It took 3 months to get my son's Hyundai Santa Fe repaired after hardly more than a fender bender. The shop was waiting on a radiator support bracket, I believe.Has anyone had any issues with long lead times for repair parts?
A little background.. been living overseas and will move back stateside in January and will need to purchase a vehicle. Looking at both new cars and cheaper used beaters (which I've historically defaulted to). A bit concerned with supply chains and parts backup if the beater needs a repair. On the flip side don't want to pay the huge markup on a new vehicle at the moment but I'm thinking that might be the best option. I'll be a cash buyer so interest rates are not a concern.
Last 6 cars I’ve bought were 1 new Toyota, 1 new Lexus, 3 used Toyotas, and 1 used Lexus. Drove them all to well over 200K miles (current Lexus is around 170K) and have never had a major repair needed. Small sample size in the big picture but you’ve got to like those oddsHas anyone had any issues with long lead times for repair parts?
A little background.. been living overseas and will move back stateside in January and will need to purchase a vehicle. Looking at both new cars and cheaper used beaters (which I've historically defaulted to). A bit concerned with supply chains and parts backup if the beater needs a repair. On the flip side don't want to pay the huge markup on a new vehicle at the moment but I'm thinking that might be the best option. I'll be a cash buyer so interest rates are not a concern.
Has anyone had any issues with long lead times for repair parts?
A little background.. been living overseas and will move back stateside in January and will need to purchase a vehicle. Looking at both new cars and cheaper used beaters (which I've historically defaulted to). A bit concerned with supply chains and parts backup if the beater needs a repair. On the flip side don't want to pay the huge markup on a new vehicle at the moment but I'm thinking that might be the best option. I'll be a cash buyer so interest rates are not a concern.
Bet that mini bites you if you keep it very long.I’m sure it depends on what you’re driving. I haven’t had issues with parts for domestic vehicles.
I also only pay cash and refuse to have a car payment. I own 4 GM trucks/SUV’s as daily drivers. They have 980,000 combined reliable miles.
I recently bought a Mini Countryman S for my wife (no need for a Suburban with kids driving now). She wanted a fun stick shift. I wanted better MPG. I haven’t had to do any repairs yet (knock on wood) but I’ve had the same worry. That’s partly why I haven’t sold any of the other daily drivers yet.
It’s a BMW product…..not hard to find their long term reliable and cost of repairs. Best of luck if you keep it long termTime will tell. From what I’ve read, if you’re good to them, they’re good to you. Run premium fuel (direct injection & turbo) and don’t neglect maintenance. It’s not a “gas and go” type of vehicle.
It’s a BMW product…..not hard to find their long term reliable and cost of repairs. Best of luck if you keep it long term
My sister got a new to her, old car, within a month had major issues not starting. It took 3 months for them to get it fixed. And of course not long after she got it back another issue popped up....Has anyone had any issues with long lead times for repair parts?
A little background.. been living overseas and will move back stateside in January and will need to purchase a vehicle. Looking at both new cars and cheaper used beaters (which I've historically defaulted to). A bit concerned with supply chains and parts backup if the beater needs a repair. On the flip side don't want to pay the huge markup on a new vehicle at the moment but I'm thinking that might be the best option. I'll be a cash buyer so interest rates are not a concern.
Has anyone had any issues with long lead times for repair parts?
It's quite simple. Walk in and sit down with a salesman and build it (or do it yourself. Print it and bring it in). Place a deposit ($1,000 here) and your vehicle is "ordered." You still have to wait for that dealer to get an allocation for that vehicle and hope there aren't any constraints.Build Your Own New Chevy Car, Truck, Crossover, SUV, or Van
Hey Yank, what do you know about people building their own Chevrolet? How does it work, and could it work with a trade-in?
It's quite simple. Walk in and sit down with a salesman and build it (or do it yourself. Print it and bring it in). Place a deposit ($1,000 here) and your vehicle is "ordered." You still have to wait for that dealer to get an allocation for that vehicle and hope there aren't any constraints.
Trade values fluctuate too much. You're looking at least 4 months from order to it getting delivered at a MINIMUM right now. Your trade today won't be worth the same in the 4 (or 6 or 8...) months it takes to get here.