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Chief Rum
10-18-2011, 06:15 PM
Hey, I know we ahev some car enthusiasts here, so I figured I would solicit some general advice from y'all.

I am in the market for a new car. I have looked around at Edmunds.com and on Carmax, and I am about ready to go visit a dealership or two.

I am trying to stay under $20,000. I am looking used more than new, but I'll buy new if it's the best deal for me. I have two sets of requirements which are warring against each other.

Requirements #1: I want a decently reliable car with good gas mileage. If it also holds its value well as well, great.

Requriements #2: I'm single and out there dating; can't be a dumpy car. I am looking at coupes mostly and aiming to get something with a sleek or sporty look. I also like a car with at least a little bit of power, as I am an aggressive driver.

Requirements #1 has me looking at Honda/Toyota types, while Requirements #2 has me looking at Mustangs and Camaros. I need to find a happy middle ground.

Some suggestions have been made to me or that I have come up with, so perhaps I can get some feedback on these. Not all of these may be coupes.

Nissan Altima (one of the sportier versions)
Hyundai Sonata
Hyundai Genesis
Honda Civic
Kia (I forget the model that was suggested)
VW Jetta/Passat

I have also given thought to looking at a sporty Mercedes, but obviously it would be an older one (mid-2000s at latest, I assume I can't afford newer).

I would prefer 30 mpg highway at least, preferably 2006 or later.

I am open to leasing new if that's a better deal (I know Hyundai has some lease deals going on right now), but not sure of the arguments pro and con leasing as opposed to buying. I am pretty sure I can't afford buying new.

Any opinions on these brands or models? Or are there other brands and models I should be considering?

Thanks for any help.

Joe
10-18-2011, 06:43 PM
Mazda 3

bhlloy
10-18-2011, 06:52 PM
Joe beat me to it. I love my Mazda 3 and even the top end models should be within your price range.

It absolutely destroys the Civic in every category IMO.

Chief Rum
10-18-2011, 06:56 PM
Cool, wasn't even thinking about Mazdas. I'll check it out.

Rizon
10-18-2011, 06:58 PM
Civic or Mazda3. I like the Civic better just because it's been a good car line for a long time and Mazda 3 just recently started being awesome. Can't go wrong with either.

Also ... negotiate up from the price the dealership paid for the car and not down from the sticker price. Though with these cars supply/demand might not give you much room to negotiate and they're pretty inexpensive anyways.

If you are single and dating, seriously, don't get the Mustang or Camaro, unless you are a teenager or dating teenagers.

Chief Rum
10-18-2011, 07:02 PM
If you are single and dating, seriously, don't get the Mustang or Camaro, unless you are a teenager or dating teenagers.

Haha neither, lol. I wasn't seriously looking to get either because it was too far out of what I was looking to get with respect to reliability and gas mileage. But those were the ones popping up the most when I was looking at sportier models.

I like the new Mustang look, I admit. But yeah I kinda felt I needed a classier looking car.

dawgfan
10-18-2011, 07:06 PM
Depending on the make and the price range you are looking at, you might consider going the "certified pre-owned (aka used)" route - the advantage this usually provides over a private party used car sale is that the certified used adds some warranty to the car.

I splurged on a nice car a couple years ago that was 2 years old and had 2 years remaining on the original warranty. Because it was a "certified pre-owned", it added 2 more years to the warranty, so I got what was in essence a new car warranty at a used car price, along with 24K miles of use already on the car. Certified will cost a bit more over a normal used, but you might find the added warranty more than makes up for that.

If you have access to Consumer Reports, it's not a bad idea to check out their most recent yearly reviews to get an idea of how the various makes & models perform in terms of reliability. And be aware that the same model and year can vary in reliability depending on the type of engine - I know that for a while Audi/VW was having some issues with their 4-cylinder 1.8 (and later 2.0) liter, while the 2.8 (and later 3.0) liter 6-cylinder was much more reliable. Just something to keep in mind as you search - focus as much as you can not just on make reliability, but model reliability and specifically which configuration of that model.

Rizon
10-18-2011, 07:06 PM
Haha neither, lol. I wasn't seriously looking to get either because it was too far out of what I was looking to get with respect to reliability and gas mileage. But those were the ones popping up the most when I was looking at sportier models.

I like the new Mustang look, I admit. But yeah I kinda felt I needed a classier looking car.

Hey, if you want chicks with miniskirts, crabs and who will take all your money while chewing gum and yapping on and on about some sort of drama .... :D

I do like the body styles of those cars, but as someone who knows people with those cars plus I've personally run with the Camaro/Mustang/Firebird crowds ... those cars attract a certain kind of wom .. I mean girl. And they ain't classy. But a Civic or Mazda3 will attract the down-to-earth types.

Pyser
10-18-2011, 07:15 PM
i love the mazda 3 too, but id definitely look into used luxury cars at 20k

CU Tiger
10-18-2011, 08:01 PM
FWIW a new 2011 v6 mustang will get 30+ mpg and 300+ hp..faster than a mid 90's (or 80's) GT V8... all in a 22k price range new.

No comment on the type attracted to those cars...

MrBug708
10-18-2011, 08:54 PM
I have an 09 Jetta, been very pleased with it

dawgfan
10-18-2011, 09:08 PM
FWIW a new 2011 v6 mustang will get 30+ mpg and 300+ hp..faster than a mid 90's (or 80's) GT V8... all in a 22k price range new...
Yeah, the fuel efficiency of engines has improved dramatically even in the last 10 years without sacrificing power.

dzilla77
10-18-2011, 09:17 PM
You might look at a Ford Fiesta or a Focus. Both have sporty models with good pickup.

Chief Rum
10-18-2011, 09:36 PM
You might look at a Ford Fiesta or a Focus. Both have sporty models with good pickup.

Heh... I am driving my Mom's Ford Focus at the moment (a 2002 model). Not really all that excited about Fords. ;)

But I'll take a look at the newer models.

Swaggs
10-18-2011, 09:55 PM
With your needs, I would look at a 2005-06ish Acura TL.

Very good looking, sporty, engine has some pick up, and it is in your price range. Mileage may hurt, though.

dawgfan
10-18-2011, 11:39 PM
Heh... I am driving my Mom's Ford Focus at the moment (a 2002 model). Not really all that excited about Fords. ;)

But I'll take a look at the newer models.
I didn't have the greatest reliability either with my '94 SHO, but recent vintage Fords are rated right there at the top of the heap in terms of reliability. They've gotten their act together in the last several years and are worth another look.

dawgfan
10-18-2011, 11:41 PM
Dola - if you're a serious driver, I'd also consider a WRX. Those things (especially the STI versions) are seriously fast and agile, though also not as comfy due to very stiff suspensions. Really fun cars to drive. If I wasn't married and with kid, there's a good chance that would have been my most recent car purchase...

Chief Rum
10-19-2011, 10:11 AM
Bump for the East Coast folks (and thank you all for the comments so far; this is really helping me)

dzilla77
10-19-2011, 11:16 AM
Heh... I am driving my Mom's Ford Focus at the moment (a 2002 model). Not really all that excited about Fords. ;)

But I'll take a look at the newer models.

The new focus isn't your mom's Focus. Powertrains have improved substantially in terms of HP and fuel economy.

gstelmack
10-19-2011, 11:20 AM
For cheap I bought a Honda Fit a few months ago that's been working out great for us. You can get a spoiler and stay under $20K if sporty is important to you. But for basic transportation around town, it's been great.

Scoobz0202
10-19-2011, 11:42 AM
The newer Focus's are actually good looking cars if you ask me.

Have you looked into the Ford Fusion or the Chevy Cruze at all? These aren't exactly under your requirement #2, but from what I've heard they seem like really nice fucking cars. If I were to buy right now my first stop would be to test drive a Fusion.

dawgfan
10-19-2011, 01:30 PM
In the mid-size sedan market, there are a lot of attractive options. The Fusion is a nice car - well worth checking out. Also check out the Korean cars: The Hyundai Sonata is a slick-looking "4-door coupe" (aka low roof-line sedan like the VW CC) and the Kia Optima is another attractive mid-size sedan. You get great warranties with the Korean cars too.

You might also consider a Jetta TDI - fantastic mileage (pretty sure they get in the mid-40's), and the turbo diesel provides a lot of torque. Fun cars to drive.

If you're into more luxury, you could check out older Infinity G35's or Lexus IS250's/350's. The Japanese makes in general are a bit more reliable than the German makes. The G35 in particular would give you a great combination of fun driving (those things are great performing cars) with curbside appeal. You'd probably have to go back about 4 years or so to fit under a $20K budget, but that's not terribly old.

Coffee Warlord
10-19-2011, 02:07 PM
Quite happy with my Fusion.

One thing to note is the Mazda (the 3 or the 6) feels cramped to me. They are just a smidge smaller on the inside than their competitors, enough to where it annoyed me.

The Altima is always solid, though the 4 cylinder version feels a little weak, power wise.

DaddyTorgo
10-19-2011, 03:17 PM
Quite happy with my Fusion.

One thing to note is the Mazda (the 3 or the 6) feels cramped to me. They are just a smidge smaller on the inside than their competitors, enough to where it annoyed me.

The Altima is always solid, though the 4 cylinder version feels a little weak, power wise.

Really? I can see that with a Mazda 3 (which my sis has), but my 2010 Mazda 6 feels huge. The back seat is massive, and I'm never cramped in the front seat either.

Coffee Warlord
10-19-2011, 03:24 PM
Guy at work has a 6, and it feels just a little more cramped than my Fusion (I've driven his a couple times). Enough to where I notice, at least. Mileage (no pun intended) may vary, of course, but that was my opinion.

DaddyTorgo
10-19-2011, 03:49 PM
Guy at work has a 6, and it feels just a little more cramped than my Fusion (I've driven his a couple times). Enough to where I notice, at least. Mileage (no pun intended) may vary, of course, but that was my opinion.

Hmm. Odd.

Blackadar
05-07-2012, 01:44 PM
CR, what did you get?

My 14 year old Subaru has finally given up the ghost - or, more appropriately, I'm putting it out to pasture. It needs about $2,500 worth of work on it and I'm not putting that much into an old car. So I guess I'm the new car market.

Shit.

I'll consider new or used, but I want to stay around or under $20k. Good gas mileage is a must. Looks aren't that important, but safety is. Need to be able to get a good toddler car seat in and out of it. It's essentially a "runabout" vehicle for the wife - local errands and such.

DaddyTorgo
05-07-2012, 01:48 PM
If it's just a runabout vehicle for the wife you should totally look used man.

McLovin
05-07-2012, 01:54 PM
What about a 2009 or so 350z ? Sporty, a lot of fun to drive, under 20k.Reliable. Mpg might be lower though.

Ragone
05-07-2012, 01:55 PM
Everytime a thread like this pops up i'm obligated to remind everyone i work for ford and can get you friends and family discount on a new vehicle if you choose to get Something from the ford family..

The 2012 escapes are getting huge incentives/rebates to clear out the lot for the redesigned 2013's coming soon.. you get both the rebates and incentives plus my discount..

DaddyTorgo
05-07-2012, 01:57 PM
Everytime a thread like this pops up i'm obligated to remind everyone i work for ford and can get you friends and family discount on a new vehicle if you choose to get Something from the ford family..

The 2012 escapes are getting huge incentives/rebates to clear out the lot for the redesigned 2013's coming soon.. you get both the rebates and incentives plus my discount..

I didn't remember this was the case. Yikes.

GrantDawg
05-07-2012, 02:04 PM
If it's just a runabout vehicle for the wife you should totally look used man.


I'm buying a new car as well. I'm looking mid-sized sedan in the 25K range. At first, I really considered used. But the price on low-mileage used cars that I have seen seem to hit really close to what the MSRP is on the new cars. Plus, getting exactly what you want on a new one is much easier. I keep cars till their wheels fall off, so getting one used probably just costs me a couple of years use. :)

Anyway, opinions on mid-sized sedans right now?

Ragone
05-07-2012, 02:05 PM
yea.. But i'm telling you man, the 2013 escapes are really nice looking.. seen a few on the road testing lot of my plant..

GrantDawg
05-07-2012, 02:05 PM
Everytime a thread like this pops up i'm obligated to remind everyone i work for ford and can get you friends and family discount on a new vehicle if you choose to get Something from the ford family..

The 2012 escapes are getting huge incentives/rebates to clear out the lot for the redesigned 2013's coming soon.. you get both the rebates and incentives plus my discount..


We need to talk. :) :) :)

GrantDawg
05-07-2012, 02:06 PM
yea.. But i'm telling you man, the 2013 escapes are really nice looking.. seen a few on the road testing lot of my plant..


Dang you are fast. When are they hitting the lots? My wife looked at a 2012 a couple of weeks ago and was turned off. The interior doors are way too cheap looking (no offense).

Blackadar
05-07-2012, 02:07 PM
Everytime a thread like this pops up i'm obligated to remind everyone i work for ford and can get you friends and family discount on a new vehicle if you choose to get Something from the ford family..

The 2012 escapes are getting huge incentives/rebates to clear out the lot for the redesigned 2013's coming soon.. you get both the rebates and incentives plus my discount..

Ragone, I may be taking you up on that offer.

I'm pushing the wife to consider the 2012 Focus. Ultimately, I'm not the one deciding, but that's one that should be right up her alley. Can you PM me and tell me how that Friends/Family program works?

If it's just a runabout vehicle for the wife you should totally look used man.

