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Tractor Talk Discussion Forum

OT- buying car to save on fuel costs...

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26Red

09-12-2005 12:41:32




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My dilemma: I drive about 2500 miles a month.

My truck is paid for (14MPG), and has a lot of life left in it. I have to use it for at least 600 miles a month- trips up to the farm hauling stuff.

The cost of a new car 15k or less, doesn't really save me any $$ per month due to car payment. (honda civic, 40mpg- too small!)

So I thought I would go the used route and find something for 8k or less(sedan 25 MPG), but my numbers still do not add to much savings in the short term..

So now I'm looking at the well used crowd and not really finding anything that doesn't need work (tires, tuneup)...(no car payment though..)

talk about fuzzy math...

So maybe I'm looking at this all wrong... cars are not a short term investment, rather they are a money pit!

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Rod in Smiths Falls, ON,

09-13-2005 17:11:37




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 Re: OT- buying car to save on fuel costs... in reply to 26Red, 09-12-2005 12:41:32  
Do you have a good mechanic? If you do he/she can keep an older vehicle running as well as a new one, and at moderate cost. When my son's '97 Civic broke its crankshaft, a newer engine cost $700, with installation another $500.

The biggest cost for many drivers is the insurance, particularly collision and comprehensive. For those drivers it makes excellent sense to buy a car of low value. Liability insurance only? Major saving.

Did nobody ever think of fuel costs when buying cars? Who needs 265 hp in a midsize sedan? If you want to change something, try legislating a 100 hp cap for all non-commercial vehicles.

Wife cars: SUVs are great in winter, and nobody wants his wife or mother stranded somewhere because of a lack of traction. My wife's RAV4 is harder on gas than an econobox, but she loves it.

My friends laughed at me for selecting a 4 cylinder, 5 speed, SUV, with low range but without air. They say it's underpowered, but it delivers an honest 24 miles per gallon in winter, higher in summer, and performs strongly off-road. So in the last couple of weeks my cost of fuel has gone from 10 cents to 12 cents per kilometer. Big deal!

I can't tow a tractor with it so I hired a student with his father's truck. Cost me $100. My 4Runner tows lighter trailers just about every day of the week.

Summary: Fuel costs are just part of the picture. Insurance is probably more expensive. Major savings in insurance and interest can accrue if you drive a well-maintained beater, but think of fuel consumption even when the stuff is cheap, because it won't always be.

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Nolan

09-13-2005 11:15:35




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 Re: OT- buying car to save on fuel costs... in reply to 26Red, 09-12-2005 12:41:32  
Yep. That's why I keep not getting a commuter car. Crunch the number for a few minutes and it just doesn't make sense. A super whiz/bang econobox would save me less than $2k a year in gas. The purchase price, insurance and maintenance eat that up and then some. So, I just drive the truck.



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Duane H

09-13-2005 09:43:51




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 Re: OT- buying car to save on fuel costs... in reply to 26Red, 09-12-2005 12:41:32  
One thing that no one seems to think about is that if you get a cheap car for commutting and only use you truck when you need it is that you will never have to buy a new truck. You will be buying cars which are about 50% of the cost of a new truck. Also the basic maintance cost of a car like tires, breaks, fluid changes are cheaper for a car. In the long haul you will come out way ahead.



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Hal/WA

09-13-2005 11:15:10




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 Re: OT- buying car to save on fuel costs... in reply to Duane H, 09-13-2005 09:43:51  
I try to use my big Ford with 460 when I need to haul something and as little as I can for use like a car. A big year for it mileage wise is 5000--I expect it to last me many more years and it is already old, a 1984. But it does the jobs I need it to do just fine, although at about 10mpg.

Most of my trips can be done with a little car. We have had excellent luck with Mazda Protege's. I think we have had 6 of them over the years, and none of them has required much of anything besides normal maintanance up to 200k. I have bought all but one as low mileage used cars and most of them have been handed down to my kids and are still on the road. Toyotas and Nissans are also good cars, but I have always thought my dollars went a little farther buying the Mazdas. With the Protege's we regularly get 30mpg overall, but the best thing has been that they have been so completely reliable. I wish my experience with U.S. made cars would have been as positive.

