ProDarwin wrote:volvoclearinghouse wrote: The only way to reliably make "cheap" transportation work is if you have multiple cars, or flexible work arrangements.*comment removed* I disagree. I don't want to derail, but I am always shocked when someone says that, especially on *this forum*. Edit: LOL at articles like the above where "cheap car" = 200k+ mile 13 year old Mercedes.
Agreed. I paid challenge money for a 90's corolla in the 00's, and I put gas, plugs, air filters, and brake pads into the thing for 5 years, while driving it harder than any corolla was ever meant to. It was as reliable as gravity, and a sedan to boot (great for loading kids into). I wouldve never let it go, except a family member had some life happen to them, and ended up with a few years newer Infiniti that I could have...HAVE. So, the 'rolla went on to the next owner, a cousin of the missus, who drove it for another 5 years.
TL,DR: A cheap, decent, AE101 (93-97) Corolla is probably better than or equal to a cheap, NEW, mediocre econobox of almost any vintage in terms of total cost of ownership.
EDIT: potentially not as reliable, but uber and the like can be a decent alternative when the car is in the shop