jasmtis
Member
Oh...I know all of their tricks...lol. I took the Ford financing, enjoyed the rebate, laughed at the interest rate (3.5%), and paid the truck off months later. I'll gladly pay 6 months of interest to get 9k knocked off the price before I even start haggling.
Yeah, I decided to go for the Tacoma instead for a variety of reasons but that's what I was thinking I'd do if I went for the ST. The whole thing just left a very bad taste in my mouth, I overthink these things but I can see how people get taken advantage of. I sat down with the salesman to talk numbers on a new ST that I'd driven and liked and a CPO RS I'd driven and fallen a bit in love in despite my better judgement. He started trying to sell me on their in-house financing, talking about discounts and all that. I said I was ready to pay cash if we could agree on a number, but I'd be willing to consider financing if he could break down the numbers for me. He left and came back with a piece of paper(making up numbers here, don't remember the specifics) that had $375 handwritten on it and nothing else. I was like no... I wanted to see how the numbers break down and you gave me a monthly payment and haven't even told me how many months its for. He told me how many months, i asked again to see what the price of the car was, how much the discounts were, how much I was considering financing and the details of the financing. He left again and came back with another piece of paper, this one had $325 scrawled on it and nothing else. Again, I was like okay first of all how long for, he told me(it was a longer period obviously), I did the mental math and it was just financing the same number over more months. Eventually I shook a barely acceptable breakdown of the numbers out of them, and a ballpark cash price but man...
I bet it would take some serious search time, but you'll find that statement here on ExPo several times by Clutch and myself about trucks. I held out as long as I could hoping Toyota would offer a version of my 1991 that just wasn't worn out. What I got for waiting was the 2nd gen Tacoma. I should have bought a low mileage 1st gen then and there but I didn't. I waited a few more years and lo and behold the 1st gen frames started rotting out so nice ones jumped in value and I ended up with a 2nd gen Tacoma anyway. Even that, back in 2015 if I was smarter I would have bought a brand new SR level 4 cylinder, 5 speed 2nd gen instead. Had I know Toyota was gonna punt stick shifts anyway. Coulda, shoulda, woulda.
My 91 was all I could afford at the time on a college budget so no regrets there really. I'm just happy I have a capable truck with a manual that should last me a long time. Seems like the manual is available on less and less configurations, who knows when it'll vanish entirely.
It is all about perspective, and what we need out of vehicle. We don't have any kids...so a regular cab would work for me. But I like the extra cabs so I can toss gear bags back there. That and I like to go to the park by work, eat lunch, recline the seat and take a little nap. Getting ready to just do that. I no longer work construction...have an easy peazy job now, that gives me waaaay too much time to argue with strangers on the internet.
We really don't need any of it...we don't need trucks, we don't need 4WD...we especially don't need crew cab trucks, etc...hell, we grew up riding around in my dad's F250 regular cab with 4 of us.....we buy this stuff because we want to. You can spend as little or as much as you want to. We all love justifying our purchases to others....Hell, I know I do.![]()
I go places with people often and make a terrible passenger, also a covered bed is still too damp for guitars. Haha I slowly construct my responses in minute chunks while waiting for software to compile.
Very true. I'd have to give up most of what I love doing but I could sell both my rigs, find an apartment walking distance from the office and have my life consist of working, going to the gym, going out, watching TV and sleeping like my friends who went to work on Wall Street after college. It sounds horrible. And hey, at least everyone on here uses their stuff for what it's made for on a regular basis. I know waaay to many people who daily drive half-tons because they tow their boat from storage to the marina in the spring and back in the fall or bro-dozers that have never and will never touch a dirt road or pull a trailer. We're splitting hairs at this point.