Probably so. But I want something with some sort of warranty on it - I can't afford to drop $10k on Joe's Used Toyota and then get stuck putting a new transmission in it 6 months later. So that leaves dealer used cars and in many cases they're really not that much cheaper. I'd rather spend $20k on a new car than $14k on a used car to be honest. That may not be logical/rational/financially smart, though.

Ragone
05-07-2012, 02:08 PM
We need to talk. :) :) :)

Not a problem, I can easily generate a pin # for you to take to dealership.. would need a little info from you.. and if you decide to go another way no big deal..

Blackadar
05-07-2012, 02:09 PM
Not a problem, I can easily generate a pin # for you to take to dealership.. would need a little info from you.. and if you decide to go another way no big deal..

Just in case you missed it - look at the message right above yours. :D

Tyvm.

Passacaglia
05-07-2012, 02:15 PM
What kind of rebates and incentives do you get outside of the friends and family discount? Looking at Ford's site, I find it surprising that the Escape is only 2K more than the Fusion.

GrantDawg
05-07-2012, 02:17 PM
Not a problem, I can easily generate a pin # for you to take to dealership.. would need a little info from you.. and if you decide to go another way no big deal..


PM? Or would rather I/you call? I definitely am interested.

DanGarion
05-07-2012, 02:21 PM
The newer Focus's are actually good looking cars if you ask me.

Have you looked into the Ford Fusion or the Chevy Cruze at all? These aren't exactly under your requirement #2, but from what I've heard they seem like really nice fucking cars. If I were to buy right now my first stop would be to test drive a Fusion.

I'd hold off for the 2013 Fusion, personally. But I'm not a fan of the current Fusion body style. I like the Focus though.

DanGarion
05-07-2012, 02:22 PM
Guy at work has a 6, and it feels just a little more cramped than my Fusion (I've driven his a couple times). Enough to where I notice, at least. Mileage (no pun intended) may vary, of course, but that was my opinion.

That's interesting since they are both pretty much the same car, just with different styling.

Ragone
05-07-2012, 02:23 PM
Dang you are fast. When are they hitting the lots? My wife looked at a 2012 a couple of weeks ago and was turned off. The interior doors are way too cheap looking (no offense).

You know, i didn't like the door panels on 2012 either.. or the boxy nature of it.. 2013 looks more like a cross between edge/ redesigned explorer.. only a bit smaller..

DanGarion
05-07-2012, 02:24 PM
Everytime a thread like this pops up i'm obligated to remind everyone i work for ford and can get you friends and family discount on a new vehicle if you choose to get Something from the ford family..

The 2012 escapes are getting huge incentives/rebates to clear out the lot for the redesigned 2013's coming soon.. you get both the rebates and incentives plus my discount..

Is your offer comparable or lower than Xplan?

Ragone
05-07-2012, 02:24 PM
PM? Or would rather I/you call? I definitely am interested.

pm is fine.. the info i need isn't too personal..

GrantDawg
05-07-2012, 02:29 PM
You know, i didn't like the door panels on 2012 either.. or the boxy nature of it.. 2013 looks more like a cross between edge/ redesigned explorer.. only a bit smaller..


Need to research that. Fusion redesign is really nice as well. Makes me almost want to wait till they hit the streets, but I don't really want to wait much longer. Very tired of only having one car. :)

Pyser
05-07-2012, 02:30 PM
awesome offer ragone. i believe ill be in touch later this year!

Chief Rum
05-07-2012, 02:33 PM
CR, what did you get?

Man, I am absolutely floored that I never came back to this thread and announced what I got. You woulda thought that would be one of the first online things I did in this forum after buying.

I bought a 6 speed (that's right, a manual, I love it) 2011 Hyundai Genesis Coupe, new off the lot (priced to move ahead of the 2012s). It's very sporty looking, looks a little like a Porsche. I bought an all black body, with tinted windows and it came woth custom rims that look pretty sweet. It's a turbo that has some pretty nice giddyup, and it comes with Hyundai's great 10 year warranty.

It doesn't quite get the mileage I was looking for, but it's still much better than an actual sports car, and it handles exactly the way I like it, especially being a stick. And I get tons of compliments on it, great looking car.

Good luck with your hunt. I don't think what I got would work for you. ;)

Blackadar
05-07-2012, 02:37 PM
Man, I am absolutely floored that I never came back to this thread and announced what I got. You woulda thought that would be one of the first online things I did in this forum after buying.

I bought a 6 speed (that's right, a manual, I love it) 2011 Hyundai Genesis Coupe, new off the lot (priced to move ahead of the 2012s). It's very sporty looking, looks a little like a Porsche. I bought an all black body, with tinted windows and it came woth custom rims that look pretty sweet. It's a turbo that has some pretty nice giddyup, and it comes with Hyundai's great 10 year warranty.

It doesn't quite get the mileage I was looking for, but it's still much better than an actual sports car, and it handles exactly the way I like it, especially being a stick. And I get tons of compliments on it, great looking car.

Good luck with your hunt. I don't think what I got would work for you. ;)

I had to go look that up. That is a great looking car. I swear Hyundai has some of the best car designers in terms of appearance.

It wouldn't work for me, but gratz!

Marc Vaughan
05-07-2012, 02:58 PM
My wife got a Hyundai Sonata when her Volvo packed up just before christmas, it was a year old and fitted into all of your specs with some room to spare.

(personally speaking I'd avoid leasing, just from personal experience - I don't consider myself a 'long range' driver but I'm having to work at not exceeding the driving milage on my Explorer and I took the maximum they allowed as it was)

PS - We had a Nissan Altima coupe when we first moved to Florida and I loved it from a 'play' perspective, ie. quite nippy and you could do some nice wheel spins in it if you weren't careful when pulling away .... from a practical perspective though the Hyundai is a nicer car with better features and mileage.

GrantDawg
05-07-2012, 03:03 PM
My wife got a Hyundai Sonata when her Volvo packed up just before christmas, it was a year old and fitted into all of your specs with some room to spare.

(personally speaking I'd avoid leasing, just from personal experience - I don't consider myself a 'long range' driver but I'm having to work at not exceeding the driving milage on my Explorer and I took the maximum they allowed as it was)


Leasing really depends on the car and situation. I know when selling Toyota's a few years ago, that leasing was great for some, bad for others. Going over milage isn't a big deal as long your lease allows you to trade in the car without having to "turn in" the car, as long as the value of the car holds up well. Trade in value of, say, a Camry in 2/4 years (as long as you didn't beat the heck out of it) even with higher miles would usually still yield you enough to straight trade out without being upside-down. In general, never turn-in a lease. You trade the leased car in on your next purchase.

Chief Rum
05-07-2012, 03:18 PM
I had to go look that up. That is a great looking car. I swear Hyundai has some of the best car designers in terms of appearance.

It wouldn't work for me, but gratz!

Thanks! One of the better purchases I have made in recent years, IMO. :)

molson
05-07-2012, 04:00 PM
Chief Rum is such a pimp.

Chief Rum
05-07-2012, 04:23 PM
Chief Rum is such a pimp.

Don't say that too loud. I don't want Pimpin' Pumpy to come in and bitch slap me for inching into his territory.

Blackadar
05-08-2012, 07:37 AM
Might as well turn this into a AAR. :)

We went last night and looked at a few new cars, but only drove one. We looked with some small dealerships close by, so the selection wasn't overly impressive.

Hyundai

This was the first dealership we hit. We got a salesman - Mark - who didn't seem to know his ass from his elbow. Said a couple of times that "he'd only been there since March". Color me unimpressed. At least he was smart enough to try to get my contact information. Grade: C-.

Elentra - Quite impressive. Looks small from the outside, but surprisingly roomy inside in both the front and back seats. Plenty of trunk space. Good styling. Won North American Car of the Year Award, which is pretty impressive. Great gas mileage. The Wife, who was leaning towards a small SUV prior to us going out really seemed to like this one. Verdict: DEFINITE CANDIDATE.

Elentra Touring - Less impressive. Good styling (as all Hyundai vehicles have), but you could tell this one wasn't redone recently. Fairly poor gas mileage and a bland interior doomed this one quickly. Verdict: OUT

Tuscon - The small SUV choice for the wife. Again, great styling and pretty decent size. Very comparable to the Forester she has now. The Wife likes, but I think it's not necessary to have another small SUV (I drive a RAV 4). Still, I can't count it out. Verdict: MAYBE

Subaru

So then we went up the street to the Subaru dealer. We got a better salesman - Ralph (really, who names their kid Ralph?) - who seemed to know his stuff. We were introduced as old customers, so he took the "low key" approach to sales. Didn't get a name or number from us after talking with him - poor job, Ralph. Grade: C

Subaru Forester - Since I'm replacing a 14 year old Forester, this should be a natural. But it looked, well...cheap. Lots of exposed plastic inside and it was frankly pretty fugly. I know the ratings are excellent and my existing one is an awesome vehicle, but I'm not sure I can buy something that ugly. The Wife said almost the same exact things after we were done. What does it say about Subaru that two customers who prefer Subarus won't buy this because it looks cheap even though the company and vehicle are top-rated? Verdict: PROBABLY OUT.

Subaru Impreza - I used to have a WRX and I miss that car, so this may be the next best thing. Decent gas mileage, decent trunk room but it felt pretty closed in even though the head space is supposed to be comparable to the Elentra. This is the only vehicle we drove (and just around the parking lot), but the suspension and response instantly brought me back to the old WRX. The inside still looks cheap, but the overall presentation was improved. Verdict: CANDIDATE.

Ford

So with just a few minutes before closing time, we went to the Ford dealer. We got a heavily accented sales rep named Daniel who was difficult to understand. Seemed friendly enough, though he had a weak handshake. But it became obvious that Daniel & Co. were more interested in going home than helping. I can understand that a bit, but turning the lights off on us in the showroom wasn't the right way to go about it. Oops. Again, Daniel didn't even ask us for our contact information. Grade: D

Focus - Too small for us. The back seat room is tiny and so is the trunk. With a string-bean 12 year old (who will be taller than 6 feet) and a 2 year old (carseat room), it's just not the right car. Other than that, I was impressed. Great styling inside and out. Verdict: OUT

---

We're planning on hitting all the major dealers on Independence Blvd tonight because that's the largest selection of cars. We'll probably look at:

Hyundai Elentra (again, since the other dealer only had one)
Hyundai Tuscon (maybe, but the only dealer only had one)
Ford Fusion (didn't get the chance to see this last night)
Kia Optima (can't believe I'm looking at a Kia)
Kia Soul (The Wife is an artist and the styling appeals to her)
Toyota Camry (maybe)
Honda Accord (maybe)
Subaru Impreza (the other dealer had only one)

Any others we should look at for around $20k?

Flasch186
05-08-2012, 08:41 AM
I love my Honda Accord but I splurged for the V6 since it felt so much better than the 4 cylinder, and quieter.

Coffee Warlord
05-08-2012, 08:45 AM
Might as well turn this into a AAR. :)

We went last night and looked at a few new cars, but only drove one. We looked with some small dealerships close by, so the selection wasn't overly impressive.

After reading about your salesmen, I'm just thinking...my dad would have tore their faces off. Sold cars / eventually was sales manager at a lincoln mercury dealer for about 15 years. There'd be death involved if he saw one of his people acting like your guys did.

Blackadar
05-08-2012, 08:55 AM
After reading about your salesmen, I'm just thinking...my dad would have tore their faces off. Sold cars / eventually was sales manager at a lincoln mercury dealer for about 15 years. There'd be death involved if he saw one of his people acting like your guys did.

Since I'm a former Sales Director (though not in automobiles), I tend to want to grade salespeople when I'm dealing with them. I used to train sales people and their bosses, so I'm amazed how many bad ones there are out there. If I were the Sales Mgr, I'd have each of those guys in my office first thing this morning for a "retraining" session because all of 'em were lazy and/or untrained. For example:

When a prospect says they will be buying within two weeks, there's no excuse for not trying to get their contact information at the very least. "Mr. Blackadar, what's the best way to reach you - email or phone?" and then follow up every day if necessary.

When the prospect is a woman who says she has a two year old and hauls groceries, why aren't you showing off the trunk and back seat space? Heck, demonstrate with a spare carseat how the customer's will fit in there.

When the prospect is a guy who asks how much "pep" the car has, why aren't you instantly popping the hood to show off that shiny new engine?

Sad. Funny too, but generally pretty sad.

Suburban Rhythm
05-08-2012, 08:59 AM
CR, what did you get?

My 14 year old Subaru has finally given up the ghost - or, more appropriately, I'm putting it out to pasture. It needs about $2,500 worth of work on it and I'm not putting that much into an old car. So I guess I'm the new car market.

Shit.

I'll consider new or used, but I want to stay around or under $20k. Good gas mileage is a must. Looks aren't that important, but safety is. Need to be able to get a good toddler car seat in and out of it. It's essentially a "runabout" vehicle for the wife - local errands and such.


A question and an opinion.

We had a Forester for about 9 years (99-08). Our 2nd car was/is a 01 Hyundai Elantra.

We had more issues with the Forester than we ever had with the Elantra. Maybe a lemon, 2 weeks in the rear defroster didn't work. Always some nagging issue with it- nothing major, but noises, etc. I am going to assume you never experienced any of these same problems?

