keegs
Veteran Member
Kyle, I drove 140+ miles round trip to work for six years before I retired. Actually, when I owned two houses, I'd drive 180+ miles twice a week. I started my commute with my old Dodge diesel truck that got 22 mpg, but the price of diesel forced me to look for alternatives. I bought an old Honda from my neighbors for $1500 and spent $1500 on it in repairs. It got my mileage up to 29 mpg and changed to gasoline which was cheaper as diesel was rising toward $5 per gallon. Of course, diesel came down, but I never went back to commuting in the diesel. Instead, I gave the Honda to my daughter and bought a Pontiac Vibe. The Vibe gets 32 mpg on ethanol added gasoline and 34 to 36 mpg on non-ethanol fuel on the highway. They are pretty cheap now that Pontiac no longer exists. I think you can make a good deal on one for $12k to $14k depending on mileage and features. They are essentially a Pontiac styled Toyota Matrix. Ours has been trouble free. It also hauls four people easily with plenty of room (headroom and footroom). The rear hatch and fold-down seats are super for carrying cargo. If you are interested in a new car with lots of features and good mileage at a low price, check out the Kia Sorento. My inlaws have one and it is impressive.
I'd sure be tempted to take that used Toyota for $2.5k. That's a great buy for the mileage. With proper maintenance, Toyotas will go 250k miles or more. The '94 Honda Accord I gave to my daughter had 346k miles on it and was still going strong. They are excellent commuters and will save in oil change costs and tires/brakes because they are just a smaller car and cheaper to maintain.
+1
The extra cost for diesel fuel eats into any savings from improved mileage. I'm surprised that the corolla is only getting 32-34 mpg.. The Mrs. has an 05 which gets 38-40.