Jul. 13th, 2009 10:40
What car should I buy?
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I meant my current car to be "temporary", then four and a half years passed. It's time: I'm not about to move, or change jobs, or spend half the summer away from home, or work on a big campaign in the next few months, so I can do stuff like find a car. What should I look at?
Whatever I get, I want to keep for a long time. At least 200k miles, maybe 300k or more. New or used is okay. I don't plan to resell for a long time.
It needs to basically work, and stay reliable as long as I maintain it regularly and fix things as soon as I know they need fixing.
I don't care if it looks cool or feels great to drive or any of those things, just reasonable.
I do want to be able to get up steep dirt roads in Vermont and the Berkshires and such places in bad weather. That doesn't necessarily mean all wheel drive. My previous car, a Saturn SL2 with front wheel drive and "traction control" (ability to have the two front wheels turn separately) was very good at it. My current car, a Saturn SL1 (less power) with front wheel drive and no traction control, is not good at it. I'd take a front wheel w/traction again.
And I want fuel efficiency, particularly on highways and country roads, which account for the majority of my driving. I've been getting 33-39mpg on those kinds of roads in my current Saturn, though it's not rated that high. I'd like something that good or better.
Edit: I'd also like to have as much space as a Saturn SL2/SL1, for people and for stuff. More space would be fine, but not needed. It'd be annoying to have to adjust to a car with less space.
Suggestions?
Whatever I get, I want to keep for a long time. At least 200k miles, maybe 300k or more. New or used is okay. I don't plan to resell for a long time.
It needs to basically work, and stay reliable as long as I maintain it regularly and fix things as soon as I know they need fixing.
I don't care if it looks cool or feels great to drive or any of those things, just reasonable.
I do want to be able to get up steep dirt roads in Vermont and the Berkshires and such places in bad weather. That doesn't necessarily mean all wheel drive. My previous car, a Saturn SL2 with front wheel drive and "traction control" (ability to have the two front wheels turn separately) was very good at it. My current car, a Saturn SL1 (less power) with front wheel drive and no traction control, is not good at it. I'd take a front wheel w/traction again.
And I want fuel efficiency, particularly on highways and country roads, which account for the majority of my driving. I've been getting 33-39mpg on those kinds of roads in my current Saturn, though it's not rated that high. I'd like something that good or better.
Edit: I'd also like to have as much space as a Saturn SL2/SL1, for people and for stuff. More space would be fine, but not needed. It'd be annoying to have to adjust to a car with less space.
Suggestions?
Tags:
no subject
BTW, Edmunds review says that if considering a Scion versus the lower cost Toyota Yaris, skip the Yaris and go for the Scion. The Yaris apparently gets poor marks compared to the Scion because it feels rather cheaply made.
I'm on my second Toyota. The first was an 81 Tercel that got run into the ground after 12 years of use. The engine still turned over in the dead of winter when it was retired. It was the body rust that finally made the car unsafe to drive. The current car is a 93 Corolla that has well over 150k miles on the clock. In the end, the body rust is gonna be what stops this baby. Every three years or so I need to do $500-$1000 of maintenance mostly due to city driving wear & tear like shocks and brakes and exhaust parts rusting.