Originally posted by: SoftwareEng
Originally posted by: senseamp
Not necessarily true. Resale value will be determined by market conditions in 5 years, which cannot be accurately predicted for Hyundai due to the rapid progress the company is making in improving quality and reliability which effects resale values down the road.Originally posted by: mrchan
4 cyl mid level trims vs 6 cyl high end trim.
If you're going to compare price levels you also have to compare resale values, in 5 years, the Honda/Toyota will be worth $10-$12k, the Hyndai? probably less than $5-7k.
In 5 years, Hyundai will still have 5 years of warranty remaining.
Not true about the remaining warranty - we just discovered the powetrain 10yrs/100,000miles is cut in HALF when you transfer the car to someone else:
"Second and/or subsequent owners have powertrain components coverage under the 5 year / 60,000 mile New Vehicle Limited Warranty." (Hyundai's own site)
Originally posted by: SampSon
I won't be buying a hyundai, ever.
Originally posted by: senseamp
My thinking is that now is the best time to buy a Hyundai. You get to benefit from the low prices and great warranty due to Hyundai's image now, and also you get to benefit on the resale at backend as Hyundai's reputation catches up to their high quality. As their reputation keeps improving they will be offering fewer incentives to lure in customers. 10 year warranty tells me something about a company. It tells me that they either believe in the quality of their products, or they are stupid enough to accept high warranty costs down the road that will make them lose money on every car they sell. Because Hyundai is a well run company that is driving so hard on improving quality, I am convinced it's the former. And Toyota wouldn't be losing sleep over Hyundai if that wasn't the case. Because if Hyundai beats Toyota on price AND has reliability high enough to allow it to offer 10 year warranty, then it has a major advantage over Toyota.
Originally posted by: DainBramaged
Originally posted by: senseamp
My thinking is that now is the best time to buy a Hyundai. You get to benefit from the low prices and great warranty due to Hyundai's image now, and also you get to benefit on the resale at backend as Hyundai's reputation catches up to their high quality. As their reputation keeps improving they will be offering fewer incentives to lure in customers. 10 year warranty tells me something about a company. It tells me that they either believe in the quality of their products, or they are stupid enough to accept high warranty costs down the road that will make them lose money on every car they sell. Because Hyundai is a well run company that is driving so hard on improving quality, I am convinced it's the former. And Toyota wouldn't be losing sleep over Hyundai if that wasn't the case. Because if Hyundai beats Toyota on price AND has reliability high enough to allow it to offer 10 year warranty, then it has a major advantage over Toyota.
:thumbsup:
Originally posted by: DainBramaged
Originally posted by: OS
oh yeah and the accord gets 7 mpg better in their test.
That's what happens when you put a smaller engine in your cars. Some like it, some don't.
Originally posted by: KentState
Thought it was odd to compare a V6 Sonata to two 4 cylinder cars. Yeah, the Sonata had better performance but the gas mileage was a lot lower than the Honda and about 5 mpg total worse than the Toyota.
The whole point of the article was that they were doing a comparison based on the average amount Americans spend on cars.
Originally posted by: mrchan
4 cyl mid level trims vs 6 cyl high end trim.
If you're going to compare price levels you also have to compare resale values, in 5 years, the Honda/Toyota will be worth $10-$12k, the Hyndai? probably less than $5-7k.
Originally posted by: Excelsior
Originally posted by: mrchan
4 cyl mid level trims vs 6 cyl high end trim.
If you're going to compare price levels you also have to compare resale values, in 5 years, the Honda/Toyota will be worth $10-$12k, the Hyndai? probably less than $5-7k.
Is that a joke? Unless the mileage is realllly high, the Hyundai will still be worth more than 5-7K.
Originally posted by: OS
so what you really mean is the purported savings up front is eaten up by your gas expense and loss in resale value.
Originally posted by: DainBramaged
Originally posted by: OS
so what you really mean is the purported savings up front is eaten up by your gas expense and loss in resale value.
Some people would rather have a larger engine. If you do it Toyota/Honda's way, it would cost you the gas + even *more* money for the engine.
As far as resale value, you simply cannot say what they are going to be in 5-10 years.
Originally posted by: ivol07
Originally posted by: Excelsior
Originally posted by: mrchan
4 cyl mid level trims vs 6 cyl high end trim.
If you're going to compare price levels you also have to compare resale values, in 5 years, the Honda/Toyota will be worth $10-$12k, the Hyndai? probably less than $5-7k.
Is that a joke? Unless the mileage is realllly high, the Hyundai will still be worth more than 5-7K.
