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l SIC l wrote:You can buy a 2003 RX8 for 8-9k these days
I don't like the price.
It's made for the old lady commuter, but they market it like it's the next big thing for 'racers'.
You know it's not Toyota getting back into sports cars because they would've at least made an attempt! (an attempt is coming at Nissan with something as wild as the amazingly successful GT-R). I personally think Toyota and Subaru knew after the GT-R, they weren't going to be able to compete with such a car (in terms of sales, looks, performance and technology wise - at this point), so they are making out that they weren't targeting that market anymore.
Like someone said; you'd have rocks in your head if you buy one new as in a year or two the value would be halved (or even less)! I'm starting to like them more, but don't see anything special. They are going a bit OTT with praising these cars for some reason...
Not sold, especially at the ridiculously inflated price for essentially a new MR2 (no homo, MR2, no homo). In saying that, the MR2 cost around that new anyway, didn't it?
This is exactly the reason you can't compare used and new cars
MR2SIK wrote:Where as I remember reading that Toyota nz were bringing in the bare bones model, then using factory parts to build what each customer wants.
l SIC l wrote:There really is almost no point buying a new car unless you want the options spec'd 'exactly' to your preference. One of the old man's employees bought himself a Holden R8 brand new for around $90,000 in 2007, next year it was $65,000 and now they're $35,000-40,000. That's not successful, that was just a stupid, non-automotive minded decision
Quint wrote:Not just cock, large cock.
l SIC l wrote:There really is almost no point buying a new car unless you want the options spec'd 'exactly' to your preference. One of the old man's employees bought himself a Holden R8 brand new for around $90,000 in 2007, next year it was $65,000 and now they're $35,000-40,000. That's not successful, that was just a stupid, non-automotive minded decision
l SIC l wrote:There really is almost no point buying a new car unless you want the options spec'd 'exactly' to your preference. One of the old man's employees bought himself a Holden R8 brand new for around $90,000 in 2007, next year it was $65,000 and now they're $35,000-40,000. That's not successful, that was just a stupid, non-automotive minded decision
Dell'Orto wrote:Believe it or not, there are people who do want a brand new car exactly how they want, and are happy to lose money on it or earn enough that a $30k hit isnt such a major. Foreign concept I know.
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