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Quoted: Why 4 years? Why not 2? How about pay cash? View Quote So it's just a rule of thumb to help people determine if they should afford a car since there are more then a few entities that will provide irresponsible loans to people. The rule is a MINIMUM 20% down, MAXIMUM 4 year loan, and MAXIMUM 10% gross income for all car related expenses. Which includes the payment, insurance, maintenance, upkeep, and fuel. So, TOTAL car expense shouldn't exceed 10%. |
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Quoted: Most people don't have the cash, and have very little net worth. So it's just a rule of thumb to help people determine if they should afford a car since there are more then a few entities that will provide irresponsible loans to people. The rule is a MINIMUM 20% down, MAXIMUM 4 year loan, and MAXIMUM 10% gross income for all car related expenses. Which includes the payment, insurance, maintenance, upkeep, and fuel. So, TOTAL car expense shouldn't exceed 10%. View Quote |
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Most people don't have the cash, and have very little net worth. So it's just a rule of thumb to help people determine if they should afford a car since there are more then a few entities that will provide irresponsible loans to people. The rule is a MINIMUM 20% down, MAXIMUM 4 year loan, and MAXIMUM 10% gross income for all car related expenses. Which includes the payment, insurance, maintenance, upkeep, and fuel. So, TOTAL car expense shouldn't exceed 10%. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted: Why 4 years? Why not 2? How about pay cash? So it's just a rule of thumb to help people determine if they should afford a car since there are more then a few entities that will provide irresponsible loans to people. The rule is a MINIMUM 20% down, MAXIMUM 4 year loan, and MAXIMUM 10% gross income for all car related expenses. Which includes the payment, insurance, maintenance, upkeep, and fuel. So, TOTAL car expense shouldn't exceed 10%. Lol 20% down on the car here is only 10% down on the actual car because sales tax is 10% Bunch of sauce if you ask me |
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I think he was referring to the seemingly random numbers. What is the significance of 4 years? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted: Most people don't have the cash, and have very little net worth. So it's just a rule of thumb to help people determine if they should afford a car since there are more then a few entities that will provide irresponsible loans to people. The rule is a MINIMUM 20% down, MAXIMUM 4 year loan, and MAXIMUM 10% gross income for all car related expenses. Which includes the payment, insurance, maintenance, upkeep, and fuel. So, TOTAL car expense shouldn't exceed 10%. Normally 36-39 months is about 50-60% of the sales price is left Luxury stuff your normally 60-70% off of sticker at year 5 |
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Quoted: I think he was referring to the seemingly random numbers. What is the significance of 4 years? View Quote People that have to go beyond a 48 month new car loan in order to make the "payment" affordable to them, probably shouldn't. The fact that we now have dealerships regularly willing to roll upside down balances into new car loans is indicative of the problem. Hell, some dealerships actively advertise their willingness to do upside down loans, so the market for people who make poor choices is there and obvious. It's insane. If you can't put 20% down ...you aren't a person that has the discipline to save. If you have to go longer than 48 months, you can't afford the car. If your total car expense (payment, maintenance, gas, and insurance) is over 10% of your income, you're an idiot who will be poor for the rest of your life due to your poor choices, and bad priorities. |
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Now that they leaked the convertible will be a hard top, I’m very interested.
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Quoted: If you can't put 20% down ...you aren't a person that has the discipline to save. If you have to go longer than 48 months, you can't afford the car. If your total car expense (payment, maintenance, gas, and insurance) is over 10% of your income, you're an idiot who will be poor for the rest of your life due to your poor choices, and bad priorities. View Quote |
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Quoted: Probably due to depreciation schedules Normally 36-39 months is about 50-60% of the sales price is left Luxury stuff your normally 60-70% off of sticker at year 5 View Quote Shit posting aside. Brand new Ram Laramie 4x4 Ecodiesel have been going for $33-35k. Those prices are thanks to generous incentives, which we should all be shopping for no? 2015 model similarly equipped is fair market at $27k. Talking 20-25% depreciation for 50 months... As for American performance, cause we are talking corvette not German. You again have to assume discounts. Chevy did 20% off the Chevy SS a couple years back (ok that’s Ausi not American) and on the C7 grand sports I think 15%, Z06 was 12%. If you assume that, those figures just don’t even come close to holding true. Maybe for an auto stingray with old man chrome rims, but definitely not on the manuals as they have proven to hold value. But I can even make the case on German luxury cars. Take a Porsche GT2 RS, you can do 144 month loans on super cars btw. Now price them out one year old, notice they hold value extremely well if not increased. And if you want the hottest new car, what makes more sense? There are rich fuckers out there who are basically just paying sales tax on new cars and getting them payment free cause of this. (SALT cap has to sting a bit on this game btw) And if your come back to that is, “but people will pay MSRP.” No shit, they are also the ones that will never listen to any financial advice. |
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Now that they leaked the convertible will be a hard top, I’m very interested. View Quote Some convenience I suppose vs manually taking a top out. |
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That is the coupe with the targa top removed. That is standard. And not the Spyder.