As for looking now, we still have the 01 Elantra, and when we traded in the Forester, we got a Hyundai VeraCruz (largest of the Hyundai SUVs). We've never had any issues with either vehicle that wasn't "self induced" - the SUV has had some recent nagging issues, but my wife was in an accident in it last August.

Obivously the dealership, etc are always going to be different and play a big role, but we've loved both Hyundai's we've owned.

Blackadar
05-08-2012, 09:06 AM
A question and an opinion.

We had a Forester for about 9 years (99-08). Our 2nd car was/is a 01 Hyundai Elantra.

We had more issues with the Forester than we ever had with the Elantra. Maybe a lemon, 2 weeks in the rear defroster didn't work. Always some nagging issue with it- nothing major, but noises, etc. I am going to assume you never experienced any of these same problems?

As for looking now, we still have the 01 Elantra, and when we traded in the Forester, we got a Hyundai VeraCruz (largest of the Hyundai SUVs). We've never had any issues with either vehicle that wasn't "self induced" - the SUV has had some recent nagging issues, but my wife was in an accident in it last August.

Obivously the dealership, etc are always going to be different and play a big role, but we've loved both Hyundai's we've owned.

No problems with my Forester (well, until now). The car has been a rock. My sister bought one a couple of years ago and loves hers, too. In fact, I've had three new Subarus in my life - '86 GL Hatchback, 1998 Forester and a 2003 WRX - and all 3 cars have been great. Got 12 years out of the GL before a big truck ran it over, got 14 years out of the Forester and got rid of the WRX (:( ) when it wasn't practical for the family.

dawgfan
05-08-2012, 01:59 PM
The warranties on the Korean cars are amazing and a big selling point, along with the generally less expensive pricing. And now they've both had excellent styling makeovers.

Worth noting that Kia is partially owned by Hyundai, so if you feel reasonably good about Hyundai, that should probably carry over to Kia.

Not sure your pricing range, but if fuel economy is one of your big factors, worth noting that there's a hybrid Optima now. You should probably also consider a TDI - I'm guessing a Jetta would be the size car you'd probably look at. You can also get an A3 in a TDI, but you pay a lot for the Audi badge. Diesel still has a bad rap from some because they used to be gutless wonders, but the current generation of turbodiesels are much, much better, and the fuel economy is fantastic - better than a lot of hybrids in fact.

DanGarion
05-08-2012, 02:01 PM
Focus - Too small for us. The back seat room is tiny and so is the trunk. With a string-bean 12 year old (who will be taller than 6 feet) and a 2 year old (carseat room), it's just not the right car. Other than that, I was impressed. Great styling inside and out. Verdict: OUT

---

Which Focus did you look at the 4 door or the 5 Door Hatch Back? I fit comfortably in the back of it and I'm a big guy (we've test drove it and it is on our list of picks).

wade moore
05-08-2012, 02:10 PM
FWIW, I bought a Hyundai Elantra a few months ago with all of the bells and whistles. I LOVE this little car.

Marc Vaughan
05-08-2012, 02:20 PM
When a prospect says they will be buying within two weeks, there's no excuse for not trying to get their contact information at the very least. "Mr. Blackadar, what's the best way to reach you - email or phone?" and then follow up every day if necessary.
To me though that'd be an instant way to lose any chance of me purchasing from you.

I will NOT give my contact details to a car showroom when looking around for a car, why not - I work from home and have better things to do than answer pointless calls from a car dealership .... if I want to buy from you then I'd be in your dealership writing a cheque, if I'm not then I'm not buying or have gone elsewhere thank you very much.

I HATE pushy salesmen and theres no better way to ensure you lose a sale than to try and 'sell' to me - if I have a question about something I'll ask it, if I don't then leave me to make my own mind up (and for gods sake don't ever try and pretend my be my 'long lost buddy' - yes I realize you're on commission, that doesn't mean you're a prostitute, ease off - I'll buy or I won't).

Same thing with price - if I'm interested in a car then I know what I'll pay - its the price I indicate I'll pay up front, you can pontificate and go and 'discuss things with the manager' all you want (ie. have a quiet cigarette before coming back with a new amount) but ultimately you either say 'yes thats a fair price' or I go elsewhere ... I hate buying cars.

GrantDawg
05-08-2012, 02:29 PM
Ok, my car shopping AAR:

Started just browsing a couple of weeks ago, knowing we will buy at the end of this month/early next. There are certain things we knew we were looking for and/or wanted.

1) Car that will sit five comfortably (My daughter is 16 and dating. We need a back seat that she, a boy *shiver,* and my 8 year old can sit in comfortably with little "touching").

2) Wife really wants leather seats, so we prevent the stains from showing up that comes with having an 8 year old eat in the car.

3) I want a freakin' rear spoiler. We currently have a 2004 Nissan Sentra 2.5s. Great car, fun to drive (though small), and nice looking. Except it no spoiler. Cars just in general look so much better with a spoiler. When I bought it I said I'd get one, but here we are 8 years later and never had it done. I learned from that, if it the car doesn't have what you want, then don't buy it.

4) All of the car standards: We need good gas mileage, some thing fun to drive, and dependable.

For years I figured I'd be looking Hyundai or Kia when I was looking to buy next. High dependability, nice looking, and solid pricing. But the last couple of years, the prices and dependability have evened out to a point that almost all cars are on the table. In then end, we are looking for the car that provides the best value for the money, while hitting our wants/needs.

The last couple of weeks we have been narrowing down our options. Mostly, we have these as our chief contenders: Nissan Altima, Toyota Camry, Honda Accord, and the Ford Fusion. We ruled out small SUV's first. I never have liked driving them, and they don't provide the seating comfort that the mid-sized sedans do. My wife has long favored Altimas (the grown up version of our car), but they are a bit dated to me. Camry's are great cars, as well as Accords, but right now they have no cash incentives. With the increase MSRP's to start on both of those, it puts their prices well over the other two. So, it is a battle between Fusions and Altimas.

We went out the last week or so and took a quick look at the dealerships. Both times we were able to sit in the cars, but we haven't gone as far as test drive. Funnily (much like Blacky), I never was pushed on personal info or anything. I'd got my butt chewed back when i was selling if I didn't get info at the least, and not even getting the customer in the building. Anyway, both are nice. It looks like though that getting the Altima in leather will mean jumping to the top trim, and that is priced higher than the Fusion.

Add to that Ragone's gift of a X-plan pin, it is getting pretty clear what we are looking at. Dropping 2-3k before rebates, and not having to fight for it, is sweet.

Pumpy Tudors
05-08-2012, 02:30 PM
Don't say that too loud. I don't want Pimpin' Pumpy to come in and bitch slap me for inching into his territory.
I'm watching you.

Rizon
05-08-2012, 02:43 PM
To me though that'd be an instant way to lose any chance of me purchasing from you.

I will NOT give my contact details to a car showroom when looking around for a car, why not - I work from home and have better things to do than answer pointless calls from a car dealership .... if I want to buy from you then I'd be in your dealership writing a cheque, if I'm not then I'm not buying or have gone elsewhere thank you very much.

I HATE pushy salesmen and theres no better way to ensure you lose a sale than to try and 'sell' to me - if I have a question about something I'll ask it, if I don't then leave me to make my own mind up (and for gods sake don't ever try and pretend my be my 'long lost buddy' - yes I realize you're on commission, that doesn't mean you're a prostitute, ease off - I'll buy or I won't).

Same thing with price - if I'm interested in a car then I know what I'll pay - its the price I indicate I'll pay up front, you can pontificate and go and 'discuss things with the manager' all you want (ie. have a quiet cigarette before coming back with a new amount) but ultimately you either say 'yes thats a fair price' or I go elsewhere ... I hate buying cars.

+1

Ragone
05-08-2012, 03:12 PM
I hate car dealerships as much as the next guy.. nothing makes decent car companies look bad as dealerships do..

I tend to go later at night.. (around 8-9 pm) after all the salesmen are gone.. Most dealerships in halfway decent areas will leave all the used cars unlocked.. that way you can sit in cars and get a feel for them.. My next car was going to be a ford flex before i saw the 2013 escape.

I have always wondered what car dealerships would be like if car companies had more control of their practices..

GrantDawg
05-08-2012, 03:34 PM
I hate car dealerships as much as the next guy.. nothing makes decent car companies look bad as dealerships do..

I tend to go later at night.. (around 8-9 pm) after all the salesmen are gone.. Most dealerships in halfway decent areas will leave all the used cars unlocked.. that way you can sit in cars and get a feel for them.. My next car was going to be a ford flex before i saw the 2013 escape.

I have always wondered what car dealerships would be like if car companies had more control of their practices..


Honestly? I have no idea why they just make dealership's more like retail shops. It has been tried (Saturn, Scion, Carmax for used cars, etc.), but the model just doesn't seem to grow or stick. It is ridiculous that buying a car is more like going to war than an enjoyable major purchase. My guess is the dealers make too much money off the gullible to ever allow a full scale change.

Ajaxab
05-08-2012, 04:08 PM
Honestly? I have no idea why they just make dealership's more like retail shops. It has been tried (Saturn, Scion, Carmax for used cars, etc.), but the model just doesn't seem to grow or stick. It is ridiculous that buying a car is more like going to war than an enjoyable major purchase. My guess is the dealers make too much money off the gullible to ever allow a full scale change.

+1 My sister-in-law bought a car a couple of summers ago from a no haggle dealership. The price in the window was the price and that was that. No need to negotiate over a couple hundred bucks here or there. I definitely prefer that to the dance that goes on between customer, sales rep and manager. All that back and forth seems like such a waste of time to me.

stevew
05-08-2012, 04:17 PM
The haggle back in forth is where they can lure people into math suicide. It's worth it to them.

Ragone
05-08-2012, 05:20 PM
I guess since I have direct employer discount.. I never get to experience shitty dealings.
Because dealerhips know I can go to ford and get them insome trouble..id love it if they'd
All got a saturn type dealership format.. with some tweaks

Blackadar
05-09-2012, 08:40 AM
To me though that'd be an instant way to lose any chance of me purchasing from you.

I will NOT give my contact details to a car showroom when looking around for a car, why not - I work from home and have better things to do than answer pointless calls from a car dealership .... if I want to buy from you then I'd be in your dealership writing a cheque, if I'm not then I'm not buying or have gone elsewhere thank you very much.

I HATE pushy salesmen and theres no better way to ensure you lose a sale than to try and 'sell' to me - if I have a question about something I'll ask it, if I don't then leave me to make my own mind up (and for gods sake don't ever try and pretend my be my 'long lost buddy' - yes I realize you're on commission, that doesn't mean you're a prostitute, ease off - I'll buy or I won't).

Same thing with price - if I'm interested in a car then I know what I'll pay - its the price I indicate I'll pay up front, you can pontificate and go and 'discuss things with the manager' all you want (ie. have a quiet cigarette before coming back with a new amount) but ultimately you either say 'yes thats a fair price' or I go elsewhere ... I hate buying cars.

FYI, my last sentence was a bit of hyperbole. But letting a prospect leave the lot without even trying to get some contact information is inexcusable.

Blackadar
05-09-2012, 09:05 AM
Car Searching AAR, Part II

We braved a couple of thunderstorms, a cranky 2 year old, Charlotte traffic, Waffle House food and vultures to look for a car last night. What fun. Shoot me now.

CarMax

I wanted to get rid of the old Subaru, so I took it by CarMax. They'll buy almost anything. Frankly, it was a pretty decent experience. We walked in, told them we wanted to sell our car, gave them a bit of information and the keys and let them take it. We returned later and they offered me $1,500 for it. I had already done my research and that was a pretty fair price, so I took it. We went down the hall, signed a couple of documents, waited about 10 minutes and got a Cashier's Check for $1,500. So now we're committed to buying a new car. :)


Hyundai

It just so happened that we again hit the Hyundai dealership first. This was a different one with a different salesperson. Tom did a pretty good job - showed us the cars, made recommendations, pointed out key features but wasn't overly pushy. He failed to get our contact information, though and forgot to give us his card. That's an unforgivable sin. Grade: D.

Elentra - The Wife took this for a test drive while I entertained the two year old. Again, we both like the car - good room, great gas mileage, etc. She liked driving it too. I think it might be a bit small for long road trips, though and if my son grows into the 6+ footer he's likely to, he might not have as much headroom in the back that he'd need. This is The Wife's top choice and I'm not entirely opposed to it. It's the cheapest of the bunch, Verdict: DEFINITE CANDIDATE.

We ruled out the Tuscon last night. The Wife finally understands that two small SUVs isn't the best way to go.

Kia

The deluge started as we got to the Kia dealer. I hate looking for cars in the freaking rain.

At least we were going against traffic, so the trip to the Kia dealership wasn't bad. Maurice had to deal with the deluge. He really did a fine job of talking about the features, though he probably tried to cover too much. He gave us a card and got our contact information, so that was good. But he talked to me instead of The Wife (or us) and didn't have an umbrella handy. So The Wife was a bit turned off. Grade: D+

Kia Optima - I kind of like this car. It's bigger than the Elentra and is pretty sporty looking for a sedan. It's a bit cheaper than the Camry/Accord and it a bump up from the Elentra class. 200 horsepower under the hood give it a sporty feel and the interior is really well done. It sits close to the ground a bit, but there's plenty of room and it has a decent sized trunk. The Wife wouldn't test drive it (the 2 year old was very rambunctious at this point) partly because she was ticked off at the salesman. I drove it briefly and thought it was pretty damn nice. Verdict: DEFINITE CANDIDATE

Kia Soul - The wife kind of liked the look, so we had Maurice pull this one around as well. It's cute and cheap, but too small in the back seats and has a very small cargo area. Verdict: OUT.

