• BolexForSoup@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    A 5K car is the used Toyota Camry my wife drove for a decade until 2 years ago. You can do fine with 5K and a fair bit of patience.

        • BolexForSoup@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          I mean as the person who drove that car along side his wife for years I can tell you it had the usual oil change and tune ups one would normally expect. It didn’t need work. She got it for $4200. Let’s be conservative and adjust for inflation and the current state of the car market, and say it would’ve cost $6000. I’m telling you you can have a car you are driving in for $6k. It won’t be pretty or have any bells and whistles, it may require you travel 60-100mi to get it, but it will be a totally adequate vehicle.

          You are speaking theoretically, I am speaking from experience. We literally just sold that car 2 years ago for $2500. They will need to do some work yes. The alternator is acting up and probably is on its last legs.

          • vivavideri@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            I’m with you. I paid off my 2014 but sold it so I wouldn’t have to tow it cross country. I got $8,500 for it from carmax which was a lowball for 2022. Two years before that, it nearly totaled itself when it blew its head gasket at 51,988 miles. (That was a $5k expense that ford refused to reimburse even though those ecoboost engines are prone to fail)
            We moved to a small town and the car market is extra fucky up here. There wasn’t much available and I needed a car for my upcoming commute, so I picked up a 2001 Forester for $5k. Unbenownst to me, the tires were 12 years old, transmission hadn’t been flushed, and the driver’s side head gasket was leaking.
            Luckily I have some buddies who are Subaru enthusiasts so I’ve only had to sink maybe $1500 to get it in great condition instead of $3-6k. Had a shop do transmission and differential flushes, and it took three months but I got gaskets, heads, spark plug goodies, and exhaust shenanigans done myself.
            We just brought home a 2001 Honda insight for $3500. It’s gonna need some work too, but luckily the hybrid engine is pretty sturdy so long as we deal with battery maintenance.

            You ought to be able to change the alternator yourself to save a buck-- check rockauto.com.