Originally posted by MrBurgundy
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2mAns Daily Driver Thread - who knows what it is today...
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When I started to look, prices werent insane hovering around the mid teens. My hope was to sell the wagon and use that to pay cash for the i3, but that didnt work out. I ended up setling the Wagon for less than $12k, and the i3 I bought was around 17k. I paid a little more because I figured I wouldnt be able to pay for it completely in cash and I also hated that 90% of the cars are white/gray/black and I wanted to avoid those colors. Carmax/Carvana/ shift/ etc have all cornered the market so I couldnt get a private party purchase. When this one popped up on CarMax I 'scheduled' my appt to prevent anyone else from being able to see it/ buy it before me. Once I saw the color in person I was sold. I already have driven one and liked em.
Overall, Im happy with the car, not totally happy with the way the financials all worked out but all said, Its a great DD that I expect to keep around longer than the typical 12 months.
Place your bets! November is 1 year! hahaSimon
Current Cars:
-1999 996.1 911 4/98 3.8L 6-Speed, 21st Century Beetle
Make R3V Great Again -2020
- Likes 1
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Originally posted by MrBurgundy View PostIf you sold it tomorrow I wouldn't be surprised...
I was just on carvana looking around at i3s and saw some reasonably priced ones with about 50k on the clock.
Mine had just under 26k when I got it, I think Im close but not yet to 30kSimon
Current Cars:
-1999 996.1 911 4/98 3.8L 6-Speed, 21st Century Beetle
Make R3V Great Again -2020
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Service schedule came up but looks like it was just for an oil change and I’ve done that once or twice in my life so I thought I’d tackle it myself. Bought a factory change kit from bluntech and set about getting to work...
Things seemed to be smooth flowing, until I went to drain the oil. At ~34k and 5 years old I’m guessing this has had 1, maybe 2 changes. Whoever the last person was who changed the oil must not understand what a torque spec is because I put at least 50lbs of force through the ratchet before the 8mm Allen took a spin, but not the drain plug itself...
Today I ordered a new drain plug and also a few of the trashed ‘neoprene nuts’ for the engine lid... I’ll get this oil change done...eventually lol
Simon
Current Cars:
-1999 996.1 911 4/98 3.8L 6-Speed, 21st Century Beetle
Make R3V Great Again -2020
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Originally posted by roguetoaster View PostYou probably should have hammered a torx socket in and called it a day, leaving the next oil change to the next guy.
New Drain plug should arrive today. I might be the next guy changing the oil soooo dont want to screw future-2mAn by lazy 2mAn anticsSimon
Current Cars:
-1999 996.1 911 4/98 3.8L 6-Speed, 21st Century Beetle
Make R3V Great Again -2020
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I can tell from the pic of the plug the socket was not sitting in all the way. hehehe Always tap your allens in until you hear it smack the end. It's a 21 ft lb torque spec fyi.
Also, something may have been torqued to 18 ft lbs, but that doesn't mean it takes equal force to remove it a year or so later.
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Well, another year passes and I'm officially at 2 years with this car. The CEL has been on for quite some time and the scan has always stated a minor leak so I've ignored it. Knowing the extended CA - Emissions warranty was ending soon I figured it was a good time to let the dealer touch it... hesitantly.
A trip to Santa Monica BMW started with a ~$777 estimate based on $250 to "Inspect" it, another $250 to diagnose the CEL (shouldn't that be part of the inspection?) and then a little more than $250 to do the scheduled brake fluid flush. Within a day the estimate doubled as they say they needed more time to diagnose the CEL, and also requested another $1500 to change my brakes because they were "too low." I declined the brake service knowing BS when I can smell it and then began the battle about the rest. That initial $14xx for additional diagnosis resulted in 2 parts that needed to be replacing costing me ~$650 and then about $2500 in parts. I challenged the Service Advisor to back up all the BS with them backing down from the ~$3200 to address the CEL all the way to a final bill of $14xx which covered the brake fluid flush and replacing all the parts. BMW USA had to step in and cover the cost of the $500 valve and all the labor. In the end Im both happy and sad. So frustrating to deal with a dealer, but happy that the CEL is off and service is up to date.
That said there's a good chance this car is going away soon as Inflation in all of my expenses VS an employer who decided I wasn't worth any more in 2024 than they paid me in 2023 means I have to find places to trim costs, and eliminating a monthly payment and the associated extra Insurance it brings is likely the easiest solution... I could sell the 911 and keep this but I'm a car guy. I make stupid decisions...
All of this could be avoided if my YouTube Career would take off, but it hasn't so its time to go through another shuffle...Simon
Current Cars:
-1999 996.1 911 4/98 3.8L 6-Speed, 21st Century Beetle
Make R3V Great Again -2020
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Originally posted by 2mAn View PostVS an employer who decided I wasn't worth any more in 2024 than they paid me in 2023 means I have to find places to trim costs.
That said, as your automotive investment advisors, you should sell your "E30" and buy an E30.
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Well... it was fun while it lasted. Let’s see what happens and what’s next. This one sucks to sell, but life forced this decision, not anything on the car itself.
Simon
Current Cars:
-1999 996.1 911 4/98 3.8L 6-Speed, 21st Century Beetle
Make R3V Great Again -2020
- Likes 1
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