Insurance costs are something else to factor into the equation. An extra vehicle costs quite a bit each year to insure, especially if you need to have collision/comprehensive coverage. But at $3 per gallon for gas, it makes a lot less sense to drive a 10mpg truck on a trip when a 30mpg car could do the job than it did when gas cost half that.

I will be buying another small car soon. They don't make Mazda Protege's any more, but maybe I will find one that is a few years old, or maybe I will get something else.

I am guessing that there will be a whole lot of low mpg SUV's on the market for cheap prices. I am sure glad I didn't give in to my wife when she wanted to buy something like that.....

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Jon Holt

09-13-2005 19:33:17




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 Re: OT- buying car to save on fuel costs... in reply to Hal/WA, 09-13-2005 11:15:10  
I have had nothing but GM cars all of my life. I don't know why everyone is so hard on American built cars. I have ran all of my vehicles above 500k and not had any major problems with them. I have found one thing that helps them last. MAINTENANCE!!!! I am also a mechanic and can save a lot of money doing the work myself. And if you are thinking I work for GM, I don't. I work at a Lincoln/Mercury/Mazda/Hyundai dealer.

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Wicksfield

09-13-2005 07:08:05




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 Re: OT- buying car to save on fuel costs... in reply to 26Red, 09-12-2005 12:41:32  
There's been many replies to your question which I haven't read all of them. There's one more piece of the puzzle that you can't put a price on. That is, the piece of mind that you're going to get with trading into an economy car to keep the oil companies from ripping you off so bad. Oil companies are not stupid and know how much they can charge before it makes mathmatical sense for a person to trade.

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26Red

09-13-2005 09:13:55




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 Re: OT- buying car to save on fuel costs... in reply to Wicksfield, 09-13-2005 07:08:05  
I have been seriously considering buying a used diesel and running it on biodiesel which you can make at home for about $.70/gal using old restaurant oil. However, I am still in the research phase- Does anybody know the $$ of bulk canola oil? soybean oil? Where can I find that information?

I have also run my truck on 50% mix of E85 with mixed results... mileage suffers a bit...especially if you run it on 100% E-85... I checked out the new E-85 compatible trucks- the E-85 mileage rating is poor. Until e-85 is priced $1.00 or so less than regular gas- then it will pay.

I am sick of paying high prices at the pump so I have to make a decision here soon, thanks for the opinions...

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ntmcj

09-13-2005 22:07:08




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 Re: OT- buying car to save on fuel costs... in reply to 26Red, 09-13-2005 09:13:55  
It is only a matter of time before the states start cracking down on home made cooking oil fuel. It is illegal to operate a tagged vehicle on the road with untaxed fuel. They will find a way to tax it. Here in SC, if you get caught with died fuel oil in your diesel, it is a $1000 per gallon fine.



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ntmcj

09-12-2005 23:06:04




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 Re: OT- buying car to save on fuel costs... in reply to 26Red, 09-12-2005 12:41:32  
If you don't care what you drive, look for a used full sized GM with the 3.8 from about 1988 on. I'm talking about a 'Granny Special', a Buick LeSabre or Oldsmobile Delta 88. They don't hold their resale value very well after a couple of years; they are mostly driven relatively easy by older folks; and they get very good mileage for cars of that size. I inherited a Buick LeSabre with 9000 miles on it about 10 years ago. I still drive it with over 150,000 miles and have never done any major work to it. I have replaced the water pump, radiator, and alternator. It rides and drives very good and has a lot of power. I have never had to add a quart of oil between changes. It gets 29 mpg on the highway and about 20 around town. I do have the transmission fluid changed at about 30 to 40 thousand miles or so.

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john d

09-12-2005 21:28:34




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 Re: OT- buying car to save on fuel costs... in reply to 26Red, 09-12-2005 12:41:32  
Unless you find an older car in good shape that still gives good mileage, you won't save as much as you want to. Unless you exercise good driving habits, you likely won't save much at all.
I have a '96 Chevy Lumina LS sedan with 153,000 miles on it. I get anywhere from 25 to 29 mpg depending on how/where I drive it. A car such as that would use roughly half of the gas your truck takes. It's worth a lot less than $8K, also. My wife has a 2000 Impala that gets about 25-27 mpg when she drives it locally. Several times we've averaged over 30mpg on trips. Lots of those are available at reasonable cost.
The previous post about the Honda is worth consideration. They're tough, and they're miserly with fuel. I never thought they were particularly comfortable, however.