Subaru

We went next door to the Subaru lot. We walked the lot for 10 minutes. Even though the sun was back out, not one person came out to help us. How fucking pathetic was that? So we left. Grade: F----

Subaru Impreza - Since we didn't see one on the lot and after being ignored by the staff, this one is fading fast. Verdict: HANGING ON BY A THREAD.

Ford

Again, the last stop of the night. The salesperson was an older guy - Bob - who was affable, low key and knew his shit. He tried very hard to help us, showed us a couple of cars and even some used car possibilities. He got our contact information, gave us his card and was a true professional. Grade: A

Fusion - I loved the look of the Focus, but it was too small. So I really looked forward to seeing the Fusion. Unfortunately, we were a bit disappointed. Even though it costs $5k more than the Elentra, the interior space wasn't appreciably bigger. As we sat in it, my son commented that this "looks like a Grandpa car". The dash and interior had a lot of buttons (too many) and just didn't have the cool look of the Focus. The Wife took this for a test drive and she said it drove well, but called it "vanilla". That's not a good sign. Verdict: OUT

---

I still want to hit the Honda and Toyota dealers to see the Camry and Accord. I've also started the Internet contacts with a couple of other dealers to see what they're going to do via Internet pricing. The front runner is the Elentra, with the Optima just a hair behind. I'm really interested in seeing the Accord and I know the Camry is a solid choice. The Impreza isn't ruled out yet, but after last night it's on the outside looking in. The Wife is getting tired of car shopping already and probably just wants to buy anything to end the pain. :)

As an aside, I'm very tempted to call the Sales Manager of the Subaru dealership and let him know why they're not selling cars. Should I?

GrantDawg
05-09-2012, 11:02 AM
Call him if you are really interested in the car. He'll probably pull out the red carpet for you next time you come by. Deal with him directly if you want to speed up the buying process. Salesmen actually have no power when it comes to negotiations. They are more like a lawyer for both parties, urging you to take the deal, begging the sales manger to give a price you'll like. Deal with the sales manger directly during the negotiation, and you'll save yourself the back and forth.

I feel for Maurice. I remember those rain days, and having to run out in the deluge trying to find and bring up cars. Sold some cars that way, but it was even more frustrating when you go through that and the person drives off.

The "not getting info" thing is so weird. I wonder if they have pushed salesmen to change tactics? Try really hard not to seem "pushy?" I know our commission checks very much depended on customer survey responses. Maybe they were getting too many complaints back on salesmen being overly aggresive in calling, and stop pushing getting the info on every "looky-loo?" But more then likely it is just we are running into lazy salesmen that don't care unless you are "buying today." I was trained that everyone that walked on the lot would buy today if I did my job (sort of unfair and stupid), but I did sell to plenty of people that said they weren't plan on buying for awhile. If a customer likes you, wants the product, and has means, they will buy.

wade moore
05-09-2012, 11:28 AM
Elentra - The Wife took this for a test drive while I entertained the two year old. Again, we both like the car - good room, great gas mileage, etc. She liked driving it too. I think it might be a bit small for long road trips, though and if my son grows into the 6+ footer he's likely to, he might not have as much headroom in the back that he'd need. This is The Wife's top choice and I'm not entirely opposed to it. It's the cheapest of the bunch, Verdict: DEFINITE CANDIDATE.

If you start considering this more seriously, let me know if you have questions. Like I said, I just bought one in December. I may not always check this thread, so you may need to PM me to alert me to it.

Suburban Rhythm
05-09-2012, 12:04 PM
Hyundai

It just so happened that we again hit the Hyundai dealership first. This was a different one with a different salesperson. Tom did a pretty good job - showed us the cars, made recommendations, pointed out key features but wasn't overly pushy. He failed to get our contact information, though and forgot to give us his card. That's an unforgivable sin. Grade: D.

Elentra - The Wife took this for a test drive while I entertained the two year old. Again, we both like the car - good room, great gas mileage, etc. She liked driving it too. I think it might be a bit small for long road trips, though and if my son grows into the 6+ footer he's likely to, he might not have as much headroom in the back that he'd need. This is The Wife's top choice and I'm not entirely opposed to it. It's the cheapest of the bunch, Verdict: DEFINITE CANDIDATE.



I guess it depends on your definition of long trip-

Ours has been used 3 times on "out of town" trips, where we normally would have used the "bigger" car.

Back when it was a pretty new car, my wife and I used it for a trip to/from Columbus, from Pittsburgh. About 360 miles round trip, and nearly made it on one tank of gas because it was nearly all highway driving.

My wife used it once to go to Baltimore to visit her brother/sister in law when they had their first kid and had no complaints.

In February I used it to go to Cleveland when my son decided he wanted to watch a "real" (read NBA) basketball game.

In all my cases, only 2 passengers, but the trunk is pretty big on that car, and you've got a solid 5-8 years before the little guy is complaining about sitting in back all the time.

Because outside of those few trips mentioned above, it was mainly used to/from the hospital for my wife to work (12 mile round trip) our 2001 model has only about 40,000 miles on it. I tell my 8 year old daughter she'll be learning to drive on it, because we'll still have it in 2020!

Blackadar
05-09-2012, 02:19 PM
I guess it depends on your definition of long trip-

550 miles or so.

In all my cases, only 2 passengers, but the trunk is pretty big on that car, and you've got a solid 5-8 years before the little guy is complaining about sitting in back all the time.

4 passengers, including a 2 year old. But the "little guy" may top 6 feet within two years. He went from a size 6 to a size 9 shoe in the last 6 months.

stevew
05-09-2012, 02:44 PM
I know you don't want another SUV, but the new CRV is really nice. My parents picked up a one year old model with low mileage a few months back. I hear the mileage on the newest version is even better.

GrantDawg
05-10-2012, 10:30 PM
Tonight, the wife and I ran buy the Ol' Hyundai dealership. It was sort of fun, because it was the same lot that the Toyota dealership was were I used to work. The actual plan was to just drive by to allow the wife (who just wasn't that interested in a Hyundai) to have look at the Elantra, Sonata, and the Sante Fe, then drive to Toyota to test drive a Camry. We wanted a Sante Fe back when they first came out, and a couple of people we know just recently bought new ones. We are strongly leaning Fusion, but we want to do due diligence and make sure that is the right car for us.

So, we drove through and I pointed out the different cars. I am guessing she still thought "cheap and ugly" when she thought Hyundai, but after seeing a few she said "park." We were being tracked as we rode around by an old guy, and I knew were going to get jumped the second we got out. Our salesman was Gray, and he was a nice guy. He's been in car sales for years, but only here a few weeks (moved here with the sales manager, which is common in car sales). He let us look and drive and actually didn't even ask for our information till we were leaving.

First vehicle to look at was the Santa Fe. It was Limited, with everything but the sun-roof. Pricey (remember, Hyundai has zip on rebates), but not scream and run, price wise. We tripped him out when we both got in the back seat first thing. My wife is just freaking out on the back seat thing. She still wasn't overly impressed with the size. I really think she has in mind the old car, huge back seats. I finally told her "look, we can get a monster back seat if you want. But then we are going to have get a boat like a Expedition, and neither of us wants to drive anything that big around." I think I might have eased her up a little on fixating on one unrealistic thing.

We didn't drive the Santa Fe, because in the end we just don't want a SUV. They are just not nearly as fun to drive (to me) as a car. I've never been a fan, and she never has either. That'll probably the last time throwing those in the mix.

Next, I drove the 2013 Sonata Hybrid. Fully loaded minus sunroof and Nav, priced at 28K MSRP. Not a bad price for a hybrid, but you know going in they move very little on them. It really wasn't that impressive a drive either. It doesn't have the CVT that most other Hybrids carry, and it makes the ride feel awkward. The gas millage also wasn't that big a jump from the regular Sonata. All-in-all, a pass.

I then tried a Sonata GLS with the 2.4l 4-banger. It drove well (though not OMG! fantastic). The interior looks nice, and seems roomy and comfortable. We also sat in a 2.0T limited that I really liked. The panoramic sunroof is pretty nice, but it is on the high side of what we want to spend (30k+). The Sonata was just a due diligence look, but is now definitely in the running.

Tomorrow, Toyota gets its visit that was eaten by Hyundai today. We will look at Camry, and the Tacoma 4-door (I have always loved them, but I doubt the wife is going to let me have one:)).

Blackadar
05-11-2012, 07:43 AM
Time to catch up on the AAR.

Wednesday

Car visits, Round 3. No rain this time, thankfully.

Subaru

The Wife wanted to go see an Impreza 5 door rather than the 4 door we test drove. So I placed a call to Ralph and back we went. Ralph's low key demeanor was the right approach, he talked to The Wife and he even realized that he forgot to get our contact information. Much better. Grade: A-

Impreza 5 Door - It drives just like the 4 door, but has a hatchback. The Wife likes the look, but I think it looks like a station wagon. I wasn't impressed with the finishes nor the depth of the cargo area, but she likes it, so it's a CONTENDER.


Honda

I had spoken with the Internet Sales Manager at Honda, so she had a younger sales girl - Kristin - working with us. She was good. Very good. She made a point of not just pointing out the features on the car, but pointing out the ones a mother of two would like. Very knowledgeable, very smooth and very well done. Grade: A+

Accord - The Wife likes. A lot. Roomy, drives well, decent pickup, ok gas mileage, large trunk, the interior looks ok, etc. There's not much to not like. I'm not a big fan of the ivory cloth seats (they look like drapes to me) and the wheel wells come in a bit far in the trunk, but that's about it. Verdict: DEFINITE CONTENDER.


Toyota

We drew an older sales lady that reminded me of the chain-smoking chick in Beetlejuice. Not a particularly good image.

http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-jgpqCVBCHZA/ToTuhcTw9UI/AAAAAAAAB-M/4F6XXpyF4cQ/s1600/beetlejuice11-juno.jpg

She did concentrate on The Wife, but to the exclusion of me. Not exactly the best way to get the business, but better to ignore me than The Wife. She did get some contact information, but when someone wants to look at a car and the best you can do is say "there's one in the showroom", that's not very helpful. She did better later on, but first impressions are everything. Grade: C+

Camry - The test drive was pretty much like driving the Accord, though I think The Wife likes the Accord a touch more. The Camry's styling isn't impressive inside or out, but from a driving and functional standpoint it's hard to beat. A bit vanilla, but still a CONTENDER.

Blackadar
05-11-2012, 07:49 AM
Wednesday Night

Had a knockdown fight with The Wife about the cars. She started complaining that I was "running her ragged". Needless to say, I blew a fuse considering that:

1. It's a car for her
2. I'm the one coming home from work and giving up my free time to go look while she's at home all day.
3. If she could make a decision I wouldn't have had to visit half of the dealerships we've gone to.
4. If she was going to complain, I'd go buy whatever the fuck I wanted.

She decided that complaining wasn't the best option.

Then she started talking about the Hyundai Tacoma and I blew fuse #2. We've been to the Hyundai dealerships twice and she hasn't bothered to test drive one, now she wants to go back a third time?!? Oh hellllllll no.

After a time out for both of us, we started whittling down the list.

The final 4

Honda Accord
Subaru Impreza 5 Door
Hyundai Elantra
Kia Optima

Time to find a way to get rid of a couple of these options.

Blackadar
05-11-2012, 08:27 AM
Thursday

I've got to narrow that list a bit.

I don't play games with dealers, well at least not the way they want to play games. I tell all of them the same thing. They need to make money on this deal. But I'm going to ask for their best price up front for a car I'm buying in the next 24 hours. If I think it's fair, then we'll deal. If I think they're holding back, I'll shop it. If I find they're holding back, I'll buy from someone else because I don't like being lied to. Everyone gets one shot and one shot only. All quotes need to be OUT THE DOOR pricing. I know the car dealers hate that shit, but it's worth it for me. Plus, it's a great source of entertainment for me. I love doing this. Hehe!

Virtually all of these are base models. I'm not much into bells and whistles.

Impreza

The dealer indicated that the 5 door was in high demand. It should be the 2nd cheapest car and needs to be, given the interior issues and the small depth of the trunk area. So let's see how willing they are to deal. I give Ralph The Speech and ask him to go get pricing. He comes back with his "best" pricing within the hour. Quote: $21,101 plus tax, title and fees. Sorry Ralph, that's not out the door pricing. Plus, it's too damn high by about $2,000. Impreza is OUT.

And then there were three...

Optima

Dealer 1 - I called a dealer in Salisbury to get pricing. Gave him the speech, got back their "best" number. $21,600 OTD. Not bad, but not what I was expecting. A bit high.

AAA - To compare that quote, I decided to use the AAA buying service. Gave them the same specs and had them quote the Optima. $22,100. Not even close.

Dealer 2 - I've looked online and I know what decent OTD pricing should look like on the Optima. I haven't seen it yet. So even though this was the dealer that pissed off the wife, I gave them a call back. I got pricing back within the hour. $20,774.74. That's more like it.


Honda

Dealer 1 - This is the dealer The Wife really liked. They gave me a great price right off the bat. $20,970.

Dealer 2 - There's always at least one that fucks around. This one was it. I called them, gave them the script and said I'd like to buy from them as they're closer. Their initial price: $22,900. Thanks, but no. 5 minutes later I hear from the Curtis sales manager asking what they can do. The conversation went something like this:

Me: I asked for your best quote up front. You told me $22,900. I guess you don't want or need the business.

