Sigarms
Super Member
It was little more than that on the service side, but it's apparent you've never owned a Mercedes beforeI don't know the quotes he got on the 100k PM service, but let's say $1800 or so;
It was little more than that on the service side, but it's apparent you've never owned a Mercedes beforeI don't know the quotes he got on the 100k PM service, but let's say $1800 or so;
I havent; but what are we talking; less than $3k? Is there a way he can do say, coils, plugs, tranny flush, whatever, and just have mechanic do timing belt/water pump? Basically do the busy work part himself; and the more complex stuff at mechanic to reduce the total shop hours? Even at $3k; we still below the cost of ownership for a 12 month period on a car with payments.It was little more than that on the service side, but it's apparent you've never owned a Mercedes before![]()
Still low but in the ballparkI havent; but what are we talking; less than $3k?
That bill was in 2022 about 25,000 miles ago.It's best to keep the car if he just recently spent that kind of money on regular scheduled maintenance.
The car I would suggest is something less than 50K on the odometer and something no more than 8 years old.I would caution against some of the 'smart' moves; such as buying a $1000-3000 compact car because it's cheap; if he's the type that is gonna want a nicer vehicle anyways. I know lots of people that will say; I'm just gonna buy this Ford Focus and drive it; then after 3 months of driving it. and parking next to the F250s and Chevy 2500s, and escaldes, they Need to buy something more manly. Then you have 2 vehicles, 2 insurance payments, 2 tags, ect. If you know yourself, and your not gonna be happy driving the Focus, don't buy it just because it's the 'smart' move.
Before anyone wants to attack, I drove the heck out of a Saturn station wagon and later a Toyota Highlander; and parked next to much 'cooler' vehicles, because it was cheap/paid for. I also probably trailered and hauled more with that highland than a lot of F250s.
That’s the position I wanted to be in and achieved it about 15 years ago at around age 50. Just a credit card now for convenience which gets paid in full each month. But I did run into a hiccup not long ago when I purchased a new Kubota $45k tractor using their zero down/zero interest offer. Kubota Credit said it was the amount that gave them pause. I let them peek at my retirement account and all good to goI don't know or care what my credit score is because I also have no loans or intend to get any.
Why do you monitor your credit score if you don't intend to get a loan?
If he will drive it, and be happy with it, yeah, that's sound logic.The car I would suggest is something less than 50K on the odometer and something no more than 8 years old.
The goal is for a car that will last 3 or more years before having to go over the 100K service and something more along the lines of a Honda or Toyota.
I have my own warped equation for age and mileage vs cost whenever I buy used (only thing I along with my wife have ever bought is used).
That said, the only thing I can do is give him advice, which doesn't mean he has to listen...