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Your Opinions/Advice Please

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Main Forum' started by XLR8, Dec 3, 2005.

  1. XLR8

    XLR8 New Member

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    1.) Do any of you have the "Sound Shield" package?

    Does it make the ride quieter?

    Is it worth the $349.00 to you?

    I really need as quiet of a ride as possible.

    2.) At what point would you sell the Prius and get a new one if you drove 36,000/mi per year? 3 year mark? (just over the 100K/mi point) Before that?

    I've heard many times that the 100,000/mi mark is key and you should get rid of cars before that. But I know that "Toyota" and "Prius" are different and maybe that "mark" is longer out.

    So, obviously I'd like to get the best re-sale as possible and find that "Sweet Spot".

    And, one more thing you may keep in mind: My company pays me a base plus mileage to drive a "New" car. So, I do have to get one every 4 years or so on average anyway.

    Thanks in advance for your opinions and advice guys,

    Aaron
     
  2. tumbleweed

    tumbleweed Senior Member

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    I'm not sure what sound shield is. It sounds like the same thing dealers sold several years ago called undercoating. If it is then it's just another car dealer rip off. Not only was in useless but it got all over everything under your car making it dificult to work on some componants and it added quit a bit of weight. Toyota went to a lot of pains to make the Prius as light as possible so I don't think it's a good idea to add weight.

    GSA who rents cars to government agencies likes to replace them at 5 to 7 years or aprox 60 to 90 thousand mile intervals, whichever comes first. But that's for average cars, and the Prius isn't average. If I put on as many miles as you do and if the resale value stays up as high as it has been I think I might look at a 3 or 4 year interval.

    I think the "sweet spot" dependes on what kind of car, where you live, rather you trade it in or sell it yourself and a whole bunch of other factors. Not the least of which is how you feel about the car, do you want to keep it or do want another one?
     
  3. XLR8

    XLR8 New Member

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    Thank you tumbleweed.

    I was also thinking it may be 3-4 years for the sell/get new point as well and I do want as many opinions here as possible.

    I HAVE to get a new one at those interval points to keep my car allowance program compliant. So, that "Sweet Spot" is important and you're right, it will vary be region. I'll just have to research that.
     
  4. frankie_delaware

    frankie_delaware Junior Member

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    While I'm waiting on my '06 Barcelona Red to come in, I'm still daily-driving my highly reliable:
    1983 Toyota Land Crusier - 200,600 miles.
    1992 Mazda MPV - 125,000 miles.

    The car I had before those two, a 1978 Toyota Celica, had 150,000 miles on it when I sold it, and I never had to make any major repairs, only routine maintenance, a water pump, and a thermostat. Still had the original clutch...
     
  5. prius_colony

    prius_colony New Member

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    I agree that these cars are reliable well over 100,000, but I think he was talking about trying to recoup the best resale value for the number of miles on the car. I do think it's true that there's a physiological barrier between buying a used car with 99,000 miles and 100,000 on it.

    I also have a Toyota with almost 200,000, but I'm sure it's not worth much to anyone besides me...
     
  6. TonyPSchaefer

    TonyPSchaefer Your Friendly Moderator
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    Drive the Prius until if falls apart and dies of old age. And then tell us when that is.
     
  7. XLR8

    XLR8 New Member

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    That's exactly right prius colony....best re-sale point.
    And, Frankie, thank you for that info too as it does add to the credibility of Toyota.


    I'm looking for a collective census on this topic of "Sweet Spot" for resale time.

    All educated "best guess" scenarios if you will.

    I know this can be subjective for sure (and have lots of variables)

    But going on this...

    36,000 miles per year

    Company pays me a base plus mileage IF I have a car less than 5 years old.
    (at 5 years times 36,000=180,000 miles so I'm gonna ditch before then to keep my monthly car allowance...question is when???)

    The way I see it...I'm always going to have a car payment (unless I bought with cash and I'm not in position to do that nor do I KNOW if that's the smart thing to do in the future as I "chew" through cars)

    Needed mid-size, great MPG and wanted: to do my part environmentally since I don't need to tow, race, haul tons of people or drive an SUV for ego reasons...just commuting a lot and have to have room for colleagues and clients.
    Oh...and some gadgets too of course, so hence the Prius.

    So, bottom line is when do ya'll think (best educated guess) I should sell it? (trading it is almost always a losing proposition)

    2 years?
    3 years?
    4 years?
    Keeping in mind the 36,000 miles per year.

    Thanks,

    Aaron
     
  8. daniel

    daniel Cat Lovers Against the Bomb

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    "Sound shield" must be a dealer add-on. ALL DEALER ADD-ONS ARE RIP-OFFS!

    Before you assume that you have to trade in your car in order to get that company reimbursement on mileage, do the math to see if the reimbursements are really enough to compensate for the cost of buying a new car every so-many years. Depending on the figures, you might be better off keeping the car, saving the new-car cost, and giving up the mileage reimbursement.

    The Prius is the coolest car in the universe, but I expect the next major model revision (2008???) to have significant advances, and to be even cooler. So I plan on trading in as soon as the next major model revision of the Prius comes out.

    (I expect the Prius to remain Toyota's showcase for its newest technology in efficiency and pollution-reduction, and I base my plan on that.)

    The "trade-in sweet spot" is a matter of controversy. There are strong arguments for keeping a car until it falls apart: you eventually have to put money into repairs, and your trade-in value is nil, but you take the hit on depriciation only once.

    My father used to say, Trade in a car while it still has significant trade-in value. But as above, you probably pay more in the long run because every time you drive a new car off the lot you lose a bucket of money.

    Some say, trade in at the end of the warranty, because you never have to worry about paying for repairs.

    I say: trade in when you become unhappy with your old car and can afford a new one.

    The most economical transportation is always a late-model used car, because someone else took the depreciation hit. You say you "need" a new car in order to qualify for the mileage reimbursement, but I bet a used car would save you far more money than the company will ever pay you in mileage.
     
  9. DaveinOlyWA

    DaveinOlyWA 3rd Time was Solariffic!!

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    daniel is right, most dealer added options can be done much cheaper elsewhere. to give you a hint, i did the fab protection and paint sealer except my sister (who works at the Ford dealership) did it for me at her cost. was just over $150 and that included an aftercare kit that cost $80. so their "cost" was about $70.

    the service was same basic service that Toyota was charging like $350 for i think. and i dont think they provided an aftercare kit. (what i got didnt include the kit, she just threw it in)