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25 new of 66 responses total.
ball
response 37 of 66: Mark Unseen   Jun 30 16:10 UTC 2004

Re #36: No, especially not on my shift (16:00 - 24:30)
keesan
response 38 of 66: Mark Unseen   Jul 1 02:50 UTC 2004

Maybe you can go into business for yourself locally?  Yardwork?  That sounds
awful, having to travel 40 miles a day to work that shift.  
ball
response 39 of 66: Mark Unseen   Jul 1 06:33 UTC 2004

Re #38: It is fairly awful, and speaks of the difficult
  position that I find myself in.  I lack the financial
  resources to go into business for myself, although it's an
  option that is frequently suggested to me. I can only hope
  that things will improve once I have an Associate Degree
  to go with my existing British vocational qualifications.

  A new Ballmobile would take me to work, to earn money to
  pay car payments, other bills, tuition fees, buy textbooks
  etc.  It would also take me to college (at least 20 miles
  in the opposite direction) for those classes that I must
  take face-to-face.  I certainly couldn't afford to run one
  of the hideous gas-guzzling trucks I saw at the dealer
  -ships.  :-/
keesan
response 40 of 66: Mark Unseen   Jul 1 15:54 UTC 2004

Do you realize you said the new car would take you to work to earn money to
pay for the new car?  A used car would be a lot cheaper, since many people
think used is worth less because of status issues.  Jim got his textbook used,
half price, online (eBay?).  I presume your wife got a good job in the town
where you cannot find work.  You don't need much of a financial investment
to do yardwork or child care, and even if they don't pay as much it would
avoid the long commute.
ball
response 41 of 66: Mark Unseen   Jul 1 17:15 UTC 2004

Re #40: Yes, that's why I wrote it ;-)  I certainly plan to
  buy a used vehicle, a brand new one would be prohibitely
  expensive.  Even a used reliable vehicle represents a
  significant financial burden.

  Yard work would not bring in a sustainable income.  There
  are other obstacles, but the most obvious one is that I
  can't expect to compete with the teenage kids who can
  afford to work for pocket money.  Child care a similarly
  unrealistic option.  My wife works in another town, North
  of us (although not so far North as my college).  She has
  the distinct advantage of a Master's Degree.
keesan
response 42 of 66: Mark Unseen   Jul 2 03:37 UTC 2004

So why don't you move North to either the town where she works or the town
where you want to attend classes?  Then one of you won't need a car.
ball
response 43 of 66: Mark Unseen   Jul 2 06:21 UTC 2004

This response has been erased.

ball
response 44 of 66: Mark Unseen   Jul 2 16:31 UTC 2004

Re #42: Besides, if we lived in either of those places I
  would have to drive even further to get to work.
keesan
response 45 of 66: Mark Unseen   Jul 3 23:51 UTC 2004

I hope you eventually find a place to live that is the same as the place where
you both work.  Maybe a degree will help get a closer job.
ball
response 46 of 66: Mark Unseen   Jul 4 00:31 UTC 2004

Re #45: So long as the degree helps me get a better job,
  that has to be my main priority at present.  I agree that
  it would be nice not to have to drive to work though.
ball
response 47 of 66: Mark Unseen   Jul 7 19:45 UTC 2004

I'm looking at the Toyota Matrix.  It's not a truck, it's an
estate car/station wagon.  Its stated fuel economy reflects
that.  It has room in the back for modest loads, and ground
clearance looks better than that of my Civic.  It lacks a
Diesel engine, but apparently many of them are stick shift
and some even have six forward gears.
slynne
response 48 of 66: Mark Unseen   Jul 7 21:06 UTC 2004

Isnt the Toyota Matrix the same car as the Pontiac Vibe?
ball
response 49 of 66: Mark Unseen   Jul 8 06:48 UTC 2004

Re #48: "The twins are a General Motors-Toyota co-production
  using Toyota drivetrains.  Vibes are built in the NUMI
  plant in California that also manufactures most Corollas
  sold in the U.S, while all Matrixes are assembled in
  Canada at Toyota s award-winning Cambridge plant."

     http://autonet.ca/DriverSource/Stories.cfm?StoryID=5151

It sounds as though the important parts come from Toyota, so
I'll try not to let the Pontiac connection put me off.
n8nxf
response 50 of 66: Mark Unseen   Jul 29 15:28 UTC 2004

