Honda Car Forum |
|
|
|||
|
I've got a 91 Honda Accord with 128K miles on it. I bought it new and have
always maintained it well. But its got some problems that are going to have to be fixed. It needs new tires, the exhaust is rusted from the cat back, the clutch master cylinder is leaking, there is something wrong with the power brake booster, it doesn't handle like it used to, and the it has the rear fender rust common to Honda's of this vintage. My ballpark estimate of the cost to fix all of this is oh I don't know lets say $2,000. If I buy a new Accord it is going to cost around $20 K or $460/month for 48 months. If I fix the one I've got, that same $460/month will pay off the tab in a little over 4 months. Then I'll have hopefully many months without a "car payment." Not to mention dirt cheap insurance, taxes, and registration. So when does it make sense to pull the plug on a car? |
|
|||
|
Dean wrote:
> I've got a 91 Honda Accord with 128K miles on it. I bought it new and have > always maintained it well. But its got some problems that are going to have to > be fixed. It needs new tires, the exhaust is rusted from the cat back, the > clutch master cylinder is leaking, there is something wrong with the power brake > booster, it doesn't handle like it used to, and the it has the rear fender rust > common to Honda's of this vintage. > > My ballpark estimate of the cost to fix all of this is oh I don't know lets say > $2,000. If I buy a new Accord it is going to cost around $20 K or $460/month > for 48 months. If I fix the one I've got, that same $460/month will pay off the > tab in a little over 4 months. Then I'll have hopefully many months without a > "car payment." Not to mention dirt cheap insurance, taxes, and registration. So > when does it make sense to pull the plug on a car? when all your other bills are paid off when the engine or tranny goes when youre just plain tired of it when you can afford a decent down payment when the monthly payments arent going to affect you much. |
|
|||
|
"SoCalMike" <mikein562athotmail@hotmail.com> wrote in message news:2Q61d.424025$%_6.31380@attbi_s01... > Dean wrote: > > I've got a 91 Honda Accord with 128K miles on it. I bought it new and have > > always maintained it well. But its got some problems that are going to have to > > be fixed. It needs new tires, the exhaust is rusted from the cat back, the > > clutch master cylinder is leaking, there is something wrong with the power brake > > booster, it doesn't handle like it used to, and the it has the rear fender rust > > common to Honda's of this vintage. > > > > My ballpark estimate of the cost to fix all of this is oh I don't know lets say > > $2,000. If I buy a new Accord it is going to cost around $20 K or $460/month > > for 48 months. If I fix the one I've got, that same $460/month will pay off the > > tab in a little over 4 months. Then I'll have hopefully many months without a > > "car payment." Not to mention dirt cheap insurance, taxes, and registration. So > > when does it make sense to pull the plug on a car? > A national CAA survey (equivalent to the AAA) among 20000 respondants performed in 2003 revealed the average cost of maintenance for passenger vehicules is : age of car 1 $200 2 $350 3 $500 4 $800 5 to12: $1100 per year Survey respondants claimed driving an average of 19k km per year, or app 12k milles. (I am sure most respondants dont keep a detailed history of repair costs. So let's add a couple of hundred dollars to the age 5 -12 figure.) In the last 12 months, I spent $1400 on my 1998 Max. I drove 22k km. It now has 123k km on the odometer. In my estimation, the economical break point for owning a vehicule is when it reaches 7-8 years old. At that point, the average yearly total cost of depreciation, repairs and capital cost is at minimum. Beyond 8 years, the average yearly cost does not get any significantly lower. As a matter of fact, you increase the risk of being stranded, car downtime, time lost while at shops, and loss of income if you depend on the car for such. The most economical strategy is to buy a used car between 2 and 5 years old and keep untill it reaches 7 or 8 years of age. A made myself a rule of thumb to seriously consider getting rid of the car if the last 12 months actual costs or next 12 months forecast exceeds $1500. But often emotions get in the way. Or life has other plans. |
|
|||
|
Some guy wrote a book on this once (don't remember name of author or
