Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 14

Thread: New Car Buying Guidelines

Hybrid View

Previous Post Previous Post   Next Post Next Post
  1. #1
    Orca Whisperer N1LAF's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    Ledyard, CT
    Posts
    13,949

    New Car Buying Guidelines

    1. Find out what the Dealer Cost of the new car is
    2. Know what value your car is, and you may find a better price at the dealership

    Links to use to help:
    http://www.truecar.com/
    http://www.nadaguides.com/Cars
    http://usnews.rankingsandreviews.com...trucks/browse/

    My car quote formula:
    (dealer cost - rebate + transportation)*(taxrate + 0.02) + dealer cost - rebate + transportation - trade in + registration + transaction fee

    The 0.02 represents Dealership Profit percentage.
    'Transportation' is the transportation/Destination/Shipping charges

    Remember, the Dealership motivation is max profits/commission, not a great deal for you. Knowledge is power.

    How to handle a dealership salesman:

    1. Calculate car cost from above formula. Use NADA for trade in.

    2. Walk into dealership, talk with salesman while they test ride your car.

    3. Tell the salesman what you will pay right now for the car.

    4. The salesman will balk at your proposal, and will try to strong-arm you to buy right now. Refuse to buy now, you need a few days to think about it. When the salesman says this is the final offer, get up, ask if your car is ready, tell the salesman have a good night, and walk out the door. A reputable salesman/dealership - will chase you out the door, maybe to talk with the manager, who wants to talk with you.

    5. Say you have a few minutes to talk with the manager, and the manager may perform the same tactic. Stick with your price. Any time in step 4 or step 5, they may say that they will pay $$$ for your car if you buy that day. You now have the price they are willing to pay for your car. Remember that trade-in number. Tell the manager the same thing, you need a couple days to consider. Leave.

    6. Recalculate the formula, using the price the dealership stated that they would pay for your car. There is no real time limit on this.

    7. IF they have an Internet sales manager, e-mail a simple paragraph like : If you agree to this price, $$$$$, for this car with these options, this will lead to a sale by {date}
    ELSE visit the salesman and tell the salesman the same thing. Explain that a 2% 'profit' is fair for the car. Even show the salesman your equation, how you arrived to your price. Remind the salesman that the trade in price is the price they are willing to pay for your car. They will initially squawk, but they will give in.


    Take this approach, you will get a great deal.

  2. #2
    Conch Master W7XF's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    DM42kj
    Posts
    6,863
    AND MAKE SURE YOU SEE THE CARFAX....AND INSIST ON WATCHING THE DEALER ENTER THE INFORMATION ON THE COMPUTER AND WATCH THE PRINTER PRINT OUT THE CARFAX!!!!!!!!!
    Encrypt everything. Even if you have nothing to hide. It increases the noise floor.

  3. #3
    Whacker Knot WØTKX's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Location
    Lakewood, CO
    Posts
    26,759
    #1 Don't buy a new car!

    There are so many excellent used vehicles out there. Of course you have to check them out but it avoids the depreciation. I'd rather pay a trusted mechanic up to $1000 over a year to keep it running than make payments, but that's just me. Tires, oil, and tuneups are just regular expenses AFAIC.

    Last year, Previa for $4500, put $800 in repairs so it will go another 100K at least. Mind you, this is a supercharged All-Trac (AWD) so it's expensive to work on. $5K for the Miata, it needs nothing... but it's only got 65K miles on it. My Acura Integra needs about $600 to go another 100k. It's for sale tho, I don't need it.

    That being said, I tried one of the new Sonota's when I was car shopping. Albi was right, what a fantastic car.
    "Where would we be without the agitators of the world to attach the electrodes
    of knowledge to the nipples of ignorance?" ~ Professor "Dick" Soloman



  4. #4
    Orca Whisperer kf0rt's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    Denver 'burbs
    Posts
    11,068
    Buy this book used, for a penny:

    http://www.amazon.com/Car-Buyers-Art...6585486&sr=8-1

    Read it.

    You win. ;)

  5. #5
    La Rata Del Desierto K7SGJ's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2010
    Location
    The Desert
    Posts
    16,791
    Quote Originally Posted by kf0rt View Post
    Buy this book used, for a penny:

    http://www.amazon.com/Car-Buyers-Art...6585486&sr=8-1

    Read it.

