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Old cars and value
Picking up on J Hertzman and T Hancock's variations on the old car owner's
lament let me inject a note of optimism into the debate. I now have two old
cars: a 1986 SAAB 9000 Turbo with 256,000 km on the clock and a 91 Alfa
Romeo 164L with 146,000 km on the odo. They cost about the same per year to
maintain in tip top shape, with factory parts at professional mechanic
rates. I would not hesitate to drive either across North America confident
it would be no less reliable than the average 4 year old car. I carry
tools, oil, "fan" belts, plugs, a working though slightly defective
thermostat, and that's it. (And a credit card!)
The annual repairs and maintenance cost for each is about CAN $3,000.00 to
drive a car that would cost about CAN $45,000.00 to replace. Depreciation
on each is effectively nil, especially since I have no intention of selling
either one. Elementary mathematics will demonstrate that the depreciation
alone on the new car will far exceed these repair and maintenance costs.
Throw in interest charges or opportunity costs and a little routine
maintenance costs on the new car and the cost advantages of the older cars
is huge. The biggest risk is putting a big repair in and getting rear ended
driving away from the shop by some dimbulb who shouldn't have a license to
drive.
I bought the 164 new in Nov 1991 for about CAN$40,000.00 and it's now worth
about $5,000-8,000 to the right buyer. The SAAB I bought 1.5 years old in
March 1988 for about CAN$28,000 and is worth about $3,000. Neither is
saleable for its true value. (Nor for sale for that matter)
If you hunt around for good used or aftermarket parts and do your own work
the economics heavily favour keeping a good older car in top shape so it is
reliable and fun to drive. The big mistake is made in treating cars as
disposable machines as they surely will rapidly become if you choose to
treat them as such.
Funnily enough, in the long, long run, following factory maintenance
requirements and using OEM or equivalent parts is the best overall policy
for years of relatively low cost high quality motoring. Buy new and keep
the car up to snuff and a modern car will deliver decades of delight.
I bought a new Mazda Protege for my daughters to drive and intend to keep
it until it is destroyed by aforesaid numnuts or it falls apart. I also
bought a 3 year old SAAB 9000 Aero which I intend to keep also. If Alfa
brings a new model over I will be right there in line for another long term
love affair.
Cheers
Michael Smith
Calgary, Alberta,Canada
91 Alfa 164L
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