120: Mark Unseen   Nov 17 23:09 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

rcurl
response 32 of 120: Mark Unseen   Nov 18 00:28 UTC 2003

Re #28: I got rid of my 1986 Subaru in part because it did NOT have airbags.
But if we are lucky only cars with airbags will be on the road in a few
years.
jep
response 33 of 120: Mark Unseen   Nov 18 00:31 UTC 2003

re resp:30: I have a 7 year old son.  It would be nearly as effective a 
safety device to put an iron portcullis on his side of the car, with 
sharpened, poisoned spikes, which would drill through his body in the 
event of an accident, as to have an airbag for his seat.  If he rides 
in the front seat, he may be at an increased risk of injury if we're in 
an accident, but if he's in the front seat with an airbag, he is in 
mortal danger if we even get in a bumper-thumper type accident.

Some "safety" feature.  It costs about $700, per seat, to have a new 
car equipped with this benefit.

It does ensure, no questions about it, for *sure*, he will *always* be 
sitting in the back seat if I buy a new car, because of the hugely 
increased hazard of this "safety" device.  The aforementioned 
portcullis would also do that.

Not that I want to discuss air bags or anything.  Please take that 
discussion to another item.  We also discussed airbags in the Bummed 
item.
twenex
response 34 of 120: Mark Unseen   Nov 18 00:38 UTC 2003

Jesus wept. Maybe they did that to ensure kids got in the back, as well. It's
illegal in the uk for kids to go in the front up until about 6 or 7 anyways.
johnnie
response 35 of 120: Mark Unseen   Nov 18 01:44 UTC 2003

I seem to recall hearing that (some?) newer cars allow the passenger air 
bags to be turned off, and/or have newfangled gadgetry that sense the 
size of the passenger and adjust the air bag inflation accordingly?  
Yes/no?

johnnie
response 36 of 120: Mark Unseen   Nov 18 01:51 UTC 2003

Oh, and as to the Cavalier:  Over the past decade, myself and a couple 
family members have owned Cavaliers, and would not hesitate to buy 
another.  Mine, an '89, served me well and faithfully until I sold it at 
170,000+ miles (and it was still running just fine, thank you).  

jep
response 37 of 120: Mark Unseen   Nov 18 03:30 UTC 2003

It's certainly interesting to hear all the commentary about 
Cavaliers.  I had not previously considered the Cavalier, though I'd 
thought about the Pontiac Sunfire.  I'm considering it now!

I should add, to my description of my perceptions of the GM WWW sites 
(except Saturn): it's maddening how often the chevrolet.com and 
pontiac.com WWW sites are down, or just fail to respond.  It is often 
impossible to change the color on a Pontiac Sunfire to "red"; they 
thought of the car as grey, and grey is what you're usually going to 
see on the WWW.  The sites frequently fail to respond at all, or 
respond with an "I'm sorry, the system isn't working right now" type 
message.
scg
response 38 of 120: Mark Unseen   Nov 18 06:22 UTC 2003

My 2003 VW Jetta has weight sensors in the seats that are supposed to adjust
airbag deployment force based on the size of the occupant, and not have the
airbags deploy for empty seats.  It's still got warning labels saying not to
let kids under age 12 sit in the front seats due to airbag danger.  I don't
know if that's just a matter of not trusting the sensors, or if the sensors
really don't distinguish well between kids over 12 and kids under 12.

As far as Saturns go, my 1994 Saturn has done pretty well at keeping running
once I started mostly ignoring routing maintenance several years ago.  During
the first few years I had it, I was being careful and taking it in for regular
service, and every time I did something would be found seriously wrong with
it, which would be expensive to fix.  For the last several years I've been
pouring in a quart of oil every thousand miles, getting the oil changed at
a quick oil change place two or three times a year (I haven't been driving
much the last few years), and deciding on a case by case basis whether the
plastic components that break off did any thing functional.  For the only one
that seemed critical (the piece of plastic on the bottom of the car that
channels air into the cooling system) I discovered I was able to reattach the
old one using ethernet cable rather than having it replaced at a cost of
several hundred dollars like I'd done the last couple of times.  Still, when
I got to the point were there was some somewhat significant work I'd have to
do to make it a good road trip car again, and I'd already been looking into
buying a new car during the week the Saturn was missing after it got stolen,
I decided I'd rather replace it than deal with it being repaired.  At almost
10 years old with 130,000 miles on it, I think it's done reasonably well. 
Anybody in the Bay Area want to buy a cheap car?