    You win. ;)
    I have his 1st edition packed away. He was a guest on the radio station I used to engineer, and he was even nice enough to sign it for me after the interview. This is about the best book a person can read prior to buying a new/used car. IIRC he was a long time car salesman somewhere in California. He reveals all the tricks, like when they gang up on the buyer in the little office and apply the pressure. He told me he received a lot of death threats right after the book first came out.

    I was amazed how dead on he was, and how many of these tricks were actually pulled on us. It really is fun to recognize them and and know the right way to deal with them. I know we have saves lots of $$ over the years. Even if you aren't in the market for a vehicle at the moment, it's a great read now, and every time prior to buying.
    Last edited by K7SGJ; 01-14-2012 at 08:54 PM.
    A clear conscience is usually a sign of a bad memory

    RIP ALBI-W3MIV RIP RUSS-W5RB RIP BOB-VK3ZL





  6. #6
    Orca Whisperer kf0rt's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    Denver 'burbs
    Posts
    11,068
    Quote Originally Posted by K7SGJ View Post
    I have his 1st edition packed away. He was a guest on the radio station I used to engineer, and he was even nice enough to sign it for me after the interview. This is about the best book a person can read prior to buying a new/used car. IIRC he was a long time car salesman somewhere in California. He reveals all the tricks, like when they gang up on the buyer in the little office and apply the pressure. He told me he received a lot of death threats right after the book first came out.

    I was amazed how dead on he was, and how many of these tricks were actually pulled on us. It really is fun to recognize them and and know the right way to deal with them. I know we have saves lots of $$ over the years. Even if you aren't in the market for a vehicle at the moment, it's a great read now, and every time prior to buying.
    I remember the same about the guy being an ex-used car salesgoon. Excellent read (think I must have read the first edition -- it was a long time ago). It's all psychology and the dimestore variety at that.

    I hate buying cars from dealers (they're SUCH assholes when it comes to sales). I've bought two now from brokers associated with the Credit Union we belong to. These two were the easiest deals I ever made. On one of them, I knew what I wanted (an '88 Nissan Pulsar) and called them. They did a search, described what they found over the phone and I picked one (over the phone). They asked if I wanted to drive it (it was located at a dealer 30 miles away) or if they should have someone drive it up their office (10 miles away) where we could sign the paperwork. I chose the latter -- first time I saw that car, I owned it. Total "face time" with sales people = zero. That was fun.

    Second time was with a "no hassle" place. Real late-model used car lot. Pick a car and let them make a photocopy of your driver's license. They hand you the keys and tell you to have a good time. Expectation is that you'll bring it back in a reasonable amount of time, but an hour or two would be okay. Want it? Go in the office and and find a closer to write it up; price is on the window. Total closing time, maybe 20 minutes, including initiating a loan.

    I doubt I'll ever go to a dealer for a car again.

  7. #7
    Silent Key Member 5-25-2015 W1GUH's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Location
    NYC
    Posts
    10,471
    Does anyone ever consider a car's or a brand's reputation for service or reliability when acquiring a new, or used vehicle? There's lots of information about how to "beat" the lizards that sell cars and about pricing and all that. But how often is that shiny new or slightly used vehicle gonna leave you stranded or waiting for a tow?

    And when you take in in for service, is the shop going to actually fix the problem so it stays fixed? Will they do the job properly?

    I've had such an education about this. I've owned Toyotas and another marque. The dependability and service and parts availability from Toyota is impeccable -- since '78 I have no complaints whatsoever with them. The "other marque" was a total disaster for reliability and service. They were always breaking, and a lot of those break-downs were simply very bad design/implementation. And this is a so-called "prestige" brand! And the service was deplorable. Some shops did things that were out-and-out just wrong! And they were pretty arrogant about it to boot. I once contacted the manufacturer about the lousy service I was getting and his answer was, "Our responsibility ends when the car leaves the factory."

    Toyota isn't like that at all. They WILL fix a car properly, for a fair price, and it'll stay fixed. That is, in the rare circumstance when something actually breaks.
    If it's a war on drugs, then free the POW's.