Curtis: What do you mean?

Me: Curtis, I just received a quote from AAA (little fib) for the same Honda for $20,900. You're $2,000 high. That's not even close.

Curtis: Um...what if we beat that by $250?

Me: Curtis, I wish you would have because I'd have purchased from you tonight. But I don't do business that way and that's what I told your sales rep when I called. Your quote is $22,900 and that's not getting you the business. Thank you for your time.

Curtis hung up on me...then called me back 3 more times. I'm not answering.


Elantra

Dealer 1 - This is the the first dealership we went to. I gave Mark the speech and had him go get pricing. $19,600. Not even close, Mark. That car isn't worth over $18,500.

Dealer 2 - Gave Tom the speech. He got back to me within the hour. $19,171. Again, not good enough.

Elantra is OUT.

---
Last two standing:
Honda Accord
Kia Optima

Time to sleep on it.

---

1:00 AM. I can't sleep. I'm tossing and turning. I'm forgetting something.

Ah-ha!

Susan, my salesgirl, can get good deals on the Camry. Or so she claims...like *very* good deals. The Wife liked the Camry almost as much as the Accord. If she can get it for $20k or so AND since Toyota is having 0% financing, that'd knock off about $1,600 or so from the overall cost of the car over the next couple of years. For $1,600 less, I'll take a Camry over the Accord/Optima.

So I knock out an email to her. She'll chase that rabbit for me in the morning.

So then there were three? Maybe? We'll see....

gstelmack
05-11-2012, 09:00 AM
My last 3 cars I bought by getting Internet quotes. I did all my research to figure out what car I wanted, then just went on the websites to request quotes. In every case those quotes have been at or under the Consumer Reports car quote service, and matched what we expected. We did a final test drive to make sure we were sure, then made sure to say "no" to everything the guy who actually does the financing asked me if I wanted, which is the longest part of the entire process. Very smooth and easy, just a bit time consuming to complete the actual purchase.

My car before that was a Ford Ranger, that I ended up buying after a miserable experience (just before Internet buying became common). I stuck to my guns on price, we were ready to walk when they finally met it (they couldn't believe I wouldn't budge at all from what I said I wanted to pay), and I did the math later to figure out that every other offer involved them essentially stealing my trade. I will NEVER go through that again, and getting Internet quotes means I just have to deal with saying "no" to all the after-market addons they want to gouge me with. I will never buy from that dealer again.

GrantDawg
05-11-2012, 11:57 AM
You both are on the right track with how to deal with a dealer. Internet pricing is good (though that will depend on the dealer), and I do the exact same thing Blacky does.Get the out-the-door price. If not, then you start a whole new round of fighting when you see the bottom line, and they have added $800 in doc fess, $500 in ad fess, etc. etc.

What I mean by "it depends on the dealer" is this. When I was selling, my dealership was not a high volume dealership. Most high volume dealerships depend on turn over for their profits much more than profit-per-sale. If they can make money on the sale, it is gravy. But they get more money on hitting manufacturer's quotas, and getting the big bonus checks. Smaller dealers really depend more on getting a profit-per-sale. So, they'll tell you anything to get you in the door (including bald-face lying which I was told to do on numerous occasions), then try to screw you hard once they had you. That I couldn't take, and why I left when I did.

If you want to buy from a lower volume dealer, always do it at the end of the month. They will have their best incentive to come down on the price either to hit a quota, or because manufacturers are more likely to offer dealer cash to franchises on holidays or at the end of the month.

Take for instance the Hyundai dealership I was dealing with. You could tell they where low-volume (they had two salesmen on duty, and only one sales manager). They also had the little "greed stickers" on every window (that is the add-on sticker that is beside the window-sticker. It usually a bunch of made up fees and add-ons to drive up the price). I know they are not going to give me the best price from the get-go, unless I play hard and start the negotiation near the end of the month. If the Sonata ends up being our target car, then I'm going to hit them around the Memorial day weekend (best chance on dealer incentives), and hit a big Hyundai dealer at the same time.

And on the wife thing, Blacky. I am having the same problems as you, and it always seems like we have this problem around major purchases. We nearly got into a fight at the Hyundai lot, until I did my "come to Jesus" speech. I really think it comes down to the fact that even though my wife wants a new car and knows we have to get a new car, she is scared of buying one. Every major purchase is like this. Says she wants one thing, and then makes up three contradicting things to make it nearly impossible to make a decision. I try to make her happy, but in the end it will be up to me to put my foot down and make the decision. I hate it, but that is life with a woman. :)

Sweed
05-11-2012, 12:58 PM
Thursday

I don't play games with dealers, well at least not the way they want to play games. I tell all of them the same thing. They need to make money on this deal. But I'm going to ask for their best price up front for a car I'm buying in the next 24 hours. If I think it's fair, then we'll deal. If I think they're holding back, I'll shop it. If I find they're holding back, I'll buy from someone else because I don't like being lied to. Everyone gets one shot and one shot only. All quotes need to be OUT THE DOOR pricing. I know the car dealers hate that shit, but it's worth it for me. Plus, it's a great source of entertainment for me. I love doing this. Hehe!

That's the key, loving the experience. I get why many people hate it but I happen enjoy car shopping. I go in knowing I don't have to buy a damn thing, the pressure is all on them.

JeeberD
05-11-2012, 01:51 PM
I love my Honda Accord but I splurged for the V6 since it felt so much better than the 4 cylinder, and quieter.

Yup, I bought a V6 Accord a little over a year ago, and I love it. Go for the Honda, Blacky!

Flasch186
05-11-2012, 07:22 PM
I love the oomph it has when needing to "hit it". I swear its like a luxury car to me.

GrantDawg
05-11-2012, 09:45 PM
Tonight was Toyota night. Our salesman William (who didn't get our info. This is getting pretty funny) was nice and patient as we checked out the Camry, Rav4, and the Tacoma. Was not impressed with the RAV4. Of course, as mentioned before we are not SUV fans, so not a surprise. Really need to stop wasting time looking at them.

Speaking of wasting time, the Tacoma. I love them. I have always loved. This is what I want. But the Evil Chief won't let me have one. At least I got to enjoy driving one again. *sigh*

The Camry is solid. Enjoyed driving, riding, looking at these. We test drove the LE, but I think if this is the car it will be SE we go with. Better suspension, better look, very little price difference. The wife liked the Camry better than the Sonata, so the Sonata is out.

Still have the Altima and Fusion to go.

GrantDawg
05-12-2012, 08:01 PM
What happened Blackadder? Inquiring minds want to know. :)

We pulled the trigger today. This is what we are buying:

http://www.inventory.ford.com/services/inventory/WindowSticker.pdf?vin=3FAHP0KC5CR251189&refid=FV

Hopefully that worked. It is a Ford Fusion Sport. 6-speed automatic V6, black on black. It is very nicely loaded. :)

We can't pick it up till Monday, because the dealer that had it in stock closed early. I am so excited to get it that I can't wait.

Why did we get it? Well, the wife decided this morning that she didn't really care about the Altima, and was ready to decide between the Camry and the Fusion. All that was left was the test drive and see how good a price we could get with Ragone's X-plan pin. I called the local dealer and talked to Kristie. I told her straight up we were coming in to test drive and make a decision, but I also told her I was pretty sure (by internet search) that they didn't have exactly what I wanted. I gave her the specifics, and asked her to find me a SEL and a Sport that was black on black, and give me the X-plan price.

We pulled up an hour later, and Kristie greeted us with the invoice in hand on the two cars she found. The price difference between the two was about $1800 (or basically the cost difference between a 4 or 6). The sport also had a couple of features the SEL didn't. In the end, I decided I wanted the Sport. Mainly because a) better suspension (like the Camry we were looking at), b) better transmission (there has been a history of problems with the trans they use in all the trims but the Sport). c) it is a freaking cool car. :)

By the time she used the X-plan and added the rebates, we were at $5,300 under invoice (or roughly what the Camry would have cost us with the 4-banger). They added free oil changes for life to counter the three year oil changes that Toyota is offering. Add on Ford financing deal, yeah. I feel pretty good about the purchase.

Now I'm driving a loaner SE till my car is ready. MONDAY COME!!!

Ragone
05-12-2012, 09:15 PM
X-plan is a helluva deal, Fully Loaded fusions are really really nice.. i'm honestly thinking about getting a fusion hybrid myself...

GrantDawg
05-12-2012, 09:26 PM
X-plan is a helluva deal, Fully Loaded fusions are really really nice.. i'm honestly thinking about getting a fusion hybrid myself...


Was tempted. I like the idea of a hybrid, and the Fusion hybrid gets high marks on handling and such. But the wife doesn't like the room you give up for the battery. We don't do extended city riding, so we wouldn't have gotten the best out of the mileage anyway.

Ragone
05-12-2012, 09:41 PM
I'm kinda waiting to see how they also do the hybrid battery in the 2013 escapes..

Blackadar
05-14-2012, 08:07 AM
And the winner is....

<drum roll>

...a 2012 charcoal Toyota Camry LE.

Huh? But...but...the Camry didn't even make the final 4? :confused:

Here's what transpired Friday. My sales girl (Susan) came in Friday and placed a call to one of her contacts at the Toyota dealership. It seems that her contact left, so she got a new sales person. She told him the car and the price and told him she needed a response fast since I was taking the afternoon off to go buy a car.

And she waited...and waited...and waited. 11:30 comes around and the guy (Joe) finally calls her back. Joe gives her a song and dance about how he doesn't do business that way, that we needed to come in...and before you know it, she was in a full-blown argument with Joe. It ended with "well, he'll just go buy the Accord", to which Joe responded "well, enjoy your Honda then!". Rather unprofessional, don't you think? At this point, we're going to the Honda dealership. Interestingly enough, I bought my RAV4 from the same Toyota dealership and my sales guy was named Joe...it couldn't be the same guy, could it?

But Susan is a Toyota fanatic and she knows the sales manager, so she fires off an email to the manager just blasting Joe. Within 5 minutes, she gets a call back and the guy is rather apologetic. Susan has directed a lot of business their way and this guy doesn't want to piss her off. So he takes the lead personally and calls back 15 minutes later with a OTD price on a LE with power seats and one of those cool auto-dimming mirrors...$21,312. Oh, and 0.0% financing for 48 months and two years' free service.

Oh my. Not bad.

I start doing the calculations in my head and the 'yota is cheaper than the Accord and the Optima for a better model. The wife liked the Camry and had a hard time picking between the Accord and the Camry. Alright, we'll come down and test drive it. If that goes ok, we're buying it.

So an hour and a half later I'm at the dealership with The Wife in tow. Since the sales mgr has the day off, I'm working with a new sales guy - Dave. Joe is out. So is the Beetlejuice lady. The Wife sits in the Camry, likes the power seats and the look. I take it for a test drive and I think it's probably fine. So we pull back into the dealership and I say, "ok, let's get this done".

We all go back inside and Dave goes to get the paperwork. He comes back with a number - $23,500 without taxes, tags, destination fee, etc. Uh, Dave, you didn't get the memo. I explain what's up and he looks confused - that price is "too low". I tell Dave to go call the sales mgr at home. Two minutes later, Dave is back and apologizing. He's going to get the right paperwork drawn up.

As I'm sitting there, Joe spots me and comes over to greet me. "Hey man, how are you doing? Buying another Toyota? Why didn't you come see me?" I gingerly explain that his blow-up this morning was over my deal and Joe turns rather pale. He stammers his way out of the conversation and then won't look at me the rest of the time I'm there. :)

So we get the paperwork done, I say "no" to all the extended warranties and stuff from the financing guy and we're out with a new Toyota Camry. It wouldn't have been my top choice, but it's a great car, looks ok, does everything she needs it to do and has a few gadgets she can play with. The Wife loves it and I was duly rewarded for my efforts...last night. :cool:

PS - Curtis at the Honda dealership that screwed around on the pricing called me back again. He asked me what I bought. I couldn't resist...so I told him a Honda Accord at another dealership. He hung up. :D

GrantDawg
05-14-2012, 09:22 AM
<drum roll="">

PS - Curtis at the Honda dealership that screwed around on the pricing called me back again. He asked me what I bought. I couldn't resist...so I told him a Honda Accord at another dealership. He hung up. :D


Lol! Congrats on the car. Solid choice.
</drum>

wade moore
05-14-2012, 10:13 AM
Just my $.02.

I find the idea of eliminating a car because the dealer didn't give you their "best price" from the get-go to be very weird.

Would you like them to do that? Sure, but that's just not how it works. You should pick the car based on what you like and what the best deal you can negotiate to imo. This weird view that they should somehow meet your demands of "the best price" from the get and you just eliminate them otherwise is silly.

So Toyota gets a benefit cause you have some connection, even if Honda or whomever would have ended up there anyways? Toyota got a chance to make counter offers, and the other dealers didn't. Idano, just strange to me.

To each his own though.

Blackadar
05-14-2012, 10:28 AM
Just my $.02.

I find the idea of eliminating a car because the dealer didn't give you their "best price" from the get-go to be very weird.

Would you like them to do that? Sure, but that's just not how it works. You should pick the car based on what you like and what the best deal you can negotiate to imo. This weird view that they should somehow meet your demands of "the best price" from the get and you just eliminate them otherwise is silly.

