I really should've created this thread years ago and just updated it with the bad ideas of the week instead. Anyway I've been noodling what I'd be replacing the Alfa with in the longer run, because I like to overthink things. Came to the conclusion that instead of another new car, I'd probably replace it and the truck with some $15k-$20k SUV-shaped appliance that can tow and add another car to the fleet instead that fulfills the following requirements:
- I've always wanted one (or owned one in the past)
- Despite my E36 M3 car buying skills, I want to reduce the likelihood of flushing too much money down the toilet on deprecation
- Chance at appreciation would be nice, but I'm not holding my breath as I think the market doesn't have that much higher to go and expect at least a price stagnation
I do have a bit of money set aside, but it's not quite clear how much I have to dump into the house and workshop buildings, which will influence the final decision. So I ended up splitting it into three price ranges.
1. The stretch goal cars
Buying one of these will likely mean taking out a car loan to cover the shortfall and/or require selling another car or two. These cars are on the YOLO list though:
- Aircooled 911 turbo - yes, the original pre-1990 widowmaker, not interested in the newer models (yes, I know a 996 turbo is objectively a better, nicer car - don't care). Prices on these have been coming down over the last 5-6 years from $stupid despite the overall rise in prices on a/c 911, but realistically, this is the most expensive car in the list both to buy and run, and I can just about stretch to a condition 3 example. Condition 3 is fine though - I want a driver, not an object to polish and keep in a cocoon.
- Original NSX. Manual, of course.
- Porsche Cayman R. Maybe. Mostly because limited edition Porker, but I don't think I'd be willing to use it as Porsche intended, so this one's a maybe.
2. The mid-range cars (ie, below $50k)
- Lotus Elise. Still miss my S1 Elise, but I already have a single minded car (the Maxton). Most expensive car in this section list, again
- Porsche 987.2 Cayman S. Maybe, but that would probably end up being a replacement for the BRZ, so we're looking a deprecation from track use.
- Nicest, most original Evo VIII or IX I can find. Problem would be that I would then be doing unspeakable things to it and end up with a car worth less because modified.
3. The not-so-expensive cheap and fun car range ($20k and below)
- A really, really nice Bertone X1/9. Yeah, I keep watching too many X1/9 videos on YouTube
- Saab Sonnet III
- JDM import Mini Cooper (not a BINI)
Me being indecisive me, I'm torn between the "no regerts" category 1 or category 3 with a view to looking into category 1 in 2-3 years as I don't think current price levels are going to be sustainable much longer. OTOH some recent events very much drove the point about one's own mortality home, hence the no regrets section, because these are really cars that I would want to own before I'm too old and decrepit to enjoy them properly (or actually get in and out of them...)