Posts Tagged ‘lamborghini’

Used Car Time

Thursday, March 12th, 2009

You make enough money to buy a new car. The payment is, what, three, four hundred a month? That’s not bad, you can afford that.

Whoa nelly! If you are thinking I’m leading you to buy a new car or keep the car you have with it’s payments, you are reading the completely wrong blog. You can afford it…but why try? Here you are, turning your ketchup bottles upside down for a month to get that last little bit, and you have a car payment?

Some simple math to put it in perspective:

$300 a month, every month, every year, until your 70, from when your 20.

By your 70th birthday (Congratulations, baldy!) you will have spent $300,000. And face it, in fifty years, due to inflation, $300 isn’t going to buy jack crap when it comes to cars. However, LLotC isn’t about living frugally, it is about living the high life without anyone knowing you aren’t spending that much.

So, you still want a bangin’ car, right? Here’s an idea. Get an awesome car new and drive the wheels off of it. This guy has a 1966 Volvo P1800 that has 2.6 million miles on it, and he is still tooling around in it. I can guess that he dislikes car payments. For giggles, I figured out that if you bought a new one for $3,970 and stretched the payments out from 1966 to 2009 (at 0%, because of your assumed excellent credit), you would be paying roughly $7.69 a month.

I’ll let that sink in. For less than your Netflix bill, for less than a bi-weekly meal at McDonald’s, for less than your damn monthly dog food allowance, you could be cruising around in your own classic car. Of course, you have to wait a long time in order for your new car to become a classic. You would have to endure those strange ‘between years’ when your car is too old to be new and too young to be classic, and everyone thinks you shop at the local Thriftko. The fact that you actually do shop at the local Thriftko has nothing to do with it.

Besides, do you really want to death-to-us-part with a car? What happens if the next year’s model gets two mpg’s better on the highway, or even, gasp, a soda-can Chill Zone? You’ll be left out in the cold (and your pop will be left inside in the warm) with your silly previous-year model. Or, even, what happens when the new lithium-powered hybrid-turbo’d diesel hydrogen heli-cars come out, and your stuck circling the city trying to find a Exxon-Mobil station without tree-hugging hippies out front protesting the last of the dead-dino sipping cars that are left on our sorry piece of planet?

This leads me to my next thought, and the one I adhere to religiously. Be sensible, try and find that car that apexes on quality, amount of miles, versatility, frugality, age, and because you are living largely, awesomeness. Example A, I have a 1996 Dodge Neon that had 108,000 miles on it when I scooped it up for $850 out the door. That has great value, but it is lacking in the awesomeness factor. So, I slapped on the AWD sign. While it will never be as cool as a new Lamborghini (which, strangly, doesn’t need a freakin’ “Chill Zone” to be desirable), I do try to keep it clean.

There are many more options out there if you are really looking to up the ante on the “awesomeness” factor. I will be telling them to you tomorrow on this two-part series.

Until then, I guess you could always walk.

Whip Tip: Emblem Awareness!

Monday, February 23rd, 2009

What kind of car you drive says a lot about who you are and what you are all about. A new Volkswagen Beetle? You are hip, cool, sure of your self, and possibly homosexual. A Volvo wagon? You are safety conscious and practical. A Volvo wagon painted Lamborghini orange with metal-flake flames? Safety conscious and practical…and crazy awesome. So, granted, this is a blog that is ultimately about saving money, so I can’t expect you to go out and get a brand-new car to flaunt your inner self. You might have to make do with that hand-me-down beat-up Plymouth Acclaim.

However, there is an amazing way to flaunt what you’ve got. When they came out with your vehicle, they probably came out with several models. Often, the main way to distinguish between them is a letter or number combination after the name of your vehicle. The Dodge Neon SXT, the Toyota Yaris S, the Izuzu GIGA 20 Light Dump.

Whatever you’ve got, it could always be improved with a little alphabetical or numerical bling. Just go to a junkyard and find these emblems, and make up your own for your vehicle. You could add an S, an SE, an X, or any combination of these three letters easily to add some major alpha dog charm to your car. There is always the option of going to the dealership and actually finding a vehicular suffix that was available for your car when it was new, but the dealership is expensive, and they probably won’t let you leave the lot without selling you a new car anyway. Besides, it is always more fun to try and scrounge up your own endings so your car is very unique.

I’ll give you a personal example. My car is a 1996 Dodge Neon AWD. How did it become all-wheel drive? Simple, the letters used to be on a Volvo XC90. Now, I get to tell people that my Dodge Neon was a manufacturer prototype or a former rally car. Create your own backstory to why you have a Volkswagen Jetta 425 Turbo Super Sport! For even more giggles, create a game where you see how long you can keep a straight face while telling the tale of how you bought this car off of a former automotive employee and saved the little experimental gem from being crushed. Hey, if you can keep it up, they may even offer to buy it off you, and then your hard work will have really paid off.

See, doesn't it look able to go over snow and ice?

See, doesn't it look able to go over snow and ice?

Of course, if you want to make do with the emblems you already have, you can just make your car have the “appearance package”. This is fancy talk for taking all your existing emblems and painting them gold. Or blue, or green, or whatever strikes your fancy. The important part is your car is different, and your neighbors will think you got a raise or something.

So, for the cost of a trip to the junkyard or a can of paint, you can make it look like your car was bought for a couple grand more when it was new. And that is priceless. Or a couple thousand dollars, when it was new.

P.S. It is generally not a good idea to include “Light Dump” at the end of your vehicle’s model name. I know I put it as an example, but seriously. Gross.