1934 Packard Twelve Coupe Roadster
Morris Minor Traveller
Bugeye Sprite
'06 Ford GT
'57 Fuelie Corvette
We had a series 2 E-type in inventory at work, If you're over about 5'6, they're horribly overrated. The AH3000 BJ8 is a much better car.
1934 Packard Twelve Coupe Roadster
Morris Minor Traveller
Bugeye Sprite
'06 Ford GT
'57 Fuelie Corvette
We had a series 2 E-type in inventory at work, If you're over about 5'6, they're horribly overrated. The AH3000 BJ8 is a much better car.
Model S Plaid, straight line luxury and speed
Taycan Turbo, a sporting GT cruiser
New F150 Lightening. For having power at the worksite and hauling.
Mustang Mach E, daily driving and family hauling
The hybrid Miata when it comes out.
There's an old adage in racing that if you're not scared you're not going fast enough. If a vehicle lacks a visceral feel or response at rates of acceleration and other perfo that you feel is adequate, it is because the vehicle is pushing you and your abilities and your mind further with regards to what it's feels it's capable of then you're pushing the vehicle. Enough seat time and you'll adapt and become skilled enough behind the wheel to push the vehicle again, instead of merely being along for the ride, maybe even start to instill the tingle of fear.
RichardSIA said:If you actually own those I am envious of four and miss the two I once had.
I have none of those. I wasn't aware that was a requirement.
If it's five I own then I don't really care about my car. It's an appliance.
The five would be motorcycles that I do own: Moto Guzzi 850 LeMans, Moto Guzzi Stelvio, Ducati 860GT, BMW R80RT and the wife's Vespa.
If I could only have one, that's easy: A mint version of my 2005 Chrysler town and country touring. I need at least that to haul my family, better than my truck at everything but plowing.
An LLC is a "private party" and can be set up for like $100. So, if I want more than 5 cars, I set up more than 1 LLC.
I mean, I'm already mandated to a maximum of 4 so this isn't really a stretch. I'll approach this with a "fire takes out my whole fleet and we have to buy new".
Wife needs a daily, something nice and gets decent fuel economy. I'd probably put her into a newer Sonata or K5. They get pretty close to what her Rio gets now and are roomier, nicer and a good distance car. It would double as our "lets drive to Philly/Gainesville to see family" car.
We need a utility vehicle of some form to replace the 06 Sierra. Neither of us like the new FS offerings, so we'd likely replace it with a 2wd CC Canyon V6. Tows 6k lbs, has a bed for smelly/messy stuff and room for 5 (or us and 2 large dogs) inside.
I'd need something fun, but economical and a hoot on track. I REALLY want an i20N but the chances of that making it here ever are pretty slim. I'd be looking at a '19 Elantra Sport or a Forte GT with the last of the manuals and the 1.6T.
Lastly... I'd finish my 78 C10. As much as I think I'll sell it I know I won't. Completely redo the suspension with the ridetech kits front and rear. Finish the interior with a nice intage air unit. Paint it and enjoy a nice fun hot-roddish truck.
5 car limit? My cars are all in pieces. I'm pretty sure if I put all the pieces together there wouldn't be 5 complete cars, so I'm good.
1 car limit? Always gonna be a crew cab truck.
Well, this thread is a fever dream flounder of obvious bent starting with OP. Given that, I find it hilarious how many electrified vehicles feature in the responses.
Boxster Spyder
EV for running around town for cheap
Tow pig
Avalon hybrid or Lexus equivalent for quiet comfy highway miles
Race karts for track days and racing
I have 5 now and already want to reduce that to 3. That of course doesn't count my wife's Subaru or the two trailers.
This would be easy for me as I am already doing that.
Camper Van for towing. If I added 4wd to it that would make it perfect.
Outback; its perfect for hualing parts and exploring old ghost towns and the like.
Datsun 1200; its four wheel drifty goodness, at some point we'll do some sort of engine swap to give it more power. I really want to do a Cosworth BDA-BDG.
Formula 500; this is my nirvana open wheel car. I get all of the single seater experience without the car being labor intensive.
The wife's Santa Fe; this is a surprisingly good car and she really likes it. In 100k it's only needed a starter. If we swapped it we'd just get her a new one or possibly a mini van.
So for the moment I'm really happy with the fleet.
The enthusiast sector isn't aging out. Your particular brand of enthusiast may be but overall the enthusiast is alive and well.
For me I would have an electric conversion project car, a (probably gas) camper, a Daily for me, daily for wife, and probably a electric converted samurai for toad duties behind the camper.
I would also probably like to have a kart or Single seater electric or gas for track work.
There is no reason to be scared of the performance vehicle future. The success of selling vehicles based on statistics guarantees that. If anything modification will become simpler once the EPA has no say over electric motor emissions. It sure has made the idea of a vehicle startup easier.
One vehicle: that's easy, I'm keeping the ex-GRM van.
