Auto loan for an FD
#26
Taliban Hunting Club
iTrader: (9)
I pulled a 9k loan for mine back in february from USAA. Very easy to get approved and my credit score is only like 720 with not a whole lot of history. I daily mine, but its already showing its issues. I'm the third owner of the car and it has 42k miles on it now. I bought it with 38k miles. First owner had it from 94-01 and put 18k miles on it, so from 01 to 11 there was another 20k. I could tell the car had sat for a long time which is worse than going out and ******* on it. The issues are starting to arise now that its being driven daily. Seals arent doing too well. FD's are tempermental so be careful. If you get a loan and your payment is $400 a month there's no way you will afford it unless you make $3k+ a month with no house payment. I make about $2800 a month with 800 going to the house, and my payments are only $220 with $30 a month insurance and i'm still finding it difficult to order the things quickly when i need them without needing to save so i can continue to dd it.
#27
dorito powered
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renting a house with friends makes owning an FD and making payments and still being able to afford it much more do-able. I make roughly 1500/mo, my payments are 110 every other week, insurance combined for my daily and the fd is roughly 120/mo and I pay about 450/mo for rent and utilities (parents pay for the cell, student loans for school). That leaves me ~700/mo to do whatever I want in my free time, video games, movies, books, alcohol, going out, whatever. Its all about prioritizing.
That said the cost of living in NE is pretty low compared to a lot of other places.
That said the cost of living in NE is pretty low compared to a lot of other places.
#28
little klze
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Sounds like a lot of you guys have had good luck with USAA.
No matter what, it sounds like I'll need to save for a fairly sizable downpayment. Although my credit score is 691 with two agencies, I just found out this morning that Experian scored me at 573! That ain't good. I'll post back with my CU's opinion after I speak with them, and maybe talk to JJ Best and USAA, too.
Despite my apparently shitty credit, I make about 4700/mo after taxes. I pay about 750 for rent in a shared house and I don't really have any other financial responsibilities. Perhaps it would be a good idea to get a secured card and start using it for retail purchases.
#30
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Yes it was who I went through, payment was $180/mo with no pre-payment penalty, they overnight all paperwork to you and you do the same on their dime. You do need to provide them with a lot of paperwork but it is simple.
#33
little klze
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Ya? I'm 25 and the $126 and the allstate quote was based on the assumption that I have one stop sign situation on record (will have to check to be sure).
#34
Boilermakers!
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Yeah, that is a possibility. Of course I wouldn't be building any credit that way. I guess either way I'm going to have to be more patient. [Edit: Also, I forgot I have student loans that are going to start needing payments in the next few months, but they're not too bad ]
Ya? I'm 25 and the $126 and the allstate quote was based on the assumption that I have one stop sign situation on record (will have to check to be sure).
Ya? I'm 25 and the $126 and the allstate quote was based on the assumption that I have one stop sign situation on record (will have to check to be sure).
I'm 29 and my insurance is about $135 a month with the FD/Mazda3/MX-6, full coverage except the 6, and that's with my girlfriend in the policy. We have AAA insurance tho, not sure if that matter.
#35
little klze
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I have quite of bit student loan myself, a mortgage, and crap load of other bills. It took me a few months to save up, but I was able to take my time to shop for the right one.
I'm 29 and my insurance is about $135 a month with the FD/Mazda3/MX-6, full coverage except the 6, and that's with my girlfriend in the policy. We have AAA insurance tho, not sure if that matter.
I'm 29 and my insurance is about $135 a month with the FD/Mazda3/MX-6, full coverage except the 6, and that's with my girlfriend in the policy. We have AAA insurance tho, not sure if that matter.
#38
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My insurance is going up, me and the wife, no accidents, no tickets, 3 cars the rex and corolla are full coverage, mustang is liability only and sits most of the time, both over 25, live in a house. Pissed me off when I saw the email this morning as my 6 months is up in Sept.
#39
Rotary Enthusiast
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Called up my insurance company, asked them why it was going up. They told me because the area we live in is high risk, so I talked to an agent to see if they could do anything. My rate is now $75 cheaper than the last 6 months, I am not complaining to much about that, it is only $10 or so each bill but anything is better than going up.
#42
Sharp Claws
iTrader: (30)
not really, i see it all the time and the sad part is that people generally sell the car AFTER they sink another $3-4k into it.
it boggles me that people still think it is a good idea to take a loan out on a used car that is of this age and mileage, they ALL have problems no matter how well they are cared for. some people make it work, some people are lucky and find a car in decent mechanical condition but MOST find out that the car is modified and unsafe or has underlying issues that were covered up under sale.
if you plan on buying one of these cars, and the seller won't let you drive the car hard then walk away because they are hiding something.
it boggles me that people still think it is a good idea to take a loan out on a used car that is of this age and mileage, they ALL have problems no matter how well they are cared for. some people make it work, some people are lucky and find a car in decent mechanical condition but MOST find out that the car is modified and unsafe or has underlying issues that were covered up under sale.
if you plan on buying one of these cars, and the seller won't let you drive the car hard then walk away because they are hiding something.
Last edited by RotaryEvolution; 09-03-11 at 07:43 PM.