  8. #8
    Orca Whisperer kf0rt's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    Denver 'burbs
    Posts
    11,068
    Quote Originally Posted by W1GUH View Post
    Does anyone ever consider a car's or a brand's reputation for service or reliability when acquiring a new, or used vehicle? There's lots of information about how to "beat" the lizards that sell cars and about pricing and all that. But how often is that shiny new or slightly used vehicle gonna leave you stranded or waiting for a tow?

    And when you take in in for service, is the shop going to actually fix the problem so it stays fixed? Will they do the job properly?

    I've had such an education about this. I've owned Toyotas and another marque. The dependability and service and parts availability from Toyota is impeccable -- since '78 I have no complaints whatsoever with them. The "other marque" was a total disaster for reliability and service. They were always breaking, and a lot of those break-downs were simply very bad design/implementation. And this is a so-called "prestige" brand! And the service was deplorable. Some shops did things that were out-and-out just wrong! And they were pretty arrogant about it to boot. I once contacted the manufacturer about the lousy service I was getting and his answer was, "Our responsibility ends when the car leaves the factory."

    Toyota isn't like that at all. They WILL fix a car properly, for a fair price, and it'll stay fixed. That is, in the rare circumstance when something actually breaks.
    What was the other brand, Paul?

    Worst cars I ever owned have had U.S. brands. Never owned a Toyota (not that I wouldn't). Toyota and Honda both have brand premium prices. I've found Nissan to be as good but lower cost to buy -- owned three of them and none have needed any maintenance to speak of. Subaru is good too -- had two of those. And two Fords and two Chevy's. Still have a '99 Blazer (114K miles on it). For every dime you put in the tank, put a dime in the maintenance kitty on that thing. If we ever get rid of it, I'd like to get a 4Runner.

  9. #9
    Silent Key Member 5-25-2015 W1GUH's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Location
    NYC
    Posts
    10,471
    I replied in a PM.

    Quote Originally Posted by kf0rt View Post
    What was the other brand, Paul?

    Worst cars I ever owned have had U.S. brands. Never owned a Toyota (not that I wouldn't). Toyota and Honda both have brand premium prices. I've found Nissan to be as good but lower cost to buy -- owned three of them and none have needed any maintenance to speak of. Subaru is good too -- had two of those. And two Fords and two Chevy's. Still have a '99 Blazer (114K miles on it). For every dime you put in the tank, put a dime in the maintenance kitty on that thing. If we ever get rid of it, I'd like to get a 4Runner.
    If it's a war on drugs, then free the POW's.

  10. #10
    La Rata Del Desierto K7SGJ's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2010
    Location
    The Desert
    Posts
    16,791
    Quote Originally Posted by kf0rt View Post
    What was the other brand, Paul?

    Worst cars I ever owned have had U.S. brands. Never owned a Toyota (not that I wouldn't). Toyota and Honda both have brand premium prices. I've found Nissan to be as good but lower cost to buy -- owned three of them and none have needed any maintenance to speak of. Subaru is good too -- had two of those. And two Fords and two Chevy's. Still have a '99 Blazer (114K miles on it). For every dime you put in the tank, put a dime in the maintenance kitty on that thing. If we ever get rid of it, I'd like to get a 4Runner.
    We had two 4Runners and loved them. Drove one to 300K with few major repairs. We have owned nothing but Toyotas for many many years, and problem were always minor. Out where we live, and because of the need for hauling stuff, a truck is pretty much a must. I've had their trucks since the early 90s, and have never had a bad one. They always get specified maintenance when due. I rolled two Tundras within 6 weeks of each other. (incident with a deer, and avoiding another vehicle that crossed into my lane on a curve (600 miles on the clock on the 2nd}) Although I got beat up pretty well and both trucks were totaled, I think what saved me was the steel roof support they built into the trucks. I don't know if other makers do that, but it sure saved my ass. I'm sure other car makers build good cars these days, but I really don't want to experiment anymore.
    Last edited by K7SGJ; 01-15-2012 at 09:03 AM.
    A clear conscience is usually a sign of a bad memory

    RIP ALBI-W3MIV RIP RUSS-W5RB RIP BOB-VK3ZL





Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •