18860. thoughtful - 3/14/2006 1:38:10 AM How would I look in this?
Of course I'd really have to try it. One thing I love about the acura is it's got a great 'wheedle' factor...even though it's a sedan, it's very maneuverable in parking lots...a critical factor for a shopper like me. 18861. arkymalarky - 3/14/2006 2:04:26 AM We loved our Saturn. I sold it to my mom when I bought the Civic, and she loves it.
Can't see the picture, so I'm imagining: Is "this" a Hummer? A minivan? A Porche? A Harley? 18862. thoughtful - 3/14/2006 2:37:02 AM no...it's a lexus sedan
reading about the mid-priced one and it has too many bells and whistles for me...like it senses and will lock in a distance from the car in front of you and it has headlights that turn as you are going around the corner.
all very nice gadgets, but IMO just more to break. 18863. arkymalarky - 3/14/2006 2:49:04 AM I'm not much of a bells and whistles person, though the van had some nice features--it just happened to be what the used one we chose had on it.
Mose's friends like the heated seats in the Jetta, and in the winter as soon as they get in the car they tell her to turn on the "butt warmer." I wouldn't have ever known she had it. In fact, Bob's driving the van now and he's found several features I hadn't noticed in six or seven years of driving it. 18864. arkymalarky - 3/14/2006 2:53:11 AM I'll bet this is the fifteenth time in about an hour and a half the stupid line on this stupid dialup isp dropped. 18865. TheWizardOfWhimsy - 3/14/2006 3:16:33 AM We have a 99 Passat that hasn't cost us a dime above schedualed maintenance costs. They have AWD and 65 % of the car has the same standard equipment that its higher priced cousin, the Audi, has.
18866. arkymalarky - 3/14/2006 3:34:22 AM I love the Passat. I would have looked into getting one, but it was out of my price range. 18867. wonkers2 - 3/14/2006 3:38:24 AM thoughtful, if you do a little research you'll see that GM quality is quite close to Toyota and Honda. 18868. Macnas - 3/14/2006 10:23:57 AM I drive an Opel, which is under the GM umbrella. Still, it's a German car, and goes pretty good for something that's over 10 years old.
We also own a Nissan, the family car. Have to say, it's a great car. Here, if you want trouble free motoring, you buy a Japanese car.
I'll have to change the Opel sometimes in the next few years, as there will come a time when it will be harder and harder to pass the NCT (national car test). This is a stringent test on all cars over a certain age, and it's usually the emmissions test part that catches older cars.
I aspire to a Toyota. They're not as flash as an Audi, Merc or BMW, but I love the all around package that gives good economy, reliability and the way they hold value.
There is, however, a little thought, a fancy if you like to have a little Merc C180, but it's just a fancy. 18869. Macnas - 3/14/2006 10:31:44 AM
My little car, which, I am told, I am far too big for.
18870. Macnas - 3/14/2006 10:34:26 AM
The Missus's car. 18871. Macnas - 3/14/2006 10:44:31 AM
What I should buy next time. 18872. Macnas - 3/14/2006 10:48:05 AM
What I'd really like to buy next time. 18873. PelleNilsson - 3/14/2006 11:26:11 AM My car, a Volvo V40, is getting on in years too. I'm thinking French for the next one. 18874. Macnas - 3/14/2006 11:38:50 AM I love the comfort of French cars, hate the trouble they cause.
I used to drive a peugeot, it was great when it decided to work. 18875. Neato - 3/14/2006 1:10:10 PM I love my citroen xsara - three years old. Only had it a month. 18876. Macnas - 3/14/2006 1:46:52 PM Good car, maybe the best of the French makes. 18877. PelleNilsson - 3/14/2006 2:17:43 PM This is the most exciting car we ever had - a BMW 2800.
We bought it from another Swede in Beirut 1975 and drove it home through Syria, Turkey, Bulgaria and Yugoslavia. Arriving in Austria was like entering Paradise.
The next year we drove it to Algeria. It suffered there because the car mechanics' experience was with French cars. Two years later it made it home, though, but only just. We crossed the Pyrenées with a leaky main brake cylinder - an interesting experience. We sold it for a pittance and bought a Peugot 405 from a guy who had been with us in Algeria and was packing his bags for a stint in Malaysia. It served us well. We had it for several years and never had any trouble.
18878. Macnas - 3/14/2006 2:38:58 PM The main problem with French cars is the electrics, especially Renault.
That and trying to get parts. One model could go through several different design chains in it's market-span, meaning you had to know the year and month it was made, and then you would wait. 18879. thoughtful - 3/14/2006 2:55:42 PM I had an opel for my first car...thing was a wreck but ran like a top and managed to get me where i needed to go.
We had a datsun too. Thing also ran like a top but the body disintegrated...we used to call it the rotson.
We tried a renault one time and tried getting it up a hill in the area...the thing was so weak on power that it decelerated all the way to the top. I wasn't sure it was ever going to get me to the crest of the hill.
Wonks, I've heard rumors that gm has improved quality but I a) don't believe it and b) don't care. They've lost me as a customer forever. And I certainly don't want to buy a car from a company that's going through mass layoffs. Even if their mfg design and processes are improved, there's always p/o'd workers and sabotage. No thanks.
And don't go by the jd power survey for judging car quality. It's a very short-term look and doesn't pick up on quality problems that emerge down the road, like the tranny in my acura. Those are easiest to see when you look at the consumer reports on used cars....no other car maker is so in the red (good) like toyota.
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