I got almost that when I sold my 2001 Elantra with over 100k miles on it about a month ago (which I paid $12.3k OTD new 5 years ago). Resale value is not as bad as people on here seem to think.
Originally posted by: OS
Originally posted by: DainBramaged
Originally posted by: OS
so what you really mean is the purported savings up front is eaten up by your gas expense and loss in resale value.
Some people would rather have a larger engine. If you do it Toyota/Honda's way, it would cost you the gas + even *more* money for the engine.
As far as resale value, you simply cannot say what they are going to be in 5-10 years.
actually, the new camry gets better rated mileage than the hyundai
Originally posted by: DainBramaged
Originally posted by: OS
Originally posted by: DainBramaged
Originally posted by: OS
so what you really mean is the purported savings up front is eaten up by your gas expense and loss in resale value.
Some people would rather have a larger engine. If you do it Toyota/Honda's way, it would cost you the gas + even *more* money for the engine.
As far as resale value, you simply cannot say what they are going to be in 5-10 years.
actually, the new camry gets better rated mileage than the hyundai
Well, a base V6 Camry is around $23K vs. a base V6 Sonata at about $21. ~$2 price difference. With tax, price diff is around $2140. Thats about 713 gallons of gas. If the MPG rating is within 2 MPG, it would take over 200,000 miles to make up the difference.
Originally posted by: OS
Originally posted by: DainBramaged
Originally posted by: OS
Originally posted by: DainBramaged
Originally posted by: OS
so what you really mean is the purported savings up front is eaten up by your gas expense and loss in resale value.
Some people would rather have a larger engine. If you do it Toyota/Honda's way, it would cost you the gas + even *more* money for the engine.
As far as resale value, you simply cannot say what they are going to be in 5-10 years.
actually, the new camry gets better rated mileage than the hyundai
Well, a base V6 Camry is around $23K vs. a base V6 Sonata at about $21. ~$2 price difference. With tax, price diff is around $2140. Thats about 713 gallons of gas. If the MPG rating is within 2 MPG, it would take over 200,000 miles to make up the difference.
And it has more power and a better automatic tranny, 6 spd vs 5.
Originally posted by: OS
Originally posted by: DainBramaged
Originally posted by: OS
Originally posted by: DainBramaged
Originally posted by: OS
so what you really mean is the purported savings up front is eaten up by your gas expense and loss in resale value.
Some people would rather have a larger engine. If you do it Toyota/Honda's way, it would cost you the gas + even *more* money for the engine.
As far as resale value, you simply cannot say what they are going to be in 5-10 years.
actually, the new camry gets better rated mileage than the hyundai
Well, a base V6 Camry is around $23K vs. a base V6 Sonata at about $21. ~$2 price difference. With tax, price diff is around $2140. Thats about 713 gallons of gas. If the MPG rating is within 2 MPG, it would take over 200,000 miles to make up the difference.
And it has more power and a better automatic tranny, 6 spd vs 5.
Originally posted by: DainBramaged
Originally posted by: OS
Originally posted by: DainBramaged
Originally posted by: OS
so what you really mean is the purported savings up front is eaten up by your gas expense and loss in resale value.
Some people would rather have a larger engine. If you do it Toyota/Honda's way, it would cost you the gas + even *more* money for the engine.
As far as resale value, you simply cannot say what they are going to be in 5-10 years.
actually, the new camry gets better rated mileage than the hyundai
Well, a base V6 Camry is around $23K vs. a base V6 Sonata at about $21. ~$2 price difference. With tax, price diff is around $2140. Thats about 713 gallons of gas. If the MPG rating is within 2 MPG, it would take over 200,000 miles to make up the difference.
Originally posted by: DainBramaged
Originally posted by: OS
Originally posted by: DainBramaged
Originally posted by: OS
Originally posted by: DainBramaged
Originally posted by: OS
so what you really mean is the purported savings up front is eaten up by your gas expense and loss in resale value.
Some people would rather have a larger engine. If you do it Toyota/Honda's way, it would cost you the gas + even *more* money for the engine.
As far as resale value, you simply cannot say what they are going to be in 5-10 years.
actually, the new camry gets better rated mileage than the hyundai
Well, a base V6 Camry is around $23K vs. a base V6 Sonata at about $21. ~$2 price difference. With tax, price diff is around $2140. Thats about 713 gallons of gas. If the MPG rating is within 2 MPG, it would take over 200,000 miles to make up the difference.
And it has more power and a better automatic tranny, 6 spd vs 5.
Not many are going to care about those minimal differences. Look, I'm not shoving a Hyundai down your throat, I'm just pointing out that an equal, or maybe better car is out there as a Honda/Toyota alternative. Priced cheaper. More options. If you don't like it, don't buy it.
