I was in an accident with my well-loved 2014 Toyota Plug-in Prius, and just found out that the insurance company is totalling it. Bummer, since it was a perfect car for me now - my mileage has dropped significantly since I work from home, and it was a second car/long trip car. 52 MPG.
Now, I need to figure out what to buy. My wife has an Acura MDX, so we have an AWD 7 passenger vehicle for the snow and for taking our family places - there's 5 of us and 2 dogs.
I need a sedan or 4 door hatch that gets great gas mileage and is small enough to park easily.
Hoping the used car market had settled down somewhat.
poindexter FORTRAN wrote to All <=-
Now, I need to figure out what to buy. My wife has an Acura MDX,
so we have an AWD 7 passenger vehicle for the snow and for taking
our family places - there's 5 of us and 2 dogs.
I need a sedan or 4 door hatch that gets great gas mileage and is
small enough to park easily.
Hoping the used car market had settled down somewhat.
I was in an accident with my well-loved 2014 Toyota Plug-in Prius, and
just found out that the insurance company is totalling it. Bummer, since
I need a sedan or 4 door hatch that gets great gas mileage and is small enough to park easily.
Hoping the used car market had settled down somewhat.
I was in an accident with my well-loved 2014 Toyota Plug-in Prius, and
I know it's normal, but that's such a weird phrasing. Somehow, cars just kinda crash themselves, when we talk about them.
Get a 4-5 year old BMW 328. Decent gas mileage and quicker than most.
I was in an accident with my well-loved 2014 Toyota Plug-in Prius, a I'm not sure what you mean about the phrasing.. How does it imply that the car crashed itself? I don't think that's what the phrasing says. I
think it gets the point across and can be easier than saying something
I was in an accident with my well-loved 2014 Toyota Plug-in Prius,
a
I'm not sure what you mean about the phrasing.. How does it imply that
the car crashed itself? I don't think that's what the phrasing says. I
Think of it this way -- imagine if it was a drunk driver who caused the damage. Would we say, "I was in an accident", or would we say, "A drunk driver crashed into my car"? Even if the damage was exactly the same?
Quite possibly. But, from the phrasing, it very well could be a car that was driving itself.
I've sometimes tilted at windmills a bit on this, but mostly because of
But if a bicyclist crashed, people probably wouldn't say, "my bike got into an accident and now I have to get a new frame.". And news articles don't use that passive language, either.
Re: Re: Totally
By: Gamgee to poindexter FORTRAN on Fri Aug 11 2023 07:37 am
Get a 4-5 year old BMW 328. Decent gas mileage and quicker than
most.
I like BMWs, but I've always been lerry to buy even a used one, as I
worry that maintenance on BMWs (both parts and labor) could be more expensive than average with them.
telnet://bbs.roonsbbs.hu:1212 <<=-
I like BMWs, but I've always been lerry to buy even a used one, as I worry
that maintenance on BMWs (both parts and labor) could be more expensive
than average with them.
my advice is to never buy german cars. <flame on> :)
I like BMWs, but I've always been lerry to buy even a used one, as I
worry that maintenance on BMWs (both parts and labor) could be more expensive than average with them.
Nightfox wrote to Gamgee <=-
By: Gamgee to poindexter FORTRAN on Fri Aug 11 2023 07:37 am
Get a 4-5 year old BMW 328. Decent gas mileage and quicker than most.
I like BMWs, but I've always been lerry to buy even a used one,
as I worry that maintenance on BMWs (both parts and labor) could
be more expensive than average with them.
Adept wrote to Nightfox <=-
I was in an accident with my well-loved 2014 Toyota Plug-in Prius, a
I'm not sure what you mean about the phrasing.. How does it imply that the car crashed itself? I don't think that's what the phrasing says. I
Think of it this way -- imagine if it was a drunk driver who
caused the damage. Would we say, "I was in an accident", or would
we say, "A drunk driver crashed into my car"? Even if the damage
was exactly the same?
think it gets the point across and can be easier than saying something
Quite possibly. But, from the phrasing, it very well could be a
car that was driving itself.