So Toyota gets a benefit cause you have some connection, even if Honda or whomever would have ended up there anyways? Toyota got a chance to make counter offers, and the other dealers didn't. Idano, just strange to me.

To each his own though.

That might work if you feel strongly about a particular automobile. For example, if I was going to buy a sportscar for $30k or so, I know that'd be a Subaru WRX without question. So yeah, I'd be working on getting the best price for that particular vehicle.

But The Wife doesn't feel that strongly about cars and in the market space we were looking in, there are many good choices. There's little to differentiate between an Accord, a Sentry, a Optima, a Sonata, an Altima, Fusion or half a dozen other cars. Once you start tossing out cars for poorer reviews or other known quantities, you're still left with a pool of cars all of which would be more than acceptable. And if you don't have a strong feeling about any of them, then it most certainly does come down to the combination of the "best car at the best price". In this case, that was the Camry.

The same thing happened when I was choosing between the RAV4 and the CR-V. I had a slight preference for the Honda, but either one was more than acceptable. Both had great rankings, similar looks, gas mileage, blah blah blah. So when the Toyota dealer offered me a better deal, that's the one I took. It works to my benefit if I'm not hung up on a particular make/model car.

FYI, if I had been the one choosing, I'd have picked the Optima. I liked the styling a bit more and the extra horsepower appealed to me. But I think the Camry was the more comfortable choice for The Wife. I think if the cars/finances had been closer to equal, then she would have taken the Accord. But when I get $1,500 more car and save $350 over the life of the loan, it's a no-brainer.

---

Also, in this case the dealer was eliminated and not the car. Hey, if someone tells me their best price is $X and then they come back and say it was really $X - $2,500, you might look at it as a negotiation. I don't. I look at that as a lie. It's one thing to hold a bit back for final negotiation, it's another thing to try to stick it to the consumer. That may be their job, but I'm the customer and I don't have to play by their rules.

Flasch186
05-14-2012, 10:56 AM
I dont know I also find it hypocritical that you would lie to them but not be ok with them lying back. {shrug} Im happy you got a new car and Im happy you got some nice returns last night.

wade moore
05-14-2012, 11:06 AM
---

Also, in this case the dealer was eliminated and not the car. Hey, if someone tells me their best price is $X and then they come back and say it was really $X - $2,500, you might look at it as a negotiation. I don't. I look at that as a lie. It's one thing to hold a bit back for final negotiation, it's another thing to try to stick it to the consumer. That may be their job, but I'm the customer and I don't have to play by their rules.

But isn't that exactly what happened with the Toyota dealer you ended up with?

Blackadar
05-14-2012, 12:07 PM
But isn't that exactly what happened with the Toyota dealer you ended up with?

No. That was just the sales guy not being clued in by his boss as to the already-negotiated final price.

Marc Vaughan
05-14-2012, 01:23 PM
Just my $.02.

I find the idea of eliminating a car because the dealer didn't give you their "best price" from the get-go to be very weird.

I do that myself - its a 'moral' thing for me, I don't like being arsed around and if I accept it from dealers then they'll do it to others .... if enough people take the same stance then fewer dealerships will dick people around.

(its also partially a safeguard against them being idiots later on - for instance if a dealership is willing to lie through their teeth initially how much do you trust them not to try and get out of something if push comes to shove with the warranty etc. .... but mainly I just dislike being treated like an idiot*/lied to by people)

I realise that sometimes it might cost me a few dollars, but generally theres a very similar deal to be had elsewhere and its worth it imho to remind places to play fair and not act like prats.

*I may well be an idiot, but please don't remind me ;)

wade moore
05-14-2012, 01:55 PM
No. That was just the sales guy not being clued in by his boss as to the already-negotiated final price.

Ah - just re-read, I misread it the first time.

Mustang
05-14-2012, 10:40 PM
Bought a new car myself this weekend. Ended up going with the Mazda 3 i Grand Touring. Nice car. (40 MPG highway does hurt either)

GrantDawg
05-14-2012, 10:45 PM
Bought a new car myself this weekend. Ended up going with the Mazda 3 i Grand Touring. Nice car. (40 MPG highway does hurt either)


Sweet car. Congrats.

Barkeep49
05-15-2012, 06:26 AM
Bought a new car myself this weekend. Ended up going with the Mazda 3 i Grand Touring. Nice car. (40 MPG highway does hurt either)
I really like my Mazda. I visited the dealer nearly as an after though after not being happy with any of the other cars I'd test driven and a few hours later I'd signed to buy the car. And, pertinent to this thread, they gave me a fabulous price right off the bat. Couple thousand dollars better than any other dealer's initial offer.

Barkeep49
05-26-2012, 09:36 AM
My brother stands a good chance of being offered a sales position at a Lexus dealership? Anything he should make sure to do before accepting?

GrantDawg
05-26-2012, 10:25 AM
My brother stands a good chance of being offered a sales position at a Lexus dealership? Anything he should make sure to do before accepting?


Be ready to starve for the first few months. I can't really say that for sure with a high-end dealership like that, though. Most likely, they probably pay better than most other dealers. The difference with them will be a higher expectation of closing, and closing with good profit margins.

Raiders Army
06-03-2012, 10:29 AM
When we bought our Lexus, it was a great experience and the best experience after buying the seven vehicles we've had in 16 years.

That being said, I will buy a 2012 Toyota Tundra this week with the SR5 package, Texas Edition, etc. It'll be a huge upgrade from our 2002 Pontiac Montana Minivan. We haven't had a car payment for the past two years, but with my son not getting a 3.0 last semester in college, we're done paying for college.

Sweed
06-03-2012, 02:17 PM
In the market now myself. Looking hard at the Ford Fusion. Had a good test drive already as the rental car we drove from Vegas to LA was a Fusion with just 68 miles on it when we picked it up.

Preapproved at the bank but will take advantage of any dealer offers if they end up being better. My biggest problem is I live in the sticks with closest volume dealers being ~3 hour drive so hopefully can do a lot online. My son does live by Des Moines though, so if I get a deal started there it won't be too bad.

So, over the week I'll be looking online at other models and getting some quotes in case I can't get a deal I like on the Fusion. Corrola, Camry, and even Focus will get a look. I wouldn't mind looking at Kia or Hyundai but there are no dealers remotely close to where I live. I do have a Honda only 67 miles away. Have read they are good cars, anyone have a recommendation?

Sweed
06-03-2012, 02:22 PM
Everytime a thread like this pops up i'm obligated to remind everyone i work for ford and can get you friends and family discount on a new vehicle if you choose to get Something from the ford family..

The 2012 escapes are getting huge incentives/rebates to clear out the lot for the redesigned 2013's coming soon.. you get both the rebates and incentives plus my discount..

Is this offer still good? Since I'm leaning heavily towards a 2012 Fusion I'd sure be interested in this discount. Every little bit helps.

Ragone
06-04-2012, 06:52 AM
sure can sweed.. i'll need some generic info from you.. and if you are nervous about it, just ask grantdawg for a reference.. will get info from you in pm

Blackadar
06-04-2012, 07:34 AM
So, over the week I'll be looking online at other models and getting some quotes in case I can't get a deal I like on the Fusion. Corrola, Camry, and even Focus will get a look. I wouldn't mind looking at Kia or Hyundai but there are no dealers remotely close to where I live. I do have a Honda only 67 miles away. Have read they are good cars, anyone have a recommendation?

Just looked and drove the same cars you mentioned - Fusion, Camry, Focus, Honda Accord, Kia Optima, Hyundai Elantra. They're all good cars. It's just a matter of what you like/need and deciding between the small differences between the models. For example, the Fusion back seat is a bit smaller and if you have a family, that's a consideration. If you don't, then the sporty drive and handling may make that the best choice for you. Or if you really don't need much of a back seat, the Focus has some amazing styling and really looks awesome from the driver's cockpit area.

I think you just need to decide between sizes first - Camry/Corrola and Focus/Fusion. If you want the bigger cars, then I'd normally say that it would be worth checking out the Accord. But since you're that far away, I wouldn't buy one unless none of the others click with you.

GrantDawg
06-04-2012, 10:51 AM
sure can sweed.. i'll need some generic info from you.. and if you are nervous about it, just ask grantdawg for a reference.. will get info from you in pm


I'll vouch for Ragone, and the Fusion highly. I truly love my car, and the X-plan pin is great. If you don't mind waiting for the dealer to get it, you can pretty much get the exact car your want brought to your closest dealer through a dealer-trade. It will have a few miles (they will drive it there), but it will get you the exact or close to exact color/trim/options you want. Because of the X-plan, you have the set price and limits on paperwork costs, etc. Makes it a great deal.

Sweed
06-04-2012, 12:40 PM
sure can sweed.. i'll need some generic info from you.. and if you are nervous about it, just ask grantdawg for a reference.. will get info from you in pm

Thanks a lot, this is awesome. You have my info in a PM.

Sweed
06-04-2012, 12:50 PM
Just looked and drove the same cars you mentioned - Fusion, Camry, Focus, Honda Accord, Kia Optima, Hyundai Elantra. They're all good cars. It's just a matter of what you like/need and deciding between the small differences between the models. For example, the Fusion back seat is a bit smaller and if you have a family, that's a consideration. If you don't, then the sporty drive and handling may make that the best choice for you. Or if you really don't need much of a back seat, the Focus has some amazing styling and really looks awesome from the driver's cockpit area.

I think you just need to decide between sizes first - Camry/Corrola and Focus/Fusion. If you want the bigger cars, then I'd normally say that it would be worth checking out the Accord. But since you're that far away, I wouldn't buy one unless none of the others click with you.

Thanks for the input. I think now with Ragone getting me the F&F discount a Ford is almost assured. I've only seen pictures of the new designed Focus interior, and yeah looks pretty cool. My son's first new car purchase after college was a Focus. It was a good car for him that he traded this year for a new Escape. We took it to Chicago a couple of times(4 hour drive each way from his place). Good ride and nice car which surprised me at the time being a smaller car. While strongly leaning to Fusion I'll still take a look at the Focus.

Sweed
06-04-2012, 12:58 PM
I'll vouch for Ragone, and the Fusion highly. I truly love my car, and the X-plan pin is great. If you don't mind waiting for the dealer to get it, you can pretty much get the exact car your want brought to your closest dealer through a dealer-trade. It will have a few miles (they will drive it there), but it will get you the exact or close to exact color/trim/options you want. Because of the X-plan, you have the set price and limits on paperwork costs, etc. Makes it a great deal.

Thanks, I figured this was going to be good:)

I asked Ragone in my PM to him but I'll also ask you here. Do you negotiate a price first and then let the dealer know you had a X-plan PIN giving you an additional discount? Do you let the dealer know upfront? Or from your post "you have the set price" mean there is no negotiation on price other than you as the buyer still being able to take advantage of dealer rebates or special financing?

GrantDawg
06-04-2012, 04:14 PM
Thanks, I figured this was going to be good:)

I asked Ragone in my PM to him but I'll also ask you here. Do you negotiate a price first and then let the dealer know you had a X-plan PIN giving you an additional discount? Do you let the dealer know upfront? Or from your post "you have the set price" mean there is no negotiation on price other than you as the buyer still being able to take advantage of dealer rebates or special financing?


No negotiation. They will show the x-plan price right on the invoice. You need to let them know straight out that it is an x-plan buy, and make sure you ask them to run the "vincent" on the car you want. You will get every incentive (including hidden dealer incentives) on the car.

GrantDawg
06-04-2012, 04:16 PM
Plus, doc fees are capped at $100. Don't trust them when they say "we can beat the x-plan price." That means they are going to make more off of you somewhere. Ford pays them $400-$500 bucks on the deal. So, to forgoe that means they are making it off you. :)

Sweed
06-04-2012, 04:37 PM
No negotiation. They will show the x-plan price right on the invoice. You need to let them know straight out that it is an x-plan buy, and make sure you ask them to run the "vincent" on the car you want. You will get every incentive (including hidden dealer incentives) on the car.

Plus, doc fees are capped at $100. Don't trust them when they say "we can beat the x-plan price." That means they are going to make more off of you somewhere. Ford pays them $400-$500 bucks on the deal. So, to forgoe that means they are making it off you. :)

Thanks. While I have mostly enjoyed the haggling when buying a car (mostly due to going in with I don't have to buy anything and watch them go nuts when I walk away over $200:)) this whole thing is making me smile.

Couple more things, did you trade a vehicle in or go straight out?

When you say every incentive does that mean you also get the low interest rate? Does that sound greedy?:) Either way is fine as financing isn't a problem, just curious.

Sweed
06-04-2012, 04:48 PM
Got my PIN # so one more big public THANK YOU to Ragone. Simply awesome.

GrantDawg
06-04-2012, 04:48 PM
Thanks. While I have mostly enjoyed the haggling when buying a car (mostly due to going in with I don't have to buy anything and watch them go nuts when I walk away over $200:)) this whole thing is making me smile.

Couple more things, did you trade a vehicle in or go straight out?

When you say every incentive does that mean you also get the low interest rate? Does that sound greedy?:) Either way is fine as financing isn't a problem, just curious.


Ford was/is offering a 0% interest if you qualify, and an extra $1000 if you take it. I did (how could you possibly beat that?) :). Incentives like that vary, and depends on if you qualify. But you can (and boy, the dealer doesn't want you to know this) take the $1000 rebate from Ford credit and refinance the car later.

Anyway, yes you can get the financing incentive as long as you qualify on top of the X-plan deal.