book). Basically, rule of thumb is buy a 3 tear old car and keep it for 7 more or buy a 7 year old car and keep it 3. His studies are old now so these numbers may be off now (cars last longer)... Daniel wrote: > "SoCalMike" <mikein562athotmail@hotmail.com> wrote in message > news:2Q61d.424025$%_6.31380@attbi_s01... > >>Dean wrote: >> >>>I've got a 91 Honda Accord with 128K miles on it. I bought it new and > > have > >>>always maintained it well. But its got some problems that are going to > > have to > >>>be fixed. It needs new tires, the exhaust is rusted from the cat back, > > the > >>>clutch master cylinder is leaking, there is something wrong with the > > power brake > >>>booster, it doesn't handle like it used to, and the it has the rear > > fender rust > >>>common to Honda's of this vintage. >>> >>>My ballpark estimate of the cost to fix all of this is oh I don't know > > lets say > >>>$2,000. If I buy a new Accord it is going to cost around $20 K or > > $460/month > >>>for 48 months. If I fix the one I've got, that same $460/month will pay > > off the > >>>tab in a little over 4 months. Then I'll have hopefully many months > > without a > >>>"car payment." Not to mention dirt cheap insurance, taxes, and > > registration. So > >>>when does it make sense to pull the plug on a car? >> > > > A national CAA survey (equivalent to the AAA) among 20000 respondants > performed in 2003 revealed the average cost of maintenance for passenger > vehicules is : > > age of car > 1 $200 > 2 $350 > 3 $500 > 4 $800 > 5 to12: $1100 per year > > Survey respondants claimed driving an average of 19k km per year, or app > 12k milles. (I am sure most respondants dont keep a detailed history of > repair costs. So let's add a couple of hundred dollars to the age 5 -12 > figure.) > > In the last 12 months, I spent $1400 on my 1998 Max. I drove 22k km. It now > has 123k km on the odometer. > > In my estimation, the economical break point for owning a vehicule is when > it reaches 7-8 years old. At that point, the average yearly total cost of > depreciation, repairs and capital cost is at minimum. Beyond 8 years, the > average yearly cost does not get any significantly lower. As a matter of > fact, you increase the risk of being stranded, car downtime, time lost while > at shops, and loss of income if you depend on the car for such. The most > economical strategy is to buy a used car between 2 and 5 years old and keep > untill it reaches 7 or 8 years of age. A made myself a rule of thumb to > seriously consider getting rid of the car if the last 12 months actual costs > or next 12 months forecast exceeds $1500. But often emotions get in the way. > Or life has other plans. > > |
|
|||
|
Daniel wrote: > > > > A national CAA survey (equivalent to the AAA) among 20000 respondants > performed in 2003 revealed the average cost of maintenance for passenger > vehicules is : > > age of car > 1 $200 > 2 $350 > 3 $500 > 4 $800 > 5 to12: $1100 per year > > Survey respondants claimed driving an average of 19k km per year, or app > 12k milles. (I am sure most respondants dont keep a detailed history of > repair costs. So let's add a couple of hundred dollars to the age 5 -12 > figure.) > > In the last 12 months, I spent $1400 on my 1998 Max. I drove 22k km. It now > has 123k km on the odometer. > > In my estimation, the economical break point for owning a vehicule is when > it reaches 7-8 years old. At that point, the average yearly total cost of > depreciation, repairs and capital cost is at minimum. Beyond 8 years, the > average yearly cost does not get any significantly lower. As a matter of > fact, you increase the risk of being stranded, car downtime, time lost while > at shops, and loss of income if you depend on the car for such. The most > economical strategy is to buy a used car between 2 and 5 years old and keep > untill it reaches 7 or 8 years of age. A made myself a rule of thumb to > seriously consider getting rid of the car if the last 12 months actual costs > or next 12 months forecast exceeds $1500. But often emotions get in the way. > Or life has other plans. My rule of thumb is to never own any vehicle that is depreciating. Most of the time I drive one of my vintage vehicles, (the newest being a 1964 model) daily. But with the price of gas suddenly becoming a factor, I ran into a deal where I bought two early 1980's Civics for $200. One had a bad engine and the other had been wrecked but the engine was fine. Seems that within the next month or so, I should be driving an '83 Civic FE (with a gaggle of spare parts btw) that was rated something like 40 mpg city and 53 mpg highway. No steenkin' computer, airbags, and other silly devices to drive you nutz as well. Yep, no hybrid for this guy! -- JT Just tooling through cyberspace in my ancient G4 |
|
|||
|
I will keep my 90 Integra as long as it stays reliable.