But if a bicyclist crashed, people probably wouldn't say, "my
bike got into an accident and now I have to get a new frame.".
Nightfox wrote to poindexter FORTRAN <=-
Sorry to hear. :( Are you okay?
What about another (used) Prius? Sounds like those get better gas
mileage than a lot of other cars.
my advice is to never buy german cars. <flame on> :)
Seems like splitting hairs there, and I'm not sure what difference it
I've sometimes tilted at windmills a bit on this, but mostly because"Tilted at windmills"? I've never heard that before..
We wouldn't say that because it wasn't just the bike that got into an accident.. You were riding on it, so I'd probably say "I was in a bike accident" or "I was in an accident while riding my bike" or something similar.
my advice is to never buy german cars. <flame on> :)
otherwise fantastic cars and I've never met anyone disappointed with a Beemer.
My wife and I are on our 4th. We've leased the last three, though, so we don't really worry about maintenance stuff.
Adept wrote to Roon <=-
From my understanding as not-a-real-German living in Germany, is that you're supposed to get a BMW to go fast on the autobahn for the roughly 30km where traffic wouldn't stop you, and then a few years later you
sell the vehicle so that it goes to a less-rich country where they can deal with the longer-term maintenance problems.
I suppose I'll find out - bought a 2018 i3, but it's only got 14K miles
on it so it's relatively new.
There was a 3-series model back in the 90s that mechanics loved - the
ones I talked to said it was the last easy one to work on that made
sense. A friend with that model was advised *never* to sell it.
High-mileage late-model BMWs of late seem to fit that bill - old '80s BMWs seem to run forever.
There was a 3-series model back in the 90s that mechanics loved - the ones I talked to said it was the last easy one to work on that made sense. A friend with that model was advised *never* to sell it.
Anyone I know who's bought a 2000 or later used BMW has had some pretty serious bills to deal with.
Adept wrote to poindexter FORTRAN <=-
That said, kinda reminds me how bicycles are kind of nice to work on, mostly because you can get at everything, and nothing is particularly complex.
But, obviously, hard to go 60mph uphill with them.
Nightfox wrote to poindexter FORTRAN <=-
I liked BMWs in the 90s for how they looked - They had some realy sharp lines. Interesting to know they were also easy to work on back then
too.
A bunch of years back, I carpooled with a car lover who had an older 5 series car with a car phone in the center console, with the curly cord and light-up buttons. He lamented that he couldn't get service for it. I told him the provisioning code he'd need to tell Verizon to get it working - Verizon didn't market it but kept their analog network running for OnStar.
A couple of weeks later he was excited to pick me up -- he wanted to show off his working car phone!
ADEPT (21:2/108) wrote to Roon <=-Even in America most people have the same view. Find a different car brand.
my advice is to never buy german cars. <flame on> :)
From my understanding as not-a-real-German living in Germany, is that you're supposed to get a BMW to go fast on the autobahn for the roughly 30km where traffic wouldn't stop you, and then a few years later you
sell the vehicle so that it goes to a less-rich country where they can deal with the longer-term maintenance problems.
A couple of weeks later he was excited to pick me up -- he wanted to
show off his working car phone!
Old motorcycles, too! First thing you do is take the saddle off and put
it on the ground so you have somewhere to sit. If you get stuck, you can take the engine out, put it in the trunk of your (or someone else's car) and drive it to someone who can fix it.
esc wrote to poindexter FORTRAN <=-
When you say "old motorcycle" - which kind do you prefer? Is it more an issue of cost and abundance or are you into a brand or style?
I have always wanted to get into motorcycles. I've never even ridden one but they look like a blast to work on. I'm pretty mechanically inclined so this feels up my alley. The thing that scares me, though, is other drivers on the road...I would never use a bike to commute, it would just be for joyrides for that reason.
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