Especially when they are 13-17 years old? I have seen many recent posts and threads regarding a 1990 D250 with only 40K original miles; a 93 with 70K, etc, etc. Why do people pay top dollar for these vehicles? If it were <5 years old, I can kind of understand, but there is a point when the years are harder on a vehicle than the miles, kind of the reverse of the old Chris Ldoux song (It Aint the Years, It's the Miles).
I had an 88 F250 I bought in 01 with 105K mi. The fuel system needed completely rebuilt, the brakes were shot and needed everything new in the hydraulic end, oil in everything was black as tar. Same with the 84 Mazda we bought in 98 with 120K- it was simply too old and stuff had rotted or seized up.
I just dont get it. Why on earth would you pay $10-20K for a vehicle that will likely need as much as if not more work than one that you get for $3-8K with 4-6x the miles? Neither one are anywhere near the end of their life expectancy, and for the difference in purchase price, you can fix what needs fixed on the higher mile one, plus upgrade everything in the process, and end up with a better running truck than the 40K garage ornament.
Daniel
I had an 88 F250 I bought in 01 with 105K mi. The fuel system needed completely rebuilt, the brakes were shot and needed everything new in the hydraulic end, oil in everything was black as tar. Same with the 84 Mazda we bought in 98 with 120K- it was simply too old and stuff had rotted or seized up.
I just dont get it. Why on earth would you pay $10-20K for a vehicle that will likely need as much as if not more work than one that you get for $3-8K with 4-6x the miles? Neither one are anywhere near the end of their life expectancy, and for the difference in purchase price, you can fix what needs fixed on the higher mile one, plus upgrade everything in the process, and end up with a better running truck than the 40K garage ornament.
Daniel