brownmonster
Man of Great Wisdom
2004 GMC. Last new vehicle we bought was 1990.
As of tonight, 2015 Chevy Silverado 1500 High Country edition. Every bell and whistle imaginable.
Loving it so far
Typical redneck ride.
2015 Nissan Altima SV with all the bells and whistles. I plan on keeping this one and paying off the balance upon retirement with funds from my 401k (thanks apple!).
Typical redneck ride.
What kind of maroon spends $60K on a pickup truck?
The old ones with 22r engine is what people. Last forever those engines.11 year old small Toyota PU, will drive it for at least 9 more years.
It has a radio, and a heater.
If the noise sounds like nuts and bolts in a Coffee can, that sure isn't normal engine noise!Those motors make some funny noise, dealer calls it normal. Wtf?!
I have beat the UPS discount price every time.I'm surprised nobody has mentioned their UPS discounts.
What kind of maroon spends $60K on a pickup truck?
. The Nissan salesperson conceded that even he could not get the same deal that we get.
. The Nissan salesperson conceded that even he could not get the same deal that we get.
It's hard to beat the VW discount when combined with 0% financing and other offers. But I've never haggled because buying/financing through dealers is something I usually avoid.[/QUOTE]I have beat the UPS discount price every time.
Done countless car deals over the years.
Here is what happened.Crazy story. About 3 car leases ago I handed the vehicle back in with about 8-10K shy of the allotted miles I was allowed to use. A few months go by and I receive a check from the bank my lease was thru, in the mail for about 3 grand. I was puzzled. The letter along with the check stated, that the vehicle was sold at auction after I handed it in and the check was my cut of the proceeds. I don't remember the exact wording but the letter also had a blurb about so few miles being on the car as well. I was totally confused. It was a lease. I didn't own the car. I was thinking it has to be a mistake.
I held onto the check for a few months thinking it had to be an error and the bank would come looking for it. Long story short they never did. I even checked around with a few car dealers just on the job while working. All of them said they'd never heard of such a thing. Only thing they could think of was that I had a lease where a security deposit payment was built in monthly and they were returning it at the end. To this day I'm still puzzled by that check.
Lease? Not.Here is what happened.
Lets say the vehicle stickered for $30,000
The agreed Lease Return value is $15,000
Your payments on the lease total $15,000
The vehicle sold at auction for $18,000 by contract, the Dealer is only entitled to the contract amount of $15,000, you get any excess.
You got a check for the excess $3,000 it sold for.
NOW, if it had sold for $12,000, you would not be liable for any shortfall
The Dealer can only guess at best what a car will be worth in the future when the lease ends.
In this case, you got the benefit of the Dealer guessing wrong.
Disclaimer: Each lease is different, and the laws for leases vary by state.
It is best to ask in advance and understand the entire lease.
Lease? Not.