This price is too good to be true

  • Thread starter Thread starter SkierPS3
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As mentioned insurance and maintenance will cost a new driver.

You are best to find a car on the cheaper end of insurance cost for yourself. At which point pick a reliable model. Then you proceed to satisfy you desires by personalizing the auto.
 
That also sounds too good to be true.

Maranellos have dropped quite a bit price, but not enough to be worth $32,000 for a model that's done roughly 900 miles a year. That example can still fetch $80-85,000.

Yeah, the other one I found on there was slighty newer but had a lot more miles on it and was up for around $80,000 if I remember correctly. Seems much more reasonable to me.
 
Dude, when you haven't bought a car before nor have been involved in owning one (talked to your parents) then your only ever going to think that that price is what you pay for the car to drive it away. Add fuel and that's all the very young amongst us generally think amounts to the cost of owning a car...
 
Of course even 19,000 is steep for any car for a brand new driver.
 
lbsf1
Yep, you'll be lucky if you have $5,000 to spend on a car.

My first car was $700. A red '88 Integra. She ran well for more then a year. Sold it for a $100 bucks. Not bad at all.
 
My first car was $700. A red '88 Integra. She ran well for more then a year. Sold it for a $100 bucks. Not bad at all.

Mine was a '98 Peugeot 306. Cost me £600 at the time, I sold it two years later for £500. Think I got a pretty good deal on that one :sly:

But, back on topic, that's way to cheap. I'd expect it to be about 4 times that asking price for that particular car.
 
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