This car has been extremely reliable since I bought it new in 90. For now, I don't worry about being standed anywhere, I go anywhere and as far as I want with this car and I'm not worried. When it starts falling apart, when I'll worry of been stranded somewhere, when it breaks faster than I can fix it, or when it costs more to maintain than payments on a newer one, I'll get rid of it. It's all paid up, and it cost me much less than $1000 to maintain (I do do keep record of it). Insurance cost is much less too. Last "expensive" job on it was a paint job 3 years ago. This car looks like new and rides like new, I could never get anything better for the money I spend on yearly maintenance plus the money I'd get by selling it. Carl 90 Integra RS |
|
|||
|
I appreciate the numbers, assuming that this is purely a cost decision they
still don't make sense to me. Even assuming the depreciation model where you buy a 2 - 5 year old car the total cost still seem to favor fixing the old car pretty much forever. From the NADA page I got the following approximate numbers for a 4 door Honda Accord LX: Year Value Monthly payment Yearly Payment 2002 15K 350 $4,200 1999 10K 230 $2,760 A 5 year old car is going to cost $2,760 every year for 4 years just to pay the loan. The numbers below predict $1,100 per year in maintenance, so it would seem to be $1,600 more cost effective to keep the old one. (assuming of course that the "newer" car doesn't need its own maintenance. In which case the paid for car is an even better deal.) Even if you have to replace an engine or transmission $2,700 will pretty much cover those costs. The reason for my question is I find myself in a situation I've never been in before. In the past I've traded cars because of changing family situations. So I've never had a car this old, but my Accord is a perfectly fine car. It does what I need it to do, and buying a new one will not give me any great pleasure. (Unless of course I can prove that it will save me money in the long run.) The prevailing "wisdom" I've heard is not to spend more money on a car than it is worth. But if spending that money gives you many more years of service, why not fix it? Dean On Sun, 12 Sep 2004 23:16:39 -0400, "Daniel" <nospam@nospam.com> wrote: > >"SoCalMike" <mikein562athotmail@hotmail.com> wrote in message >news:2Q61d.424025$%_6.31380@attbi_s01... >> Dean wrote: >> > I've got a 91 Honda Accord with 128K miles on it. <snip> >> >So when does it make sense to pull the plug on a car? >> > > >A national CAA survey (equivalent to the AAA) among 20000 respondants >performed in 2003 revealed the average cost of maintenance for passenger >vehicules is : > >age of car >1 $200 >2 $350 >3 $500 >4 $800 >5 to12: $1100 per year > >Survey respondants claimed driving an average of 19k km per year, or app >12k milles. (I am sure most respondants dont keep a detailed history of >repair costs. So let's add a couple of hundred dollars to the age 5 -12 >figure.) > >In the last 12 months, I spent $1400 on my 1998 Max. I drove 22k km. It now >has 123k km on the odometer. > >In my estimation, the economical break point for owning a vehicule is when >it reaches 7-8 years old. At that point, the average yearly total cost of >depreciation, repairs and capital cost is at minimum. Beyond 8 years, the >average yearly cost does not get any significantly lower. As a matter of >fact, you increase the risk of being stranded, car downtime, time lost while >at shops, and loss of income if you depend on the car for such. The most >economical strategy is to buy a used car between 2 and 5 years old and keep >untill it reaches 7 or 8 years of age. A made myself a rule of thumb to >seriously consider getting rid of the car if the last 12 months actual costs >or next 12 months forecast exceeds $1500. But often emotions get in the way. >Or life has other plans. > |
|
|||
|
In article <pi81d.5594$0h7.290186@news20.bellglobal.com>, nospam@nospam.com