I had a Chevy Toyota Corolla Nova back in the 80's.  We liked it a lot and
had it for 15 years putting 150K on it.  I would think it's the same deal with
the Vib.
ball
response 51 of 66: Mark Unseen   Jul 30 16:55 UTC 2004

Re #50: did it make a good ground plane?  ;-)
n8nxf
response 52 of 66: Mark Unseen   Feb 6 03:59 UTC 2005

It wasn't plastic so, yes it did.
ball
response 53 of 66: Mark Unseen   Aug 29 18:10 UTC 2005

My napkin math was wrong, but not 'out of the ball park'
wrong.  According to the metric conversions at...

              http://www.sciencemadesimple.net

                           ...40 MPG is about 5.88 l/100 km.

We bought the Matrix.  Not Diesel :-(  Stick shift :-)  No
accelleration :-(  Reasonable fuel economy :-)  Gas costs
half as much here as in Britain, but I'm still feeling the
effect of the rise in gasoline prices.

- Andy Ball
ball
response 54 of 66: Mark Unseen   Jan 9 05:04 UTC 2006

It finally happened at Christmas: there came a day when the
Matrix was officially too small.  We were going out of town
for a couple of days to visit family and couldn't squeeze
everything that we needed in there.

Before we added a child seat that prevented us from folding
down the rear seats, I was able to use the Matrix to bring
home a small chest freezer in a 1m wide carton.  I was
somewhat surprised that it fit.  Now I'm starting to see why
suburban families might buy SUVs, mini-vans or other such
monstrosities.

I wouldn't object to a long-wheelbase Land Rover Defender
(biodiesel, naturally ;-) but that's more for use as a
platform for experiments in radio, electronics and perhaps
astronomy. I get the impression that those aren't legal over
here anyway, so perhaps I should buy an old Geo Metro, strip
everything out of that, stiffen the suspension and start
welding and bolting things to it.  >:-)
rcurl
response 55 of 66: Mark Unseen   Jan 9 06:21 UTC 2006

I drive non-SUV wagons. For carrying equipment for four people for car 
camping I built a box with doors that can be carried on top, with four 
compartments on one side for individual gear and compartments on the other 
side for tent, cooking gear, etc. There is no reason to have a vehicle 
that can carry all that when most of the time all that is not being 
carried. I've thought that such containers should be standard accessories 
one could buy with a car, but they aren't.
gull
response 56 of 66: Mark Unseen   Jan 10 04:02 UTC 2006

A utility trailer is often a good option, too, although most modern 
cars have laughably small towing capacities.  (Yet another reason 
people buy SUVs.) 
 
The Land Rover Defender has, as far as I know, not been sold in the 
U.S. for about a decade.  Importing cars younger than 25 years that 
weren't sold here is difficult because they're required to meet EPA/DOT 
standards. 
n8nxf
response 57 of 66: Mark Unseen   Jan 25 14:36 UTC 2006

We drove our Subaru Legacy wagon from Michigan to Oregon and back with two
teens, two adults, an 8-man cabin tent, sleeping bags and clothing for all.
The Yakima Space Box on top made it possible.
springne
response 58 of 66: Mark Unseen   Jan 25 14:46 UTC 2006

I ride a bicycle a lot, every day.

And I'm looking at a Ford F-250 with the "mobile office" detachable tablet
computer with voice command.  I'm waiting for the local Ford dealer to get
one in.
keesan
response 59 of 66: Mark Unseen   Jan 25 23:25 UTC 2006

Re 57, 2 plus 2 does not add to 8 - why such a big tent instead of 2 small
ones?  We drove our 1986 Toyota around the country for a month with camping
gear, clothing, cooking gear, food for two, and a piano.
What is a tablet computer?
ball
response 60 of 66: Mark Unseen   Feb 6 04:25 UTC 2006

Re #59: Picture a conventional laptop with the display where
        the keyboard would normally be and without the lid.  
        They generally feature touch-sensitive displays that
        people use with a plastic stylus.

        Similar are 'convertibles' where you can open the    
        lid, twist it 180 degrees so that the display is on
        the outside and close it to use it like a tablet.
keesan
response 61 of 66: Mark Unseen   Feb 6 15:13 UTC 2006

I would rather use a keyboard to enter data.  Someone gave us a PDA without
a keyboard and to enter data you either have to draw each letter carefully
or tap on pictures of each letter on a 'keyboard' on the display.  It is a
really slow way to enter data unless you are the sort who types with one
finger anyway.  
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