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riverman wrote:
On Apr 16, 4:07 pm, Wilko wrote: JohnKuthe wrote: On Apr 14, 2:34 pm, Wilko wrote: Bill Tuthill wrote: Siskuwihane wrote: Rumor has it that Honda may bring its 2.2 litre diesel CR-V to the US in 2008. That's good. CR-V is a nice vehicle and I like spare tires on the back. Although did Honda move the spare tire in the new 2007 model? The Jeep Liberty diesel only gets 18 mpg according to Consumer Reports. Toyota Highlander hybrid is due for revision in late 2007 (2008 model) and expectations are that fuel economy will improve dramatically. Possibly a Toyota Tacoma with 6-speed manual would get decent mileage on the highway, though not in town. A friend gets 24 mpg in his Tacoma. The crew cab has a fairly comfortable back seat, and with gate down, the cargo bed is long enough for me to sleep in, although my feet would get wet in the rain, sticking out of a camper shell. Bill, you may want to have a look at the VW Passat wagon, if you want more room than the Jetta. They come in a 4X4 version and have several (pretty powerful) diesel engines. I have the Skoda Octavia, with the same VW 4X4 system, but based on the Golf/Jetta undercarriage. I'd buy another one in a heartbeat (Did so already, this is my third Octavia 4X4 :-)). Your third? In how many years? Why did you get rid of #1 and #2? How many miles did they have on them when you got rid of them? How much maintenance didi each require? Saying you're on the "third" of any vehicle does not necesarily mean they are good vehicles. It could mean you're just making the same mistake over and over! ;-) John Kuthe... The first two were lease cars, John. After they get to their maximum amount of miles (usually 100K miles) you have to hand them in and pick another (new) car (or buy the lease car). I drove 1 year and 10 months in the first one, then it reached its maximum miles, and I drove one year and 11 months in the second one before it reached its maximum. The third one I bought, it now has 100K on it as well. -- So do you think owning is preferable to leasing? If this was a lease car, you'd be on the verge of replacing it with a new car. It seems that you're committed to driving your current car into the dirt now. I think it depends. I became a student after working for the past 7 years, so leasing is not an option any more. Also, I stopped driving to work every working day and I stopped driving to the Czech Republic every second weekend, which cut my annual miles from 65K to roughly 10K now. In my view leasing in this country is only interesting if: -your company pays for the lease contract with a tax free personal budget, -you can afford it and -if you drive (a lot) more than what your lease contract is for. In my case, I'd pay the lease company (through the company I worked for) for 25K miles a year and drive well over 65K miles a year. If I had to pay the lease company out of my own pocket, I'd pay using after taxes money (bye bye 42%) but still have to pay the full amount (1150 euro incl. fuel per month, add roughly 33% for the price in US$). I can afford my own car, since I drive miles less now than what a minimum lease contract goes for and since this car is used. I couldn't afford the 65K miles a year, especially not out of my non-existent paycheck. -- Wilko van den Bergh wilkoa t)dse(d o tnl Eindhoven The Netherlands Europe ---Look at the possibilities, don't worry about the limitations.--- http://kayaker.nl/ |
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