What's new

Owning a vehicle is a luxury.

So I have a leaking gas tank and a problem with the evap sensor (or some component in that system) as well as a driver's side window switch that needs repair.

I pop it into the shop and get a quote.
Waaaaaaay more than I was expecting (what was I expecting anyway??)

I can't drive around with a leaking gas tank and the evap problem should be fixed too.
The driver's side window switch affects my drive thru food intake so that one has to be fixed ASAP.

Owing a car is a pain in the rump. I mean look at the trouble I have. Way more than I can afford, I can't buy any more frags, pens or shaving gear. I might even have to part with some of my treasured goods (that I don't use anymore anyway) to make up part of the cost.

Wait a minute. Hold up here. Put this on pause.

Am I really complaining about owning a car?

I am incredibly fortunate that I could afford to purchase a car in the first place.
Paying the cost to keep it running is part of it.

I only complained about the cost of these repairs once to my friend who gave me a stern look and with much disdain said:
"Check your head. Owning a car is a luxury. That is such a first world problem. "

He's right. Yes I did complain. But you know what? I'm lucky. Darn lucky to have the ability to own a car, put gas in it and do the necessary repairs (yay credit cards!)

We actually own 2 cars. A minivan for my wife to pile kids and groceries in and a little cheap car for me to drive.

He's right. It totally is a "first world problem"
 
ahhhh dang it. I posted to the wrong forum. Can this get moved?
I'll PM a steward.
Silly me.
 
Its been attributed to Leonid Brezhnev, "America is the only country in the world where the "poor" drive to protest their poverty in their own automobiles...":001_smile
 
Over the years I have spent more on vehicles than on the house. Currently all are paid for, house , car and truck. I usually spend more annually on vehicle maintance and repair than on the house.

Down here where I live and the way I am currently working a vehicle is a necessity not a luxury.
 
I agree. There is a difference between a necessity and a luxury. Lugging around groceries and the family in one of these is definitely a necessity (facetious tone):
proxy.php


Anyhow, I just recently begun riding the old bicycle to work to try and cut down and gas costs and extra repair expenditures. There are solutions out there, but sometimes it requires sacrifice. Actually, I need the extra exercise. To each his own.
 
In 1980 the Third World accounted for only 18 percent of global vehicle ownership; by 2020, about half of the world's projected 1.3 billion cars, trucks and buses - along with several hundred million motorbikes and scooters - will clog the streets and alleys of poorer countries.

The World Health Organization considers traffic to be one of the worst health hazards facing the urban poor, and predicts that road accidents by 2020 will be the third leading cause of death.

Around three-quarters of all traffic accidents now occur in the Third World.


Not just a first world problem. not at all.
 

Legion

OTF jewel hunter
Staff member
I crashed my car a few months ago, and then found out my insurance was not it order. Long story short, all my money went to fixing the other peoples car and I have been on public transport or my bicycle since then. It could be worse though. The public transport where I live is not so bad, and it is not like it snows in winter. SWMBO still has her car for when we both need to go somewhere.

Although it is sometimes inconvenient, most people in cities can get by without a car.
 
Repairs and maintenance are a lot cheaper than a car payment. Just think -- sure it might cost $500-$1000 or so every year in repair and maintenance costs, but that beats paying $4000 a year in car payments. If you change the oil regularly, auto tranny fluid, tune up, belts and hoses, filters, etc., a car can last 300,000 kilometers on the original block and head.
 
2 cars 4 motorcycles...

only 1 driver.

I would ask what the car is with all these problems, but thats a whole different topic...
 
One of my dreams is living and working in a city where I don't have to own a car.

Oil co's helped to kill off street cars. Up until like the 1940's, most cities had electric street cars. If you needed to get to work in downtown, you hopped on a trolley and rode it to downtown. Sure, you may have had to arrive there 20 minutes early, but it beats messing with buying and maintaining and parking a car.
 
Oil co's helped to kill off street cars. Up until like the 1940's, most cities had electric street cars. If you needed to get to work in downtown, you hopped on a trolley and rode it to downtown. Sure, you may have had to arrive there 20 minutes early, but it beats messing with buying and maintaining and parking a car.

Oil companies didn't force people after WWII to move out of cities and into the suburban areas where a commute in a vehicle to get to work in an urban area became a necessary part of the day. People did that. People want individual freedom and part of that feeling is being in control of your very own vehicle for transportation, not some nefarious plan by a phantom "evil" corporation.
 
Oil companies didn't force people after WWII to move out of cities and into the suburban areas where a commute in a vehicle to get to work in an urban area became a necessary part of the day. People did that. People want individual freedom and part of that feeling is being in control of your very own vehicle for transportation, not some nefarious plan by a phantom "evil" corporation.

I agree. People had the opportunity to take control of their transportation, and who can blame them for wanting to? My little pickup can be a pain, but I'll never complain because I can go where I want, when I want (if I can afford gas), and that's pretty awesome. But, as Uncle Ben said, "with great power comes great responsibility." Those of us that own vehicles have the privilege and responsibility to own them. That means knowing you'll pay an arm and a leg (and your first-born) for gas, paying mechanics exorbitant amounts to fix your machine. Don't like it? Drive less, do your own vehicle maintenance. I agree with the starter of the post, what a first-world problem.
 
One of my dreams is living and working in a city where I don't have to own a car.

Y u c k.

You won't have any competition from me!

Re: Cars... learn to do some of the work yourself. It's not rocket science, it's good knowledge, and it will save you a ton of money in the long run.
 
Oil companies didn't force people after WWII to move out of cities and into the suburban areas where a commute in a vehicle to get to work in an urban area became a necessary part of the day. People did that. People want individual freedom and part of that feeling is being in control of your very own vehicle for transportation, not some nefarious plan by a phantom "evil" corporation.

The trollies did go out to the suburbs of that era. And the oil co's did do some shady things to help put an end to that. Sure, today's suburbs are larger and further away, but who's to say that the trolley lines wouldn't have grown too. It's not just that people moved out of the range of trollies. The suburbs were in the range of the trollies at that time. It would take a full length book to fully discuss urban planning and trollies and such. And of course every city was different. But it would not be accurate to simply blame it on people moving out to the suburbs, But that probably did play somewhat of a role in the trolly's demise -- the ever increasing distance between where people live and work. Complex issue. A forum post or two can't fully discuss it.
 
Definitely a luxury. I put my Tacoma on it's side a couple of weeks ago and have been griping about how, as it's over 10 years old, the insurance company might total it, even though it's completely drivable. Thankfully, they didn't total it - I love my truck and it's paid for. We're fortunate enough to have another vehicle to use AND to have the insurance to cover the repairs minus the deductible.

(Woohoo! 1000 posts!)
 
Top Bottom