Heavy Metal Doctor
Silver Member
- Joined
- Sep 12, 2007
- Messages
- 123
- Location
- Mason Dixon Line
- Tractor
- Kubota L3301 w/LA525 loader, old IH Cub Cadets - 1250, 105, 124, Ferris IS1500z
I'm wondering out loud thinking of options to reduce monthly costs. I have 2 hours a day or more to think about these things. My last commuter was a Saturn that got about 32 mpg on my commute but here's an issue....they have started repaving roads here in Texas with very coarse (marble sized) overlay. You can't hardly hear the radio in most small cars like the Saturn or my mom's '98 Toyota Corolla. I hate this repaving overlay!
Options: #1 Buy mom's Corolla for cheap ($2500). Only has about 55k miles. Gets about 32-34 mpg which is about a 22% improvement. Could save about $120/ month in gas at the expense of the noisy ride. Payoff would be roughly 2 years but would have the benefit and expense of a 3rd vehicle.
#2, Get an electric plug in vehicle that can make the commute. I looked at the Chevy Volt but it won't make it even 1 way on a charge according to what I've read. The Nissan Leaf could make it I think, but surely I'd need my work to offer to let me recharge while there. These vehicles cost over $32,000 or more. The payment would be over $600/month so this doesn't exactly work as my cheapest option. I can't make the numbers work on most any great mileage vehicle that costs over $10K used. My high mileage depreciation devalues whatever vehicle I end up driving. This depreciation can end up costing almost as much as anything else if I were to buy new.
#3, Suck it up and hope the price comes back down soon. I've read to expect these prices to stay up through the summer or longer but I hope not.
I love my job but I love where I live even more. My company is a bit shaky right now and I'd like to see some things get better before I would think about moving closer to work. And, if this job ever ends, there are no other jobs in the area that the pay compares to what I'm getting so I'd have to move again if my job ends. Homes are pricey where my job is but the gas savings would make up the difference I believe.
Are there any other options within reason? Has anyone else thought this through and might I be missing something?
The major costs of commuting are vehicle payment, fuel, depreciation, tires batteries and oil, and of course maintenance and breakdowns. Other costs are insurance and the stress of driving in a noisy tin can compared to a much quieter car at the expense of 5-7 mpg or so.
I understand where your coming from - I had a lot of the same issuses in mind when I bought my house out in the country / far suburbs away from the city where my job is. Since then, I've been doing about 55 miles each way for the nearly 16 years. Based on my experience with the drive and with cars in general, my advice would be option #1 -- that little car is cheap enough and may run for hundreds of thousands of miles yet.
In the first couple of years of commuting, I went through a few domestics, each of which I picked up used / cheap -- crappy K-Cars, Escorts, ect -- I worked on 'em all too often and had too many tow truck rides. Then I switched to the Nissan Stanza that was my wifes car we bought used w/75k on it for $5k (of course that was in 94) . All I ever did was change the oil, tires and other basic maint. stuff. When it finally died 7 or 8 years later at around 450k, I bought another used Nissan, then another.....they where all cheap to own and got better milage than they where rated for...and only once did I have a breakdwon - which was my fault for putting off replacing a worn belt which broke and left me parked on the side of the road. The only serious work done to any of them was due to a wreck /deer hit or general wear and tear after hundreds of thousand of miles. I've found the parts to be relatively cheap and everything easy to work on when I needed to. I stick to standard trans 'cause they'll last forever with just a new clutch once in a while (I usually get 250K or more out of clutch)....I guess I sound like an advertisement for Nissan, but they've earned my loyalty in my book.....
I don't have any faith that the new hybrids or electrics will have the longevity to be worth the cost when your turning real milage everyday. How many miles or cycles will the batteries last?....Even with high gas prices, I prefer to stick with the proven reliability of the gas engine drivetrain - besides, you can buy a cheap traditional car fairly cheap that gets 32mpg or even better. Also - many new cars equiped with stuff like multiple airbags might be even safer than an older, larger, vehicle in the same crash....these ideas in mind is what put me in my first brand new Nissan when the cash for clunkers crap messed up the whole used car market in 09 leaving me nothing worth buying for the cash I had on hand and nothing I thought worth financing used either. I fought hard NOT to by brand new for a commuter car. I was ready to piece together 2 wrecks and build a car (I've done it before when the parts fell in my lap for next to nothing) but couln't even find stuff to do it. So, once I checked the insurance and found out the cost was negligable and the payment was as good, if not better, than the financing I'd get on something used, I was sold. 54k since Oct 09 so far and no hickups.