No, I did not trade. The trade negotiation is totally up to you. Get the appraisal off the Ford site before you go in to know what you should get. I hate trading-in cars, because the best you'll get is 40-60% of the car's value. It just saves you the headache of selling yourself. Another thing you can do (if there is a carmax near you) is take it to Carmax to sell or get a price from them. Their values are good from them for 30 days (at least used to be). So, you can sell straight to them, or take the valuation and try to give the dealer a chance to beat it.

Sweed
06-04-2012, 04:54 PM
Ford was/is offering a 0% interest if you qualify, and an extra $1000 if you take it. I did (how could you possibly beat that?) :). Incentives like that vary, and depends on if you qualify. But you can (and boy, the dealer doesn't want you to know this) take the $1000 rebate from Ford credit and refinance the car later.

Anyway, yes you can get the financing incentive as long as you qualify on top of the X-plan deal.

No, I did not trade. The trade negotiation is totally up to you. Get the appraisal off the Ford site before you go in to know what you should get. I hate trading-in cars, because the best you'll get is 40-60% of the car's value. It just saves you the headache of selling yourself. Another thing you can do (if there is a carmax near you) is take it to Carmax to sell or get a price from them. Their values are good from them for 30 days (at least used to be). So, you can sell straight to them, or take the valuation and try to give the dealer a chance to beat it.

Yeah, already have an appraisal on the trade. Didn't know about carmax. If I go to Des Moines I'll check to see if they have carmax. Bought our van new in 03 that I'm trading and it's something I'd rather not spend a lot of time on. Thanks again

sooner333
06-04-2012, 05:10 PM
I'm now in the new car market. After shelling out about $3k in repairs over the last four months on my '03 BMW 325i, I've decided I'm in the market for a new car.

Test drove the Hyundai Genesis Coupe and high-end Sonata as well as the Nissan Altima and Maxima. I'm going to to take my time to really see what I'll like the best though.

Blackadar
06-04-2012, 07:15 PM
Ford was/is offering a 0% interest if you qualify, and an extra $1000 if you take it. I did (how could you possibly beat that?) :). Incentives like that vary, and depends on if you qualify. But you can (and boy, the dealer doesn't want you to know this) take the $1000 rebate from Ford credit and refinance the car later.

Anyway, yes you can get the financing incentive as long as you qualify on top of the X-plan deal.

No, I did not trade. The trade negotiation is totally up to you. Get the appraisal off the Ford site before you go in to know what you should get. I hate trading-in cars, because the best you'll get is 40-60% of the car's value. It just saves you the headache of selling yourself. Another thing you can do (if there is a carmax near you) is take it to Carmax to sell or get a price from them. Their values are good from them for 30 days (at least used to be). So, you can sell straight to them, or take the valuation and try to give the dealer a chance to beat it.

It's good for 7 days on Carmax now. But it was the easiest car transaction I've ever had, so if they offer a good deal, my advice is to take it and get the used car negotiation out of the purchase of the new car.

Ragone
06-05-2012, 05:26 AM
And as i also told you in pm sneed, and all who may want a pin in the future.. Get the trade in value stated first before busting out the x-plan pin.. they will try to get their profits back from you on the trade in.. the car max idea is a solid one..

Vegas Vic
06-23-2012, 05:39 PM
X-plan is a helluva deal, Fully Loaded fusions are really really nice.. i'm honestly thinking about getting a fusion hybrid myself...

I bought a 2012 Fusion Hybrid last month, and I'm very pleased with the performance so far. It's a fun car to drive, and the only way I can tell I'm driving a hybrid is how quiet it is.

I got almost 700 miles on my first tank of gas, and so far I'm getting 40.2 MPG combined even though I've been running the AC almost all of the time. The MPG should improve in the fall and winter here without the AC.

The car will accelerate quickly if needed, as the gas and electric motors combine for 191 HP. It makes a quiet, almost seamless transition from electric to gas. Unlike the Prius and some other hybrids, this car looks like a normal sedan, except for the small hybrid badges on the rear and side.

Crapshoot
06-23-2012, 06:36 PM
Bought a new car myself this weekend. Ended up going with the Mazda 3 i Grand Touring. Nice car. (40 MPG highway does hurt either)

I have the ISport, and really love it - 2007 model, still fun to drive. Good call.

MacroGuru
07-25-2012, 10:20 AM
Alright,

Girlfriend is in the market for a new car...she likes the Nissan Rogue...she has done well with her Nissan and isn't to interested in straying....I am trying to get her to look at the Fords....any advice on the Nissan's?

finketr
07-25-2012, 02:09 PM
I have a 2008 Nissan Rogue with 52000 miles on it. I cannot complain about it really. I just put new tires on about 4k miles ago and it runs great. So glad I have it since my wife and I had our first child a little less than a year ago. Roomy enough to put Matthew in the middle of the back seat and have two passengers in it, in addition to being able to put the stroller and some suitcases in the trunk/deck area.


--t

MacroGuru
07-28-2012, 10:18 PM
Well, test drove a bunch of cars with the gf today. She is going with the Ford Edge..sent Ragone a PM, hoping to get xplan pricing.

Edward64
07-28-2012, 11:12 PM
I'm going to get a new car soon.

Applied for pre-approval for $x from Capital One who did my current auto loan. They denied my request by sending a letter saying no because of insufficient salary. I am surprised that Capital One didn't say you weren't approved for $x but you can get $y. I was disappointed and drove to my current bank Wells Fargo branch.

At Wells Fargo, they said they needed to know the VIN# of the car I wanted to buy ... meaning no preapproval. I told them I don't understand how you get any auto loan business this way and walked out.

Ended up going to BofA online and getting my $x preapproved within a couple minutes of submission.

So to Capital One, f**k you, I'm insulted as I know I've got great credit and sufficient income. To Wells Fargo, you guys need to grow up and stop deluding yourself you can be competitive in the auto loan business with your current policy. To BofA, thank you.

Desnudo
07-29-2012, 09:50 AM
Alright,

Girlfriend is in the market for a new car...she likes the Nissan Rogue...she has done well with her Nissan and isn't to interested in straying....I am trying to get her to look at the Fords....any advice on the Nissan's?

I've had an Xterra since 2005 and never have had any mechanical issues (70K). I think the only time I've been in the shop is for oil changes and mileage maintenance + tire changes.

Ragone
07-29-2012, 01:03 PM
I sent you a pm macro.. i need a few more tidbits of info.. will have your pin after that..

Ragone
08-11-2012, 03:46 PM
quick bump, i have 2 more x-plan pins left for this year if anyone is considering buying a new ford... please don't pay full price.

Ajaxab
08-30-2012, 07:40 AM
Scott Adams, the creator of Dilbert, recently posted his experience of buying a new car. Interesting read and interesting comments as well: http://dilbert.com/blog/entry/car_buying

terpkristin
09-15-2012, 03:46 PM
Anybody here have any thoughts on the "small" or "crossover" type SUV's? Based on Consumer Reports ratings, it looks like the Toyota Rav4, Honda CR-V, and Nissan Murano have the best rating. As many of you know, I am disgusted with Mazda in general and have been looking for a new car more or less since I bought my 3 in 2007. While I'm not excited to have a car payment again, this is a good time for me to try to take the plunge, since I'm getting ready to have back surgery and will do better with a car I don't have to duck to get into.

Thanks as always to this community that offers more information than even my best Google-fu can usually turn up...
/tk

molson
09-15-2012, 06:20 PM
Older thread but I hadn't read the last few pages about buying new......I have my system down that I hope to use for the rest of my life. I do some research, decide the car and price I want, and I email my offer to every dealership within X number of miles. If I have more than one response that says they can do it, maybe I ask for a little more. Then I go in and get it. I don't want any test drives, chatting with salesman, traveling to multiple dealerships, or phone calls back and forth. I don't even really care about the color if they give me the price I want. Yes, obviously I'm single.

rjolley
09-15-2012, 09:05 PM
tk: My wife has a Honda CR-V and loves it. Plenty of room, smooth ride, and no issues since we got it in 2009. We also got a good deal because I was buying a Pilot as well and we got them both during the switchover to the new model year.

CU Tiger
09-16-2012, 08:07 AM
Anybody here have any thoughts on the "small" or "crossover" type SUV's? Based on Consumer Reports ratings, it looks like the Toyota Rav4, Honda CR-V, and Nissan Murano have the best rating. As many of you know, I am disgusted with Mazda in general and have been looking for a new car more or less since I bought my 3 in 2007. While I'm not excited to have a car payment again, this is a good time for me to try to take the plunge, since I'm getting ready to have back surgery and will do better with a car I don't have to duck to get into.

Thanks as always to this community that offers more information than even my best Google-fu can usually turn up...
/tk

My mom has a Murano. Its been a very reliable car. My dad drives a crap ton (75k+/year) so after she drove it for three years (princess needs a new car every 3 years) he took it the last ~1.5. At this point they have like 185k on it...and its been dead reliable. Brakes, a battery, tires and wiper blades.

That said...

My wife looked at the smaller crossovers last cycle, and her conclusion was they were caught in between the benefits of both. They didn't give her the safe "feel" of the Tahoe she got out of. The certainly cant haul as many people or tow as much (I dont suspect either is an issue to you?) they didnt handle as well or get as good as gas mileage as a car, and the surprising thing was the mid size cars with an actual trunk actually have more room for storage (shopping bags in her case) than the cute utes.

Now you nailed the major counter point, I hate getting in her current car because of my knees. In fact just yesterday we packed the kids and drover 280 miles in my dually truck (at 14mpg) just to avoid getting in and out of her car(at 35 mpg) .

Scoobz0202
09-16-2012, 07:18 PM
Ragone -

I live with my brother while i'm going to school and him and his wife are looking for a new car. I understand if you would want to keep it FOFC only of course (if you even have any left).

Lathum
09-27-2012, 05:12 PM
So my wife and I are moving back to Cincinnati and we are going to be buying another car. Anyone had any experience buying directly from the factory and not going through a dealership?

britrock88
10-29-2012, 11:47 PM
So my wife and I are moving back to Cincinnati and we are going to be buying another car. Anyone had any experience buying directly from the factory and not going through a dealership?

Though I don't have any special knowledge, I'm not so sure how possible this is to do. Apparently the auto industry is fairly well-regulated in breaking car manufacture and consumer sales into different tiers, giving so many dealerships reason to exist.

In other news, I spent all afternoon at a dealership and drove away in a '13 Ford Escape SEL. I have high hopes for it (I'm the type to drive a car into the ground), and I don't think I got screwed on the pricing/financing, so I feel about as good as I imagined possible. The bigger implication is that it's yet another sign of my becoming a "real adult" -- out of school, landing a job, an impeding move, and now buying a car.

dawgfan
02-17-2013, 06:14 PM
quick bump, i have 2 more x-plan pins left for this year if anyone is considering buying a new ford... please don't pay full price.
Bump - not sure if you still have any x-plan pins left (or if they rollover with the new year), but the wife is getting sick of our old 2nd car and is itching to replace it.

The issue is she's rabid about getting an electric car. As I've pointed out to her, there's still a premium to be paid for them at this point. I may have talked her into the idea of starting with a plug-in hybrid for now, and then a few years down the road replacing our current primary car with a full EV; that way we have a car with unlimited range still (the PEV), but both cars are primarily working off the electrical grid.

My question would be if your x-plan pins also cover the Energi models (and for that matter the Focus EV) - we're taking a close look at the C-Max Energi. I love the looks of the new Fusion, but with 2 kids I suspect the storage capacities of the C-Max fit our needs better, and obviously the difference in price is significant.

Thanks in advance!

SackAttack
09-30-2019, 02:58 PM
I'm in the market for a vehicle for the first time, so this thread is now relevant to me (there may be other, more recent threads, but this is the one I could find.

Huzzah!

TI will NOT give my contact details to a car showroom when looking around for a car, why not - I work from home and have better things to do than answer pointless calls from a car dealership .... if I want to buy from you then I'd be in your dealership writing a cheque, if I'm not then I'm not buying or have gone elsewhere thank you very much.

I set up a brand new Google Voice number, and set it to not forward calls to the cell phone # I had to provide. New Gmail account. Sure, I'll give you my contact info, but it's the curated stuff. You can email me/call me all you want, but I'll only see it when I'm good and effin' ready, thank you. How well that works, we'll see as I go through the process.

Anybody here have any thoughts on the "small" or "crossover" type SUV's? Based on Consumer Reports ratings, it looks like the Toyota Rav4, Honda CR-V, and Nissan Murano have the best rating. As many of you know, I am disgusted with Mazda in general and have been looking for a new car more or less since I bought my 3 in 2007. While I'm not excited to have a car payment again, this is a good time for me to try to take the plunge, since I'm getting ready to have back surgery and will do better with a car I don't have to duck to get into.

Thanks as always to this community that offers more information than even my best Google-fu can usually turn up...
/tk

"Crossover" SUVs are what the lady and I are looking at, and that's almost verbatim the list we've been examining. Not as much the CR-V as yet, but the RAV4, the Murano, and from Hyundai, the Tucson and Santa Fe have been on our radar. I would be over the moon if we could make a RAV4 Hybrid happen on our budget but, well...we'll have to see.

My wife looked at the smaller crossovers last cycle, and her conclusion was they were caught in between the benefits of both. They didn't give her the safe "feel" of the Tahoe she got out of. The certainly cant haul as many people or tow as much (I dont suspect either is an issue to you?) they didnt handle as well or get as good as gas mileage as a car, and the surprising thing was the mid size cars with an actual trunk actually have more room for storage (shopping bags in her case) than the cute utes.