After finding out what a hassle it is to deal with a stolen car, being hard
to steal quickly rose to near the top of my priority list, and that eliminates
Hondas and Toyotas from consideration.  I don't know if the current generation
of Saturns has gotten any better in that regard, but I was told by the cop
who took my stolen car report that mid-90s Saturns are stolen so often that
the police around here run the plates whenever they see one.  Indeed, I was
talking to somebody on the train this morning who was complaining that his
'94 Saturn had just been stolen for the second time in a year.  That mine was
returned with no damage to the door or the ignition presumably illustrates
just how easy they are to drive off with.  The Jetta, in addition to its alarm
system, has a radio transceiver in the key that has to be in close proximity
to the dash board, or the engine control computer won't run.

I ended up choosing the Jetta for a number of reasons, most of which probably 
won't appeal to jep.  Part of it was because it appears hard to steal.  Part
of it was for safety -- In addition to anti-locks brakes and traction control,
the big airbag question now appears to be not whether to have them but how
many to have.  The Jetta has six of them, front and side for each front seat
passenger, and "side curtain" which goes between the side windows and the
heads of both front and back seat passengers.  The high end luxury cars have
eight.  They add front airbags for the back seat passengers as well.  Other
cars in the Jetta's price range tend to have at most four.  Mostly, though,
the Jetta is just a really fun car to drive.  I wanted a Mercedes or BMW or
Audi, and the Jetta was the closest I could comfortably afford.

The big lesson I learned from car buying this time was the importance of both
shopping around and negotiating.  I started out at the VW dealer that's an
easy walk from my house, where the salesman was very nice and quoted me a
price that was slightly below dealer invoice, so I suspected I was getting
a good deal.  To be sure, I sent requests for quotes to several other VW
dealers in the area (car dealers all now have "Internet sales departments,"
to deal with requests that come in by e-mail or via web forms, and which
supposedly quote lower prices than the sales people in the dealership can
quote), and ended up with a fairly large spread, ranging from slightly above
what I'd been quoted by the first dealer to $2,000 below.

I then went to talk to the guy with the $2,000 lower quote, and found him to 
be really slimy, but also rather easy to push down on price even further.  We 
talked for a couple hours, with him becoming progressively ruder, me becoming 
progressively angrier, and him lowering the price more and more whenever I 
indicated that I didn't like him and really would prefer not to buy from him.  
By the end of that session, we were $2,500 lower than my quote from the 
original dealer, and had moved up to a car with significantly more options.  
He refused to give me the quote in writing, which I thought was strange.  I 
refused to buy without spending the night thinking it over first.  The more I 
thought about it, the more I really wanted to run screaming from the slimy 
salesman, but his pricing seemed just too good to do so.  

I called back the original dealer, and it turned out he didn't have the car 
he'd originally quoted me the price on, just cars loaded with lots of options 
I didn't want to pay for.  I offered him a couple hundred dollars less than 
the slimy dealer's quote for a fancier car, and he said no, as I expected.  I 
then called back the slimy dealer and told him I'd accept the deal we'd 
negotiated the day before, but he responded by raising the price $500.  I 
hung up on him, expecting him to repeat the previous day's pattern by calling 
back, but haven't heard from him since.
 
I then started looking around on the web, and saw that the dealer who had been
my second lowest bidder had three identical cars in the inventory database
on their website.  I called them and said, "hi, I see you have these three
cars in your database.  I had a deal with with (the other dealer) for (the
price that had been offered and withdrawn), but they're really unpleasant to
deal with and I'd much rather buy from somebody else."  He responded by
quoting me a price $500 less than what was no longer available at the other
dealer, and e-mailed me a written quote (a big improvement over the other
guy).  I told him I'd take it.

I ended up buying the car for $4,000 under MSRP, which was $3,000 under
invoice and $3,000 under the original quote I'd gotten, and around $2,500
under the Edmunds.com "true market value."

The salesman who had given me the original quote and refused my counter offer
(which, as it turned out, was more than I ended up paying) called me back as
I got in the door from buying the car.  I told him he was too late, so I don't
know what he would have offered at that point.
gelinas
response 39 of 120: Mark Unseen   Nov 18 06:41 UTC 2003

(IIRC, those warning stickers were Federally mandated, when the reports
started coming out on the first-generation airbags.  The requirement
remains, even if no longer strictly true, because "better safe than sorry"
and liabilty suits are really ugly.)
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