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No, it does not depend on the vehicle

2007-01-07 08:38:13 · 6 answers · asked by Scatman 5 in Cars & Transportation Buying & Selling

6 answers

usually if you buy a car that is for 3000 bux it will have 100,000 miles or more on it . but i have found many great deals on vehicals that are in the $3000.00 range and are over 100,000 miles but still run great and could go for another 30,000-50,000 miles. such as most toyota trucks are almost bullet proof. i just bought a toyota truck for 250 bucks and it runs perfect they guy was just strapped for cash it is a $1000 truck. and will run for along time after i drop my chevy 350 motor and trans-am tranny in it.

2007-01-07 08:43:47 · answer #1 · answered by toyota jake 1 · 0 1

You're wrong about it not depending on the vehicle. what year is the vehicle? what is the milage? what was it used for? how was it maintained? What company is the vehicle from?

see a 2000 Ferrari for $3000 you're expecting it to be a fire damaged and scrapped for scrap metal. A 1991 Toyota corola for $3000 could be a dependable little car. See where I'm going?

A 1996 Dodge Neon with 150 000mi going for $3000 is over priced, when a 2000 Dodge Neon with 50 000mi going for $3000 is reasonably priced.

2007-01-07 16:48:36 · answer #2 · answered by gregthomasparke 5 · 1 0

Depends.....

You can either get a newer American car with low mileage and in good condition or older Japanese car with high mileage and avg condition.

For example, I bought a 15 year old Honda with over 200K miles and body/interior in poor condition. Yet I drove it for a year and 25k miles without a single problem. Also got 40mpg. One of the best used cars I've ever owned.

2007-01-07 17:32:42 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

The body and interior would have to be decent (not perfect), and it should check out okay by my personal mechanic. Would expect normal wear and tear depending on age of the vehicle.

2007-01-07 16:46:56 · answer #4 · answered by Mrs. Strain 5 · 0 1

it not only depends on the make and model of the car, but the area you are buying the car from. I'm sure California cars are priced differently than say Kentucky cars, because the price of living is different.

2007-01-07 18:51:18 · answer #5 · answered by ~♥~ *CHEEKY* ~♥~ 6 · 0 0

Wouldn't be topnotch, but it's most likely decent.

2007-01-07 16:40:08 · answer #6 · answered by Taylor 2 · 0 1

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