That is an excellent point, and one frequently overlooked by people. For people that are in going to be in that position (high negative equity), gap coverage is an option. It's basically insurance that covers the gap between your loan and what your auto insurance agency gives you if you total your car. It often must…
Having the money and not wanting to pay it is different than not having it. If you can't come up with a down payment due to financial situation, you should not be in the market for a new car.
Unless you have significant collateral, financing a car for ANY term means you will have significant negative equity. A shorter term just means you will be in a situation of equity sooner.
The simple answer is to just make a big down payment. I hate borrowing money and refuse to be upside down on anything. I could take a total bath on my house and worse case still be able to sell it without a short sale.
do you have any idea how much time I have wasted there because my 3 and 4 year olds just had to keep watching the trucks drive underneath? I dragged them out of there crying the last time. 30 minutes is enough traffic watching.
He hit his head on rock.
I used to work on my old man's used car lot. Goodness those Excel's were garbage. Always a headache coming back with complaints a few months later. Sold two and then refused to touch them because they were more trouble than they were worth.
I always stop there as well (it falls right in the middle of a 2 hour window of w/ no rest areas 3 hours from home for me - so not stopping there means stopping either 2 hrs from home (too close) or 5 hours from home (too far).
Last time I stopped there, the pizza shop had what was billed as "authentic anchor bar…
I drive under that bridge on a weekly basis. Never bothered to stop though, probably should sometime
Mustang to Mustang II?
Diesels are more expensive to make because of emissions - they need dpfs, much higher injection pressures and at least in the US urea addition. They also need stronger parts because the way they work.
And people often don't include the mileage that they get per gallon of fuel — they just see $4 vs. $3.~~ and think, "Diesel costs more."
Angola used to have a Dennys IIRC. I like the stop before Angola going west (Clarence I believe) that has that sine non qua of the Thruway, a stop with an Arbys and a Tim Hortons.
Question is, with stats that are basically the same as the already available Passat TDI, what is the point of selling a similar, gas powered, MPG-machine? The key might be the fear that is harbored for diesel by a large number of Americans, but hopefully they'd also be willing to trade performance to get that…
Man that place is terrible