says... >age of car >1 $200 >2 $350 >3 $500 >4 $800 >5 to12: $1100 per year If this was to be believed, then owning a car from the 5th year to the 10th would cost $5500. In my limited experience, about 5 cars that fall into that range, this is completely wrong. I never spent that much money on a car. Even if I didnt' do all the work on my car and paid someone else to do it, the numbers would be lower. >In my estimation, the economical break point for owning a vehicule is when >it reaches 7-8 years old. At that point, the average yearly total cost of >depreciation, repairs and capital cost is at minimum. Beyond 8 years, the >average yearly cost does not get any significantly lower. As a matter of >fact, you increase the risk of being stranded, car downtime, time lost while >at shops, and loss of income if you depend on the car for such. The most >economical strategy is to buy a used car between 2 and 5 years old and keep >untill it reaches 7 or 8 years of age. A made myself a rule of thumb to >seriously consider getting rid of the car if the last 12 months actual costs >or next 12 months forecast exceeds $1500. But often emotions get in the way. >Or life has other plans. I think it is best to get a 7-8 year old car that has been well maintained. You get it at a really low price to start with and then don't have to spend that much money keeping it running, this assumes the prior owner maintained the car properly. This strategy has worked well for me, so far. ------------ Alex |
|
|||
|
> The most
> economical strategy is to buy a used car between 2 and 5 years old and keep > untill it reaches 7 or 8 years of age. Almost my thought. I'd say the best period minimal depreciation/acceptable reliability & repair costs is between 5 and 8 years. At 8 years, it still has a good value (if it is an Honda) and it is interesting to get good cash from it. After 8 years, the 6-7000$ car will become a 2-4000$ quickly. |
|
|||
|
On Tue, 14 Sep 2004 23:50:31 -0700, Frank Boettcher <fboettcher@ebicom.net>
wrote: >The things you mentioned don't sound like $2,000. Yah that was a guess. Yesterday I called around and got estimates on the work and with labor it is more in the $1,000 range. >Question is what >have you put into it recently. Has the clutch been changed ($600), done at 90K miles >has the timing belt/water pump/counterbalance belt been done ($500), done at 120K miles >Have your replaced the main relay Resoldered this weekend. (thanks to everyone that posted pages on how to do that) >and/or distributor parts ($150-200 if you do it yourself). I'm not aware of any distributor issues. There was something wrong with the distributor years ago and the dealer fixed it free, including covering the tow bill. > Struts? Not yet. According to the mechanic those can be done at 150K miles >Drive axles? Done The single most expensive quote was to repair the rust. It isn't too bad yet but it is still $650 to fix. The one thing I failed to consider is the safety of the 91 Accord. There are no air bags, ABS, and I doubt that its crash performace will be equal to the newer Honda's. All the money in the world can't fix those issues. (well, I guess it could by buying a new car <lol>) So with that critical oversight, failing to consider the saftey of the older car, I'm leaning toward getting something a little newer with the appropriate saftey equipment. Thanks Dean > >I just put about $1000 in my '90 based on the fact that I had done all >of these things within the last year or two. I did the body work and >painted it myself so that only cost about $150 for materials to do >that. Figure I have a car that is good to go for another 2-3 years >with only minor maintenance. And it looks good too. > >I also have a 97 and strongly prefer the 90 so there is a touch of >emotional attachment. > >You have to assess what needs to be done now and what is probable in >the near future to make the proper decision > > >On Mon, 13 Sep 2004 01:23:25 GMT, Dean ><Jeep_TJ.removethis@hotmail.dot.com > wrote: > >>I've got a 91 Honda Accord with 128K miles on it. I bought it new and have >>always maintained it well. But its got some problems that are going to have to >>be fixed. It needs new tires, the exhaust is rusted from the cat back, the >>clutch master cylinder is leaking, there is something wrong with the power brake >>booster, it doesn't handle like it used to, and the it has the rear fender rust >>common to Honda's of this vintage. >> >>My ballpark estimate of the cost to fix all of this is oh I don't know lets say >>$2,000. If I buy a new Accord it is going to cost around $20 K or $460/month >>for 48 months. If I fix the one I've got, that same $460/month will pay off the >>tab in a little over 4 months. Then I'll have hopefully many months without a >>"car payment." Not to mention dirt cheap insurance, taxes, and registration. So >>when does it make sense to pull the plug on a car? |
![]() |
| Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests) | |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Accord versus Taurus Economics | Fred Smith | Honda 2 | 31 | 08 Aug 2004 01:22 am |