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Rendering of the hardtop convertible. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3mxwmdqymzI http://gmauthority.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/00000-1024x575.jpg https://cdn.motor1.com/images/mgl/AE48P/s1/c8-corvette-hardtop-convertible-rendering.jpg https://www.corvetteblogger.com/images/content/2018-2/091218_8b.jpg https://o.aolcdn.com/images/dims3/GLOB/legacy_thumbnail/800x450/format/jpg/quality/85/https://s.aolcdn.com/os/ab/_cms/2019/07/30133015/chevy-corvette-c8-convertible-spy-4.jpg https://www.corvetteblogger.com/images/content/2019-2/072719_6c.jpg View Quote |
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We Spied the 2020 Chevy Corvette C8 Convertible, Revealing New Details
This is also the first time we have seen the C8 convertible with the top in place, as Chevy's teasers only showed it with the top down. It will be a folding hardtop in the vein of other mid-engined supercars like the Ferrari 488 and the McLaren 720S. The hardtop seems to be a two-piece unit that will surely be powered, although we couldn't spot a button or switch in the interior that controls it. The top will likely fold into the space between the back of the seats and the engine. Given how close to production this prototype looked (and the fact that Chevy has already basically shown us the car), we expect the C8 convertible to debut by the end of the year. Expect to pay a premium of around $5000 over the standard C8 coupe, which itself has a manually removable targa roof that stows in the frunk. Continued |
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I know this because the PDK is the worst DCT out there, rough shifting, lags, jerky downshifts, unreliable. not tough to improve on. Oh well View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted: And you know this because how? Sounds like someone is blowing hot air out of their ass... Literally, you have no idea what you are talking about. |
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Friend just sold back his C7 GrandSport for 52k.
My 2015 GT goes in for it's 4th AC repair today. Ca law permits seeking lemon law remedies 4 years after purchase. My purchase date was Aug 19 2015. May be pushing the Lemon Law as soon as I find out what is wrong with my POS. Gal who originally sold me the car said the standard offer is amount paid out minus mileage. My mileage is 12074 miles. If it is 30 cents a mile that means maybe 3k dollars off the 37k I have paid. Will see how this pans out but if I am between 35-37k back it may go into a stash while I wait to jump on a 2019 GrandSpory 2lt or 3lt. Only thing making choice difficult is I have a 66 mustang 2bbl and a Dart 331 long block in the garage that I could complete with the money. |
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Friend just sold back his C7 GrandSport for 52k. My 2015 GT goes in for it's 4th AC repair today. Ca law permits seeking lemon law remedies 4 years after purchase. My purchase date was Aug 19 2015. May be pushing the Lemon Law as soon as I find out what is wrong with my POS. Gal who originally sold me the car said the standard offer is amount paid out minus mileage. My mileage is 12074 miles. If it is 30 cents a mile that means maybe 3k dollars off the 37k I have paid. Will see how this pans out but if I am between 35-37k back it may go into a stash while I wait to jump on a 2019 GrandSpory 2lt or 3lt. Only thing making choice difficult is I have a 66 mustang 2bbl and a Dart 331 long block in the garage that I could complete with the money. View Quote |
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Dealer tried the mileage BS when they agreed to buy my vehicle back, I said nope. It took a few more calls and they finally agreed. My vehicle was only two months old though. View Quote If it were to goto court it would be give me everything I paid in. Avoiding court it could be a simple give me everything minus 1k bucks as a mileage alotment. This was not a case of me wanting to ever sell this car. But it has gotten to the point that I hate seeing it in the garage. Naturally, eating KBB depreciation isnt as attractive an option. |
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The risk of it going to court and losing, where they will pay attorney's fees on top of full refund of fees paid, should be enough to get a fair compromise on the buy back price. If it were to goto court it would be give me everything I paid in. Avoiding court it could be a simple give me everything minus 1k bucks as a mileage alotment. This was not a case of me wanting to ever sell this car. But it has gotten to the point that I hate seeing it in the garage. Naturally, eating KBB depreciation isnt as attractive an option. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Dealer tried the mileage BS when they agreed to buy my vehicle back, I said nope. It took a few more calls and they finally agreed. My vehicle was only two months old though. If it were to goto court it would be give me everything I paid in. Avoiding court it could be a simple give me everything minus 1k bucks as a mileage alotment. This was not a case of me wanting to ever sell this car. But it has gotten to the point that I hate seeing it in the garage. Naturally, eating KBB depreciation isnt as attractive an option. |
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The coupe has a removable targa top. So no rigidity is really lost. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes |
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Quoted: What about when the tops are up/on? View Quote And from what the engineering team did with the C7, I doubt you would notice any difference on the C8. They have become rather competent in designing cars for the track. |
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It looks great, except for the rear end. The C7 looks better from the rear. It's faster than the C7 in the quarter mile and top end speed. Handles better than all Vettes before due to the weight distribution of being mid-engine. It's going to be very close performance wise to cars costing 3-4 times as much on road courses and track.
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Dealer tried the mileage BS when they agreed to buy my vehicle back, I said nope. It took a few more calls and they finally agreed. My vehicle was only two months old though. View Quote |
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I had a problem with a suburban back in 2002..GM bought it back at full price paid minus 1 dollar, and they paid my lawyer fee's...that was 2 weeks after the lawyer sent them notice to sue under the lemon law...The truck was 17 months old with almost 18000 miles on it... View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Dealer tried the mileage BS when they agreed to buy my vehicle back, I said nope. It took a few more calls and they finally agreed. My vehicle was only two months old though. The service manager and regional guy for Land Rover were absolute pricks. The sales manager, general manager and owner went above and beyond. |
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Life is good.
2020 760hp Ford Mustang GT500 Most Powerful Street-legal Ford EVER! 760hp Ford Mustang Shelby GT500 Shredding w/Vaughn Gittin Jr. |
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This new vette is getting to me.
https://www.powernationtv.com/post/the-2020-chevrolet-corvette-stingray-is-almost-sold-out |
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This new vette is getting to me. https://www.powernationtv.com/post/the-2020-chevrolet-corvette-stingray-is-almost-sold-out View Quote |
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Quoted: Corvette gatherings out here are going to be insane now. View Quote The C8 will introduce a strange dichotomy of Corvette owners to mix with "Corvette Purists". Because I have a feeling the C8 will have some interesting modifications/aftermarket offerings. |
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Your advice is dumb. Get as low a rate for as long as you can. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted: There are many reason's the Millennials haven't been as big on buying new cars as past generations. Cars have gotten expensive, new car prices have increased more than household incomes. Even some car guys are acknowledging this now. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=raaM2zcpAoM The average person has to finance their car purchase. The responsible way to do this is to apply the 20/4/10 rule. Which means a min of 20% down, a maximum 4 year loan term and a maximum of 10% of your gross monthly income spent on total car expense. This includes loan payment, gas, maintenance (service, oil changes, car washes) and the cost to insurance the car. Using this rule 20/40/10 rule: A person would need a $162,000 annual income to afford to buy and own a new Corvette. If you need anything longer than a 4 year loan, you probably shouldn't buy the car or truck. Get as low a rate for as long as you can. |
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Especially if you believe you can get a higher ROI than the interest you will pay.... can always pay it off early! View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Quoted: There are many reason's the Millennials haven't been as big on buying new cars as past generations. Cars have gotten expensive, new car prices have increased more than household incomes. Even some car guys are acknowledging this now. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=raaM2zcpAoM The average person has to finance their car purchase. The responsible way to do this is to apply the 20/4/10 rule. Which means a min of 20% down, a maximum 4 year loan term and a maximum of 10% of your gross monthly income spent on total car expense. This includes loan payment, gas, maintenance (service, oil changes, car washes) and the cost to insurance the car. Using this rule 20/40/10 rule: A person would need a $162,000 annual income to afford to buy and own a new Corvette. If you need anything longer than a 4 year loan, you probably shouldn't buy the car or truck. Get as low a rate for as long as you can. |
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Quoted: The Bloomington GOLD Corvette show next year will be hilarious. The C8 will introduce a strange dichotomy of Corvette owners to mix with "Corvette Purists". Because I have a feeling the C8 will have some interesting modifications/aftermarket offerings. View Quote |
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Quoted: Maybe-maybe not. I tried to tell myself I was a purist...but the C8 is just to darn amazing for me not to dream of owning one. I love the way it looks, heck I hate drop tops but this one is really neat. View Quote I have seen a guy go irate and kick his just finished 1967 427 restoration because he put a chalk pen mark in the wrong spot and his plug wires were wrong. Threw 5 years and tens of thousands down the drain because he didn't apply the correct marking on the frame with a chalk pen.... I restored a 1968 L89 over the course of 8 years with my father 20 some years ago and it is a Bloomington GOLD certified winner. Guys get nuts with "being correct". |
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You will probably gain an immeasurable or unnoticeable amount. The aluminum frame/tub is engineered to not require the top. I have to imagine it is rather sturdy from the pictures. And from what the engineering team did with the C7, I doubt you would notice any difference on the C8. They have become rather competent in designing cars for the track. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted: What about when the tops are up/on? And from what the engineering team did with the C7, I doubt you would notice any difference on the C8. They have become rather competent in designing cars for the track. |
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Fair enough, it's still more weight. And I can't help but look at something mechanical and wonder how it can be improved upon. Stuff like that just bugs me. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Quoted: What about when the tops are up/on? And from what the engineering team did with the C7, I doubt you would notice any difference on the C8. They have become rather competent in designing cars for the track. Even an active spoiler would probably be worth its weight 10 fold. There are several companies with aftermarket active aero that tie into the canbus system. I wouldn't want the convertible version of the C8. Just more shit to break. I would rather add exhaust, intake, tuning, better cooling, active spoiler, lighter wheels and tires. |
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I would imagine adapting active aero and more power would be the best improvement areas without having driven the C8. Even an active spoiler would probably be worth its weight 10 fold. There are several companies with aftermarket active aero that tie into the canbus system. I wouldn't want the convertible version of the C8. Just more shit to break. I would rather add exhaust, intake, tuning, better cooling, active spoiler, lighter wheels and tires. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Quoted: What about when the tops are up/on? And from what the engineering team did with the C7, I doubt you would notice any difference on the C8. They have become rather competent in designing cars for the track. Even an active spoiler would probably be worth its weight 10 fold. There are several companies with aftermarket active aero that tie into the canbus system. I wouldn't want the convertible version of the C8. Just more shit to break. I would rather add exhaust, intake, tuning, better cooling, active spoiler, lighter wheels and tires. |
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Quoted:
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Quoted: What about when the tops are up/on? And from what the engineering team did with the C7, I doubt you would notice any difference on the C8. They have become rather competent in designing cars for the track. Even an active spoiler would probably be worth its weight 10 fold. There are several companies with aftermarket active aero that tie into the canbus system. I wouldn't want the convertible version of the C8. Just more shit to break. I would rather add exhaust, intake, tuning, better cooling, active spoiler, lighter wheels and tires. |
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Quoted: Have you ever been to a Bloomington GOLD show? I have seen a guy go irate and kick his just finished 1967 427 restoration because he put a chalk pen mark in the wrong spot and his plug wires were wrong. Threw 5 years and tens of thousands down the drain because he didn't apply the correct marking on the frame with a chalk pen.... I restored a 1968 L89 over the course of 8 years with my father 20 some years ago and it is a Bloomington GOLD certified winner. Guys get nuts with "being correct". View Quote |
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The GM fleet order guide is live.
https://www.gmfleetorderguide.com/NASApp/domestic/printbook.jsp?year=2020®ionID=1&lang=1&divisionID=3&vehicleID=21905 |
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Quoted: I would imagine adapting active aero and more power would be the best improvement areas without having driven the C8. Even an active spoiler would probably be worth its weight 10 fold. There are several companies with aftermarket active aero that tie into the canbus system. I wouldn't want the convertible version of the C8. Just more shit to break. I would rather add exhaust, intake, tuning, better cooling, active spoiler, lighter wheels and tires. View Quote |
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Active Aero will be a big thing here shortly. There are a few companies that did a dumb active aero, The Canbus intellegent active aero will be a big thing in the next 5 to 10 years. View Quote https://aeromotions.com/products/chevrolet/s1-dynamic-chevrolet-corvette-c6-wing/ 1st Place Finish NASA Homestead Speedway 11-6-10 rear camera view |
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I have been following aero motion for a while now. They have done well.
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"Corvette" will have to be pronounced "core-vetty" now that it looks like an Italian supercar. I'm claiming it right now.
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