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RodinNS

09-12-2005 20:32:23




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 Re: OT- buying car to save on fuel costs... in reply to 26Red, 09-12-2005 12:41:32  
Consider the Jetta. They aren't cheap to buy, new or used, but they do get good mileage. Most are into the 50's, depending on how heavy the foot is. Get a 5 speed. The body's hold up fairly well. By proportion, there's probably more old Jetta's on the road here in Nova Scotia than any other car. Although rust will get them in the end. It just takes longer. There's a fleet of these cars on my road (live in the boonies), and more than a few clocked over 600 km before the bodies fell apart. They're good reliable cars, and with the turbo models, they don't take a back seat to too much on the road. Just keep the oil changed, and do the timing belt as recomended, or it'll break and smash the valves. FWIW,

Rod

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NC Wayne

09-12-2005 19:18:45




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 Re: OT- buying car to save on fuel costs... in reply to 26Red, 09-12-2005 12:41:32  
Something I've thought about for some time and looked into briefely was getting a motorcycle for those commutes where your not gonna need to haul anything other than yourself. You can get an older Honda say in the 350 range for well less than $1000 and if you have any experience at all insurance only runs around $200 a year. My problem though is I see how all the idiots on the road react to my service truck that's 25' long and weighs nearly 32,000 lbs. I figure if they can't see it and drive like they've got some sense around something that large then how are they gonna act around something so much smaller.

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Nathan in Texas

09-12-2005 18:09:19




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 Re: OT- buying car to save on fuel costs... in reply to 26Red, 09-12-2005 12:41:32  
At 40 mpg it starts to make some financial sense to buy a car just for commuting.

40 - 14 = 26 mpg savings. 1,900 / 26 = 73 gallons of gas saved per month. X $2.50 per gallon = $183 per moth.

Not enough to make a full payment on a car but if you look at it as an asset then the gas savings will go a long way toward paying the payment on the car.

Just another perspective.



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Chris in MD

09-12-2005 17:05:13




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 Re: OT- buying car to save on fuel costs... in reply to 26Red, 09-12-2005 12:41:32  
I think everyone is in the same dilemna, big vehicles, poor mileage, high cost of fuel. The wife drives a 4WD Chevy Tahoe (13mpg) everyday, and is thinking about getting a little car. The math doesn't add up much, like it's been said, it's just the fact of the matter. BUT, it would be more practical, we haven't towed hardly anything with it, got the truck for that, and in five years haven't used the 4WD but a handfull of times (again, have the truck, which is in the mud a lot more, w/trailer). Anyhow, it hurts the wallet either more, and we have been put in a place where we have to make some decisions. If, as they tell us, gas will get more expensive, smaller cars put less pollution in the environment, use less gas, and are definately a lot more practical than an SUV that doesn't get off the road. Just an example, my dad has had trucks all his life, he has a 3500 dodge dually cummins diesel (awesome truck!), but he just bought a little Chevy Malibu to drive around in, and his truck hardly sees any use. I know not everybody is in the same position, I drive a truck everyday as well, but in my dad's case, the car works great for him and he never thought he would drive it more than his truck.
-Chris

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jughead 2

09-12-2005 16:53:41




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 Re: OT- buying car to save on fuel costs... in reply to 26Red, 09-12-2005 12:41:32  
i know this not the place but I have a 1989 honda accord for sale for 1500 obo. good little car that runs out well-164000 miles it gets 32 mpg keep looking they are out there



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720Deere

09-12-2005 17:53:48




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 Re: OT- buying car to save on fuel costs... in reply to jughead 2, 09-12-2005 16:53:41  
I started reading these posts and lauged when I got to this one. It is exactly what I was going to suggest. Find a Honda Accord with 120K to 150K on the dial. They are very affordable and will run almost forever. My brother has always kept a Honda around for this very reason and I have owned them myself. I never spent any major money on one except for the flex part of the exhaust. They will run upwards of 250,000 easily without much repair work.

Other than a $2,000 to $3,000 car like the Honda, I can't justify buying another car to "save" on gas.