#44
little klze
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not really, i see it all the time and the sad part is that people generally sell the car AFTER they sink another $3-4k into it.
it boggles me that people still think it is a good idea to take a loan out on a used car that is of this age and mileage, they ALL have problems no matter how well they are cared for. some people make it work, some people are lucky and find a car in decent mechanical condition but MOST find out that the car is modified and unsafe or has underlying issues that were covered up under sale.
if you plan on buying one of these cars, and the seller won't let you drive the car hard then walk away because they are hiding something.
it boggles me that people still think it is a good idea to take a loan out on a used car that is of this age and mileage, they ALL have problems no matter how well they are cared for. some people make it work, some people are lucky and find a car in decent mechanical condition but MOST find out that the car is modified and unsafe or has underlying issues that were covered up under sale.
if you plan on buying one of these cars, and the seller won't let you drive the car hard then walk away because they are hiding something.
I know this journey is going to be expensive. Will it be worth it? I don't know yet, but I'm the only person that can/will be able to answer that question, and I think the answer will be yes.
I'll take your advise about driving it hard. I'm also going to have a mechanic (probably won't be lucky enough to find a rotary mechanic in whatever area I find the car) to give it a look before purchasing.
#45
Rx7 Wagon
iTrader: (16)
It's not really about being a "good idea." Buying a sports car probably isn't a "good" idea 99% of the time for 99% of people -- it's fun and it's unnecessary -- it's a luxury.
I know this journey is going to be expensive. Will it be worth it? I don't know yet, but I'm the only person that can/will be able to answer that question, and I think the answer will be yes.
I'll take your advise about driving it hard. I'm also going to have a mechanic (probably won't be lucky enough to find a rotary mechanic in whatever area I find the car) to give it a look before purchasing.
I know this journey is going to be expensive. Will it be worth it? I don't know yet, but I'm the only person that can/will be able to answer that question, and I think the answer will be yes.
I'll take your advise about driving it hard. I'm also going to have a mechanic (probably won't be lucky enough to find a rotary mechanic in whatever area I find the car) to give it a look before purchasing.
Socal has Racing Beat and Mazdatrix(I think)
I'm on the other side of your mountain, so if you find something local I can help you look at it.
#46
Seismic Disturbance
iTrader: (29)
mdavis,
As Karack said, don't take a loan out for something like this.
Get good grades and finish college. Don't get distracted by cars and girls.
The only thing worth going into debt for at age 18 is your college degree.
Barban,
Rick's Rotary will rape you. For instance Rick charges $128 to swap a fuel pump (which I can do in 12 minutes), and he will royally ream you out like you wouldn't believe on everything else.
As Karack said, don't take a loan out for something like this.
Get good grades and finish college. Don't get distracted by cars and girls.
The only thing worth going into debt for at age 18 is your college degree.
Barban,
Rick's Rotary will rape you. For instance Rick charges $128 to swap a fuel pump (which I can do in 12 minutes), and he will royally ream you out like you wouldn't believe on everything else.
#47
little klze
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Good advise indeed for a high school/college student, but I'm 25 and work full-time in Silicon Valley.
#48
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mdavis,
As Karack said, don't take a loan out for something like this.
Get good grades and finish college. Don't get distracted by cars and girls.
The only thing worth going into debt for at age 18 is your college degree.
Barban,
Rick's Rotary will rape you. For instance Rick charges $128 to swap a fuel pump (which I can do in 12 minutes), and he will royally ream you out like you wouldn't believe on everything else.
As Karack said, don't take a loan out for something like this.
Get good grades and finish college. Don't get distracted by cars and girls.
The only thing worth going into debt for at age 18 is your college degree.
Barban,
Rick's Rotary will rape you. For instance Rick charges $128 to swap a fuel pump (which I can do in 12 minutes), and he will royally ream you out like you wouldn't believe on everything else.
#49
Auburn FD Driver
iTrader: (8)
That's encouraging!
No matter what, it sounds like I'll need to save for a fairly sizable downpayment. Although my credit score is 691 with two agencies, I just found out this morning that Experian scored me at 573! That ain't good. I'll post back with my CU's opinion after I speak with them, and maybe talk to JJ Best and USAA, too.
Despite my apparently shitty credit, I make about 4700/mo after taxes. I pay about 750 for rent in a shared house and I don't really have any other financial responsibilities. Perhaps it would be a good idea to get a secured card and start using it for retail purchases.
No matter what, it sounds like I'll need to save for a fairly sizable downpayment. Although my credit score is 691 with two agencies, I just found out this morning that Experian scored me at 573! That ain't good. I'll post back with my CU's opinion after I speak with them, and maybe talk to JJ Best and USAA, too.
Despite my apparently shitty credit, I make about 4700/mo after taxes. I pay about 750 for rent in a shared house and I don't really have any other financial responsibilities. Perhaps it would be a good idea to get a secured card and start using it for retail purchases.
#50
1 bar boost
iTrader: (4)
you should go to college, graduate with $100,000 debt to pay off while you work some shitty minimum wage job that you never needed a college degree for or look for jobs with soaring %25 unemployment rate instead man, sounds like a way more fun time then a FD
just get a personal loan and buy what you want, the world economy will collapse before that **** is even paid for regardless so you might as well do it
just get a personal loan and buy what you want, the world economy will collapse before that **** is even paid for regardless so you might as well do it