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posted by [personal profile] cathyr19355 at 01:16am on 10/12/2006 under ,
In the end, I decided not to buy the 2001 Honda Civic that had caused so much trouble for me and Sales Guy. I went instead with the Avalon. [livejournal.com profile] esrblog and I went to the dealership yesterday morning to sign the papers.

The Avalon in question, in case you missed my recent post that mentioned it, is a 2000 Toyota Avalon, a largish four-door sedan with a lot of nice options and standard features, such as power everything, a combination CD-cassette player in addition to the radio, lights in interesting places, and an all-leather interior, among other things. It has an amazingly silent ride, brakes easily, accelerates well, and handles beautifully. Because it's a "certified pre-owned" car, it has a brand-new set of tires, and even comes with a limited warranty. Because it has 61,000 miles, and had been on the lot awhile, it was actually several hundred bucks cheaper than the Civic. My car is silver with a beautiful light gray interior. I have never had a car that looked so new, or so glamourous.

I've nicknamed it the Land Shark.

Don't get me wrong. I did not think that Sales Guy or anyone else at the dealership had unfastened and refastened the "check engine light" on the Civic on purpose. If they had done that, it would have been more in their interest to steer me toward the 2004 Honda Civic Sales Guy showed me last week, which cost nearly $2,000 more than either the 2001 Civic or the Avalon. They didn't.

What happened was this. I went to the dealership on Thursday night, prepared to buy the 2001 Civic if it still seemed to be a good idea when I drove it again. Sales Guy came to pick us up in the Civic, but let me do the driving on the way to the dealership. Thursday was very windy and cold here, and I noticed as I drove that the Civic, like my poor old Subaru, tended to shudder as the wind gusts hit it, a phenomenon which has always unnerved me. It also was noisy, and the ride was kind of rough.

Then I asked to test drive the Avalon again. It didn't shudder in the wind, and its ride was neither rough nor noisy. And I said to myself: Why should I pay so much money to get a car that's no better than my Subaru, when I can get a car that won't shake in the wind? That's when I decided to go with the Avalon.

My mechanic thought the Avalon was great. His only caveat was that the Avalon will likely need a bunch of servicing items when it gets close to 90,000 miles, to the tune (probably) of $800 or $900. On the other hand, that's two, maybe three years down the road, given the number of miles per year I usually put on my cars. Even with that future maintenance expense looming, it still seemed worth taking.

So now I'm Queen of Avalon. We'll see how long the car stays looking new, given Pennsylvania temperatures and driving conditions.
Mood:: 'pleased' pleased
There are 8 comments on this entry. (Reply.)
metalfatigue: (dead STOP end)
posted by [personal profile] metalfatigue at 08:46am on 10/12/2006
Glad to hear you didn't get the Civic. Even discounting the possibility of fraud, that car just sounded like a disaster waiting to happen.
 
posted by [identity profile] cathyr19355.livejournal.com at 11:10pm on 10/12/2006
Maybe. In any event, I'm happy with my choice and that's what counts.
 
posted by [identity profile] jmaynard.livejournal.com at 11:47am on 10/12/2006
I'll second that. I think you'll be very happy.

The maintenance the mechanic is referring to is the timing belt, which will need to be replaced at 90-100K (check your owner's manual). Make sure your mechanic gets that one right, as mine didn't the first time around...
 
posted by [identity profile] cathyr19355.livejournal.com at 11:08pm on 10/12/2006
Yeah, the mechanic mentioned the timing belt, though I'm having a hard time imagining how that replacement alone could cost $800-$900, hence the remark in my post.

I will keep in mind your near-miss with disaster on your timing belt replacement when 90,000 miles rolls around for me. Thanks for mentioning it.

 
posted by [identity profile] jmaynard.livejournal.com at 12:04am on 12/12/2006
It's a very labor-intensive process, requiring removing pretty much everything in front of the engine. The belt itself alone is $150 or so.
 
posted by [identity profile] cathyr19355.livejournal.com at 04:20am on 12/12/2006
So it's like multiple items after all! Pretty scary. Thanks for the information.
 
posted by [identity profile] fadethecat.livejournal.com at 04:32pm on 10/12/2006
Sounds like a very nice new car! Now I'm faintly jealous and stuff. (Though what I really want is a nice tiny car. Or possibly a motorcycle. Parallel parking is not my friend.) We'll have to come out and visit the new car--and, you know, people associated with it--at some point.
 
posted by [identity profile] cathyr19355.livejournal.com at 11:05pm on 10/12/2006
Parallel parking is not my friend either, but since I long ago learned how to avoid having to resort to it 99% of the time, I decided I didn't care. :-)

If you're jealous now, you'll be even more so when you actually see it. Heck, I'm still impressed, and it's now all mine! (Though it still doesn't feel like it's my car, in a way.)

You're probably right that a small car is better for you. Good luck in finding one, eventually!

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