Any car with double digits on the odometer I do nto consider to be new. If you wanna pay full price for a car that's been sitting on a lot and other people have driven then so be it, but if I were to ever buy a new car it would be striaght from the factory and rodered with exactly the options I want.
What is it about tailgating 2951Kenneth Crudup For me, tailgating is when you're so close in my rearview it looks like you're parallel parked behind me. Less than a...
300 miles is not a new car by any stretch of the imagination, especially since those miles are probably very hard miles. I know several peoplw who work at dealerships and the cars on teh ltos and the cars that get serviced there are beaten on to no end. They are abused in every way imaginably. Not only "new" cars on the lot, but cusotmers cars that are in for service. It's not right, but you gotta figure the dealership techs often make under $10-hr. Not enough to live on here in NJ. They don't give a damn. One of my good friends works at a Subaru dealership and makes $8.50-hr as a technician. The dealership charges teh customer $75-hr for his services. He doesn't give a damn how he or anyone else treats a car in for service, from test-driving it to how it's serviced. For example, air tools for both disbuttembly and buttembly. No torque sticks for lug nuts, shortcuts and such everywhere possible. The dealership rapes him and he can't even afford to live on his pay, so he just plain doesn't care. Not the greatest atbreastude I say, but so be it. I don't blame him for not caring considering how much money the dealership makes from him.
Anyhow, the only new car I would ever buy would be straight off the truck being delivered from the factory. That is of course if tehre were any new vehicles worth buying. A new car is a terrible waste of money from a practical standpoint. If it makes you happy then go for it, but it's not a financially wise decision, especially if you finance it instead of paying cash.
Cory