Kinda depends on the crossover and what chassis it's built on. Some of them are on passenger car chassis (chasses?) and others have the truck underpinning them.

The Hybrid RAV4 has some pretty impressive MPG, and even the gas variant isn't awful, but obviously this is 5 years after that post, so.

So anyway, we're looking at the crossovers, and our list right now basically looks like:

Test driven:

RAV4
Santa Fe
Tucson

Not test driven yet:
CR-V
Murano

Jenny wants but I'm leery as hell of:
Explorer

Back story on that last one is that shitty treatment at the Ford dealership on a warranty issue with my first (only) vehicle soured me on the entire company. She loves the cabin size on the Explorer and wants us to take one for a test drive, but I also suspect that the only way to get the Explorer into our budget would be to go used AND have it be older/higher mileage since it's got a higher MSRP than the other models we've been looking at.

I've been fiddling around with TrueCar and I'm aware of Edmunds and CarMax, but as this is my first bite at the apple, any advice for how to maximize the ride while minimizing the cost is appreciated.

We anticipate being able to pay for the vehicle in full at the time of purchase, so financing isn't necessary (and I don't think either of our credit scores would get us the really great financing terms). It's just a matter of finding the vehicle that has most or all of the features we want without blowing a hole in the budget.

cartman
09-30-2019, 03:15 PM
My mom just got a VW Tiguan. Haven't seen it yet, but they are coming down this weekend. It seems to be a solid contender in the CUV space.

Silver Owl
10-01-2019, 12:30 PM
FWIW, I have a 2003 Hyundai Santa Fe that still runs great. Its probably the best car I have owned as far as reliability. I would definitely check them out if they are on your list.

SackAttack
10-01-2019, 12:53 PM
FWIW, I have a 2003 Hyundai Santa Fe that still runs great. Its probably the best car I have owned as far as reliability. I would definitely check them out if they are on your list.

We did a test drive and liked the car. I don't know if it's #2 or #3 on our list right now, but it's up there.

My guess is it goes something like:

#1: RAV4 Hybrid
#2: RAV4 gasoline/Santa Fe
#4: Tucson
#5: Explorer?
#6: Murano
#7: wild card!

Past the top coupla there the options are "if the budget ends up not being there for the top choices." We still have to test drive the Explorer, so who knows. It might move up the list. I suspect it won't because Jenny has liked the RAV4 and the Santa Fe, both of which offer better pricing and gas mileage than the Explorer. Also, I'm kinda inimically opposed to purchasing Ford vehicles again after my dealership experience with warranty repairs on my Ranger.

But who knows.

Honolulu_Blue
10-01-2019, 12:55 PM
If anyone is ever interested in a GM vehicle - Chevy, Buick, GMC, or Cadillac - I can get you a discount. An good one, if you're trading in an GM vehicle, a great one if you're trading in some other OEM's vehicle.

That's all!

Izulde
10-01-2019, 01:17 PM
I'll be looking through this thread once I finally get off my rear and turn my temps into an actual license, so I can finally shave off the $600+ a month I spend on Lyft and be able to do a lot more socially. A lot of times I skip social events because I'm like that's $20-30 just to get there and back, so nah, I'll just stay home with the dog.

rjolley
10-01-2019, 01:18 PM
We've had Hondas for the past decade and they've been great. I got a new Pilot last year after having my 2008 Pilot for 10. It was a great car, but developed an issue that would've potentially been more expensive to fix than the car was worth.

My wife got her CR-V at the same time and is still driving it with no plans to replace it. When we finally do, it'll be for another CR-V or possibly a Passport, which sits between a CR-V and a Pilot.

Before I got the new Pilot, I looked at other SUVs and the Pilot provided the best reliability and features for the cost.

Good friends of ours just got a new Mazda CR-9 and love it. I believe they replaced a Murano that was at the end of the lease.

Capital
10-01-2019, 01:26 PM
I recently purchased a new Honda CR-V EXL and I am very happy with that purchase - after owning Toyota Camry for 14 years. The ratings saw that the CR-V was top notch and nothing thus far has led me to believe otherwise.

dawgfan
10-02-2019, 03:50 PM
Sack, have you given any consideration to an EV? Both the Hyundai Kona (258 miles) and the Kia Niro (238 miles) are long-range crossovers at a reasonable price.

Coffee Warlord
10-02-2019, 06:11 PM
Still very happy with my Mazda CX-5.

SackAttack
10-02-2019, 10:43 PM
Sack, have you given any consideration to an EV? Both the Hyundai Kona (258 miles) and the Kia Niro (238 miles) are long-range crossovers at a reasonable price.

apartment living makes that impractical. Not against the concept, but don't really have a workable solution.

A hybrid, be it the RAV4 or something similar, is better suited to our living situation.

SackAttack
10-14-2019, 01:20 PM
Got an email the other day that purported to be about the Hybrid XLE RAV4, but the offer inside smells more like a gasoline XLE.

I don't really mind; it's the most aggressive offer I've gotten on an XLE yet either way. But it'd be nice if it were a less ambiguous contact.

Izulde
10-14-2019, 02:49 PM
No one will sell me a car without a full license, which makes practicing damned difficult, if not impossible. So stupid.

Anyway, driving lesson is booked for Friday - road test set for November 21st.

Edward64
10-14-2019, 03:04 PM
Got my college junior son a used MX3 hatchback two weekends ago. It was a pretty good shopping experience (had to tell a couple of them that I didn't want to talk monthly payments but the full price though). We paid half and he has to pay the other half over 4 years.

Before I got involved my son was convinced by an Infiniti dealership he wanted a new $43K Infinti and that the monthly lease payments were doable. My wife and I were able to convince him that this was not a good idea and to wait until he had a job. Afterwards we talked about how unethical it was for a car dealership to try push a college junior (admittedly with a part-time job) a brand new $43K car.

AnalBumCover
10-15-2019, 12:50 PM
I'm convinced my next vehicle will be a RAV4. However, as a current 2004 Highlander owner (and a guy who in the past has always thought SUV's should be big and strong), will I feel driving a RAV4 will be a significant downgrade to this? I haven't test driven it yet, and I will when purchase date, in January 2020, approaches.

I'm choosing the RAV4 because, 1) it's more affordable than a new Highlander, and 2) it will fit better in my garage, which is always a tight fit with my current situation.

SackAttack
10-15-2019, 01:05 PM
I'm convinced my next vehicle will be a RAV4. However, as a current 2004 Highlander owner (and a guy who in the past has always thought SUV's should be big and strong), will I feel driving a RAV4 will be a significant downgrade to this? I haven't test driven it yet, and I will when purchase date, in January 2020, approaches.

I'm choosing the RAV4 because, 1) it's more affordable than a new Highlander, and 2) it will fit better in my garage, which is always a tight fit with my current situation.

Affordability is why I targeted a RAV4 over a Highlander, also.

As far as whether it'll feel like a downgrade, having not driven a Highlander, I can't say. I can say that my RAV4 test drive was the best of the bunch. Couple of the other crossovers struggled at highway speeds, but the RAV4 didn't have any issues with get-up-and-go.

That was unloaded, though; I don't know how any of the cars I've driven would do with a cargo area full of a month's worth of groceries (my girlfriend hates grocery shopping and refuses to consider breaking the grocery trip into bimonthly affairs). Wonder if a dealer would let me test that next month, hehe.

rjolley
10-15-2019, 06:30 PM
We're in the market for a small SUV for my wife and we'll probably end up going with another CR-V. The current one has done well for us over the last 11 years, but needs repairs which cost enough to warrant considering a new car instead. First major issue we've had with it and my Pilot did us well for 10 years, so Honda's definitely on the top of the board for us. We did look at the HR-V and Fit, as well as Toyota and Mazda, but the CR-V is the best value for us.

SackAttack
10-15-2019, 08:02 PM
We're in the market for a small SUV for my wife and we'll probably end up going with another CR-V. The current one has done well for us over the last 11 years, but needs repairs which cost enough to warrant considering a new car instead. First major issue we've had with it and my Pilot did us well for 10 years, so Honda's definitely on the top of the board for us. We did look at the HR-V and Fit, as well as Toyota and Mazda, but the CR-V is the best value for us.

Honda has weirdly been the most expensive of the ones I've test driven, and it definitely lagged Toyota on standard features, both Toyota and Hyundai on creature comforts, and put the telescoping lever for the steering wheel in the weirdest damn place.

pbot
10-15-2019, 08:50 PM
2008 and 2012 Rav4s at our house. We bought them for the awd capabilities and to sit a bit higher up than a Corolla/Civic type. I get 23-24 mpg commuting to work and can fairly easily hit 28-30 mpg on extended highway trips.

They're good little vehicles. No complaints with either of them.

SackAttack
10-31-2019, 04:25 PM
Interesting developments over the last week or so.

Couple Hyundai dealers offered to put me in a 2020 Santa Fe SEL for at or under my budget, and Jenny and I decided that's the direction we're going to go.

Couple Toyota dealers, previously resistant to meeting my matrix of price and feature requirements, went "wait, can we try again?"

I'm not expecting much to come of that because so far all the Toyota attempts have either been "here's why you should spend another $2500 now: resale value!" (when...15-20 years from now, that vehicle isn't gonna be worth $2500 more than a 2020 Santa Fe) or "we can do pre-owned but we can't get there on a new 2019 RAV4 XLE."

And neither of those options are going to cut it this time.

So we'll see.

Izulde
10-31-2019, 04:43 PM
Lessons have been going weirdly well so far - enough that there's a decent shot I might pass road test on 21st.

Then I'll be car shopping on my own for the first time if I do.

Flasch186
03-11-2021, 03:52 PM
I'm looking into buying a 2021 Chevy Suburban Premier with Premium pkg inc. rear seat media center... black ext/black int

Anyone know the best way to get started? I've already pinged a few internet sites and my email is getting bombarded. What's the best way to do this?

cartman
03-11-2021, 04:28 PM
the new Grand Wagoneers look sexy AF. The interior is amazing

sterlingice
03-11-2021, 04:37 PM
I'm looking into buying a 2021 Chevy Suburban Premier with Premium pkg inc. rear seat media center... black ext/black int

Anyone know the best way to get started? I've already pinged a few internet sites and my email is getting bombarded. What's the best way to do this?

I basically have a burner Gmail and Google voice account specifically for car shopping. That way my real one isn't spammed to hell.

As for how to buy a specific high end model with high end trim, I'm no help here. I figure you're probably more at the dealer inventory mercy and having to use direct from manufacturer as an anchor. The last two times, we went shopping, we were looking for a low end car (Ford Fusion, Kia Forte) with low to "meh" trim so inventory was high. We did the Edmund's thing where you could submit them what you wanted and they'd spam your inbox but, in exchange, you'd get a couple of prices that dealers /had/ to honor and you could use the lowest one as an anchor. Then I just let other dealers compete off of that. If no one got much lower than the initial one, I just went with that. Just a bunch of emails - kindof a busy week or two - and a spreadsheet to keep track of where everyone's best deal, trim level and specific VIN, and response time. Then make the call with the flat info in front of you. Once you've made a call, email and ask if they'll still honor their deal and, if so, they'll be happy-ish because it's like 30 mins of paperwork for a sale. Of course, you still have to deal with the financing, etc (though on the second one, we just brought our own financing from our bank - we probably could have saved some money using the dealer financing deals but it also is a way for them to alter their deal from before and makes for more negotiating).

SI

Ksyrup
03-11-2021, 07:29 PM
When I bought my Audi in November 2019, I basically used every car app and website I could to search within a 500 mile radius to find what I was looking for. I reached out to about half a dozen with a pitch of "I've got cash and financing, I'm willing to come pick it up, give me your bottom line best price" and I ended up getting exactly what I wanted in Chicago. Way better price and selection than I could ever get within an hour of Lexington. It was relatively painless.

Pyser
03-11-2021, 09:10 PM
in LA car brokers have become the rage. play two of them off each other and grind them down. they talk to dealerships for you (and get their cut from the dealerships too). they deliver the car to your house and you sign paperwork at home.

PilotMan
03-12-2021, 09:54 AM
When I bought my Audi in November 2019, I basically used every car app and website I could to search within a 500 mile radius to find what I was looking for. I reached out to about half a dozen with a pitch of "I've got cash and financing, I'm willing to come pick it up, give me your bottom line best price" and I ended up getting exactly what I wanted in Chicago. Way better price and selection than I could ever get within an hour of Lexington. It was relatively painless.


This is how I've heard is the best practice for cars. I had heard that people with {big} money just bypass the salesman, go straight to the finance manager, give them a list of features and what car they want, and tell them to get back to them with a price. Then do that for every dealer they can find.

Ksyrup
03-12-2021, 11:13 AM
I try to eliminate all of the "other stuff" - I get my own financing, deal separately with any trade-in, have parameters for the price I'm willing to pay, know what my monthly payment is going to be, and have a decent list of several dealers I'm working or will move on to if the ones I contact want to play games. I've bought 4 cars in the past 18 months - 2 new, 2 used but just one model year off new, and it has worked great.

cartman
03-12-2021, 11:57 AM
Another little know tactic is to search enthusiast forums for the make/model you are interested in. A lot of times there are dealerships that work group buys with the forum members to sell just above dealer cost.