autonerd1

t1_iy47yna wrote

Reply to comment by in Financing a new car? by

Oh I have! And now that they’re being discontinued, dealerships have marked them up. $40k at my local, i’m going to try another one and try to get it for $35k.

Time is of the essence though and I want to have more to throw at a price like that though. So unfortunately either way, I may have to wait on the fun aspect.

Sadly, there are so many great cars being discontinued and a gut feeling tells me it’s from the hybrid/EV push.

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t1_iy47fgd wrote

Reply to comment by in Financing a new car? by

but you will always have a car payment compared to buying. Yes, you are right, cars depreciate. But after you spent $19k over 3 years, that could of been towards the price of the car, but yet, there you are back at square one $19k later. It just doesn’t make sense to me.

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t1_iy4388t wrote

Reply to comment by in Financing a new car? by

Yeah i gotcha. I was wanting to shop one and go for that “fun, sports car to drive that yet is cheaper than a 5.0 mustang”

I’m not so sure the latest generations Honda Civic Si’s are insanely reliable either, the darn 1.5L turbo engine honda has been throwing in their cars have seen a lot of issues.

As for Nissans, i think their transmissions have gotten slightly better but still might not be saying much, haha.

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t1_iy3yqmn wrote

OP, you are very naive and new to car buying, especially the financial part. And that is VERY okay. That’s why you are here. And remember, this is a personal finance page so 99% of people here will tell you not to buy a new car in your financial situation. Especially your current car having a bad part on your exhaust system.

If your engine or transmission was failing, well yeah, that’s a different story. Even drive axles, or other major or minor repairs that add up to thousands in repair $$

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t1_iy3y3mw wrote

But then you would have a hefty $550+ monthly car payment on a $34k loan.

Weigh your options, if you make enough to easily afford that, then sure. But something is telling me a young 23 year old doesn’t make enough $$ to afford that. If you do, then more power to ya!

I understand the want/need of getting a new car, believe me. But as others have stated, a bad catalytic converters does NOT affect how the vehicle drives. It’s literally just an emissions thing. If you live in a state where you have to pass emission laws, then well, you will want to get that fixed and as cheap as possible. Do not pay anything over $1k for it.

Limp that baby along for another 6mo-1yr and save more money for a better down payment and maybe keep it under $25k?

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