Five vehicles: in addition to the van, some kind of AWD turbo boost-buggy, a Honda Fit of one generation or another, a Lotus Europa, and probably some cheap manual beater for me.
I like the idea of one of each: car, truck, van, jeep-ish thing.
I like the Z4, I'd take one with a stick.
Truck and van can be merged into a shuttle bus. Towing and hauling all in one.
4 door Jeep for family convenience.
Then...something electric since torque feels AWESOME
And a limo.
Assuming money is no issue
The most fuel efficient pickup I can find with a 5000lb towing capcity. (Towing Civic plus truck stuff)
My Civic built with K swap (autocross car)
A Suzuki Alto Work RSR (weekend driver)
Unsure what as a daily. Really I want the height and space of my Element (to be able to slide a bike in) but with electric. I guess if we are dreaming I could have something figured out to electrify my Element.
Jaguar I-Pace for the wife.
I'm sorry you're feeling excluded here, man. I get that, I've read a few comments here and there about things I care about and my annoyance is something I have to push past since there's enough other good stuff happening on this forum with enough other people who share my basic core interest of "cars" -- and at the same time remind myself that because someone disagrees with me, they're not bad, nor are they saying I am bad.
Im reminded of a post a while back by someone who wandered into a low rider show despite having no previous interest. IIRC, he was surprised to discover that it's just a bunch of car guys. They enjoy cars differently, but they are car guys nonetheless. My hope is that that perspective can take the edge off for you.
For what it's worth, I was not trying to yank your chain.
Right now I would have a hard time justifying a thing beyond a Ford Maverick.
If someone else is paying the cost and maintenance of the rest of the cars, I'll take an overland vehicle, a brz/370z/similar, and that's about it.
If the carpocalypse hits and I wanted 5 in my stable:
- 67 LeMans convertible done up in a modern pro-touring style (have the car, but not the resto yet)
- LLY/LBZ duramax pickup, preferably long bed reg cab
- 00-03 Jag Super V8
- Reliable motorcycle (have it)
- first-gen NSX
I currently have five cars (not counting my wife's crossover and the old tow rig that is all but sold), and to be honest I'm pretty happy with my stable at the moment and not on the hunt for any "next" project (granted, I just bought my new tow rig, so that will keep me busy for a while).
I have a rule that I won't own two cars that "are for the same thing" becuase if I have multiple "same thing" cars, then I just find that I like one better than the other(s) and drive that one, and not the others. So I have specific cars for specific things:
1. Tow/big utility vehicle (2010 Sequoia, replacing a 2005) - something good for hauling stuff, but I don't want to daily-drive a big-ass truck
2. Daily driver (2018 GTI) - I don't need my daily to be anything crazy, just something pleasant to drive to work that doesn't give me any drama.
3. (Actual) race car - in my case, the e30, which is a stage rally car but could easily do track stuff with a suspension swap. It is street legal, but not often driven on the street.
4. Road trip car (Porsche 924S) The GTI is very good, but a dull road-tripper. But I want a road trip car that has character, gets decent MPGs, and is reasonably quick and fun to drive.
5. Off-road toy (1989 Dodge Raider M/T) some people do double-duty on this with their big truck or road-trip vehicle, or whatever. For me, the Raider is primarily for actual off-roading (not Jeep mall-crawling), though it's pretty fun to drive so I find myself scooting to Home Depot on the weekend in it or whatever, when I don't need the big truck for whatever I'm getting.
--
Now, I can certainly think of a car in each of those categories that would be my "money no option" ideal thing.
1. Tow rig: Honestly, probably just a 2021 Sequoia. There are things that tow better, but I don't need "excessive"
2. Daily driver: using the criteria above, it would probably be some kind of hatchback that's quicker than a GTI. Maybe just a Golf R. Nothign exotic.
3. Race car: I mean, I'm close: I'd love a Patrick Snijers-spec e30 M3 rally car....or a Martini Lancia Delta rally car.
4. Road tripper: I'm thinking a Cayman R. The idea of long road trips in a Porsche just appeals to me. Or maybe a 90s 5-series wagon with a full M5 drivetrain swap, or something. IDK.
5. Off-roader: ideal? For capability, a 06-07 Land Cruiser would be up there as an ideal offroad/overland rig thanks to reliability, space, looks cool, and super-capable. Not a Jeep. If I went old, maybe an FJ40 or something, but that's fairly comparable to what I have now. Or a 90s G-Wagen with all the offroad goodies.
I have 5 cars but I'd sign the Lincoln over to my mom since she drives it anyway. Then I'd probably:
Keep the Cougar and the Probe (and build them both into racecars)
Swap the Escort for a turbo FWD Capri (to keep the Mazda-based Ford numbers steady)
Get rid of the Focus and get a 1st-gen Lightning (to increase the ratio of both hauling stuff and doing burnouts)
That leaves one spot open. All the really rich people would have to offload their 05-06 Ford GTs so they could keep 5 Ferraris or whatever, so I'll gladly take one of those unwanted castoffs.
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