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txgrn

09-12-2005 16:01:39




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 Re: OT- buying car to save on fuel costs... in reply to 26Red, 09-12-2005 12:41:32  
Never could make a new vehicle purchase justify offsetting high fuel costs.....just doesn't work. Looked at it back in the '60's and several times since. Same answer. Keep the gas hog and drive less..... unless the hog is a pig and needs replacing.

Mark



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RayP(MI)

09-12-2005 15:47:11




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 Re: OT- buying car to save on fuel costs... in reply to 26Red, 09-12-2005 12:41:32  
I"m kinda looking at the same questions. Wife and I are both running Chevy Blazers, both are getting in the neighborhood of 21-22 miles per gallon. About the same as a fullsize automobile. Think we"re going to stay where we are. Need the space and 4wd quite often. Wife commutes 40miles each way daily, on the road after midnite. Anyway, my point is that changing one used car for another may not get you much savings. Consumer reports were quoted as saying that the govt. milage figures are often optomistic.

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Mike(inWisc.)

09-12-2005 15:31:32




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 Re: OT- buying car to save on fuel costs... in reply to 26Red, 09-12-2005 12:41:32  
Ok. Here is another thought.

I also have a farm and need a good truck occasionly. Have another job as well where I commute about 33K/year.

Three years ago, I bought a used VW Jetta Diesel for the commute to work. It gets just over 50 miles per gallon. Has a turbo, and with the 5 speed is just a s fast as any other car on the road. Now have about 150K on it, and it should last for about 250-300K.

Very good car that the savings in fuel alone has already paid for.

For farm use I have a 1989 Ford F250 4X4 that had about 100K on and I paid cash for about $4K. It has the 351 Windsor and gets about 11 miles per gallon, but I only use it for the farm and put about 4K miles per year on it.

I suggest that you get a VW Diesel and an older truck. Don't know of any other more cost effective solution.

Just my opinion.

Mike

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sawtooth

09-12-2005 14:34:47




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 Re: OT- buying car to save on fuel costs... in reply to 26Red, 09-12-2005 12:41:32  
My son-in-law the mechanic got a non-running car for free- decent body. All it needed to get going was a fuel pump. He sold that and got another small cheap one for $500. Now runs that every day to his job- about 50 miles a day. Was running a 4 wheel drive pickup. Says it's already paid for itself. Seems to depend on if you can buy a junker and fix it yourself.



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Wicksfield

09-12-2005 14:16:28




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 Re: OT- buying car to save on fuel costs... in reply to 26Red, 09-12-2005 12:41:32  
You drive 2500 miles/month of which you must use your truck 600 of those miles. That leaves 1900 miles left that you could us an economy car. Check the Math:
Truck 1900mi/14mpg=135galx$3.00/gal=$405.00
Car 1900mi/28mpg=67galx$3.00/gal=$201.00

Assuming the car would get 28mpg, you would realize a savings in gasoline of $204/month or $2448/yr. With repairs, plates, and insurance, it doesn't leave much for depreciation.

Good luck with your decision!

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26Red

09-12-2005 14:30:08




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 Re: OT- buying car to save on fuel costs... in reply to Wicksfield, 09-12-2005 14:16:28  
Yep, it's a wash when you factor in a car payment and maintenance costs... decisions, decisions..



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RN

09-12-2005 13:49:34




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 Re: OT- buying car to save on fuel costs... in reply to 26Red, 09-12-2005 12:41:32  
Check salvage yard. Find a parts chaser special that the shop and wreckers use- runnable, but ugly some body damage and too old for insurance company to fix. Under $1000.00, figure a years worth of use. Pick a large sale volume model- Ford Escort, Chevy celebraty, Dodge Horizon, Toyota Camry, Etc. Example: Chev Geo with backend damage sold for $500.- duct tape and plywood on back, trailer light kit for legal lights. A yard I know has set aside some student repair/learn to drive/expendable get to work for winter types like this. Others are the broke timing belt haul ins. Chevette timing belt costs $20.00, that and oil change, tuneup 1/2 day added to $30.00 tow bill, $30.00 replacement title, fan belt- about $100.00. $200.00 sale price for a guys granddaughter to learn to drive. Car back to shop for Tires -$40.00 a pair, and brake job(?$) over years use- granddaughter took it to college. Think cheap, ugly, short use and helps if you can fix something yourself. RN

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26Red

09-12-2005 14:31:54




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 Re: OT- buying car to save on fuel costs... in reply to RN, 09-12-2005 13:49:34  
I think I will have a look at the local salvage yard... thanks