Originally posted by: MIKEMIKE
Originally posted by: OS
Originally posted by: DainBramaged
Originally posted by: OS
Originally posted by: DainBramaged
Originally posted by: OS
so what you really mean is the purported savings up front is eaten up by your gas expense and loss in resale value.
Some people would rather have a larger engine. If you do it Toyota/Honda's way, it would cost you the gas + even *more* money for the engine.
As far as resale value, you simply cannot say what they are going to be in 5-10 years.
actually, the new camry gets better rated mileage than the hyundai
Well, a base V6 Camry is around $23K vs. a base V6 Sonata at about $21. ~$2 price difference. With tax, price diff is around $2140. Thats about 713 gallons of gas. If the MPG rating is within 2 MPG, it would take over 200,000 miles to make up the difference.
And it has more power and a better automatic tranny, 6 spd vs 5.
dont forget that transmission of toyotas has been recalled.
but supposedly fixed now...
more != greater
Originally posted by: OS
Originally posted by: MIKEMIKE
Originally posted by: OS
Originally posted by: DainBramaged
Originally posted by: OS
Originally posted by: DainBramaged
Originally posted by: OS
so what you really mean is the purported savings up front is eaten up by your gas expense and loss in resale value.
Some people would rather have a larger engine. If you do it Toyota/Honda's way, it would cost you the gas + even *more* money for the engine.
As far as resale value, you simply cannot say what they are going to be in 5-10 years.
actually, the new camry gets better rated mileage than the hyundai
Well, a base V6 Camry is around $23K vs. a base V6 Sonata at about $21. ~$2 price difference. With tax, price diff is around $2140. Thats about 713 gallons of gas. If the MPG rating is within 2 MPG, it would take over 200,000 miles to make up the difference.
And it has more power and a better automatic tranny, 6 spd vs 5.
dont forget that transmission of toyotas has been recalled.
but supposedly fixed now...
more != greater
of course you think that, you probably think GM putting 4 speed autos in their cars is still cool.
Originally posted by: OS
Originally posted by: MIKEMIKE
Originally posted by: OS
Originally posted by: DainBramaged
Originally posted by: OS
Originally posted by: DainBramaged
Originally posted by: OS
so what you really mean is the purported savings up front is eaten up by your gas expense and loss in resale value.
Some people would rather have a larger engine. If you do it Toyota/Honda's way, it would cost you the gas + even *more* money for the engine.
As far as resale value, you simply cannot say what they are going to be in 5-10 years.
actually, the new camry gets better rated mileage than the hyundai
Well, a base V6 Camry is around $23K vs. a base V6 Sonata at about $21. ~$2 price difference. With tax, price diff is around $2140. Thats about 713 gallons of gas. If the MPG rating is within 2 MPG, it would take over 200,000 miles to make up the difference.
And it has more power and a better automatic tranny, 6 spd vs 5.
dont forget that transmission of toyotas has been recalled.
but supposedly fixed now...
more != greater
of course you think that, you probably think GM putting 4 speed autos in their cars is still cool.
Originally posted by: senseamp
Of course if you don't think that, then CVT's are infinitely better than transmissions with any number of fixed speeds since they have infinite number of gears.
As long as the gearing is a good match for the engine, and the shifts are smooth it's fine. GM engines have good low end torque, so they don't need many gears just to keep the engine in the rev band.
Originally posted by: MIKEMIKE
Originally posted by: OS
Originally posted by: MIKEMIKE
Originally posted by: OS
Originally posted by: DainBramaged
Originally posted by: OS
Originally posted by: DainBramaged
Originally posted by: OS
so what you really mean is the purported savings up front is eaten up by your gas expense and loss in resale value.
Some people would rather have a larger engine. If you do it Toyota/Honda's way, it would cost you the gas + even *more* money for the engine.
As far as resale value, you simply cannot say what they are going to be in 5-10 years.
actually, the new camry gets better rated mileage than the hyundai
Well, a base V6 Camry is around $23K vs. a base V6 Sonata at about $21. ~$2 price difference. With tax, price diff is around $2140. Thats about 713 gallons of gas. If the MPG rating is within 2 MPG, it would take over 200,000 miles to make up the difference.
And it has more power and a better automatic tranny, 6 spd vs 5.
dont forget that transmission of toyotas has been recalled.
but supposedly fixed now...
more != greater
of course you think that, you probably think GM putting 4 speed autos in their cars is still cool.
when you put 8 speeds in a car, and all it does is hunt for the proper gear... is that better?
no you dumbshlt