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Coloken

09-12-2005 13:35:25




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 Re: OT- buying car to save on fuel costs... in reply to 26Red, 09-12-2005 12:41:32  
Its kind of like throwing good money after bad in a poker game. There would be one good reason for you to buy another economy car---if your truck (pickup to me) is needed for things like pulling trailer, then buying another car would extend its life so you do not need to replace it in the near future. I am assuming a cheap small car against a large, high priced truck. Kennyp



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26Red

09-12-2005 14:34:49




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 Re: OT- buying car to save on fuel costs... in reply to Coloken, 09-12-2005 13:35:25  
Hopefully I can make this little hauler last a few more years... it is a '97 with 240,000 on the ticker and still looks pretty good.



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dhermesc

09-12-2005 12:58:48




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 Re: OT- buying car to save on fuel costs... in reply to 26Red, 09-12-2005 12:41:32  
Rarely does trading a good running car for another workout into savings, much less trying to add another car. It's not fuzzy math, it's just the cold hard facts.



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26Red

09-12-2005 13:10:59




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 Re: OT- buying car to save on fuel costs... in reply to dhermesc, 09-12-2005 12:58:48  
I was starting to think my excel spreadsheet of operating costs was lying to me... Looks like most of my options only pay in the long term scenario. I would like a new diesel truck, but like most guys, all my money is tied up in in the farm...



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e

09-12-2005 13:54:24




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 Re: OT- buying car to save on fuel costs... in reply to 26Red, 09-12-2005 13:10:59  
Now put that diesel pickup into your spread sheet and see how buying one of those wouldn't pay either. A $6k option to get maybe 4 mpg increase + pay more per gallon of fuel. And watch as we move toward '07 as diesel fuel prices increase with ultra low sulfur. I've been reading from several sources where experts are expecting at least a $1/gallon increase. Irregardless, I've held off buying a new truck and will wait and see.

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Doug in IL

09-13-2005 05:15:11




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 Re: OT- buying car to save on fuel costs... in reply to e, 09-12-2005 13:54:24  
4 mpg? You don't really believe that do you?



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e

09-13-2005 07:46:05




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 Re: OT- buying car to save on fuel costs... in reply to Doug in IL, 09-13-2005 05:15:11  
No, I don't believe there is a 4 mpg difference between say a hemi and the 610 ft-bs cummins in terms of unloaded highway miles. With the new multi displacement hemi, they are going to be neck and neck for milage.



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26Red

09-12-2005 14:28:14




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 Re: OT- buying car to save on fuel costs... in reply to e, 09-12-2005 13:54:24  
Ya, new truck to me means used with 80k on the ticker! and those diesel's are still expensive...



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rc in ct

09-12-2005 16:37:35




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 Re: OT- buying car to save on fuel costs... in reply to 26Red, 09-12-2005 14:28:14  
My daily driver is a 92 saab 900. When I need to move something I have a F250 4x4 diesel dually and a F350 dually dump. The fords don't see much road action unless there making more than it costs to drive them. Both cost well over a $100 to fill at current prices. I put one tank of fuel in the Saab a week -- 350 miles of travel commutting to work. I looked for a moment at buying a commuter car (new) in the 50mpg range. I'm not comfortable enough with the economy to take out a loan to buy a new car at $26k nor do I want to part with $26k out of savings. I think you're right about looking at the numbers long term. I don't expect to see fuel prices drop till spring 2006.

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TimS

09-13-2005 08:14:26




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 Re: OT- buying car to save on fuel costs... in reply to rc in ct, 09-12-2005 16:37:35  
I just traded an 95 Isuzu Trooper ( 18 mpg ) for a 97 vw passat tdi diesel ( 45 mpg ).

The difference in mpg will pay for the car payment and save me some money on top of it with the amount that this gets driven, usually 75 miles per day or so.

I personally blame GM for ruining the market for diesels in passenger cars in this country with that horrible 6.2l diesel they put out in the 80s.

The worst thing is that the army hummers are powered by that weak, unreliable thing.

With the weight of an armored hummer, what they really need is a turbo cummins like in our 3/4 ton dodge, or the ford powerstroke, or the duramax, etc.

But thats a different topic, haha.

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