denverpilot
Tied Down
... so if you have any this good, I'll take them.
----
This is why I don't buy new cars.
Typical MSRP price for the options on this truck was over $38,000 when new in 2004.
(By the way, government inflation numbers say the same truck today should be $43,000. MSRP is actually $48,000 on an identical truck. Take that for whatever it's worth. Just find it entertaining.)
First owner paid, let's be generous and call it $34,000 because they were a good negotiator. Even so, they probably only got back about $12,000 for a net of $22,000 paid ... since I found it at a Ford dealership who had eight Yukons they needed to get off their lot.
Their capital / depreciation cost: $0.55/mile.
I've put an additional 110,000 miles on it. I bought it at 40,000 miles in 2008 for $17,000 in pristine condition.
My capital / depreciation cost: $0.065/mile
Repairs so far:
- Water pump ($150)
- Fuel pump ($350)
- Dash cluster servos and lights ($100)
- Climate control control panel ($70)
- 4WD center differential position sensor ($240)
- Various light bulbs (replaced with LED) ($15)
- Normal wear items and fluids (brakes, spark plugs, serpentine belt, tires all normal stuff) ($whatever)
And... I haven't done it yet but... it needs a new driver's seat cover. ($250)
The only time it has ever left me stranded was the fuel pump. Ever. I've owned it since 2008.
They're known for blowing transmissions at this age. So I don't tow with it anymore. If it blew, a good rebuild with a Corvette servo is about $1500.
This is also why I couldn't bring myself to sell this truck when I realized I don't need multiple vehicles. I can't replace it for anywhere near how cheap it is to operate it. So, it gets driven on doggy dropoff/pickup days or if we need to haul humans around, and the dogs like the room in the back better than the Subaru.
It needs new brakes before the end of summer. I'll do that here shortly. Might need rotors this time too.
----
This is why I don't buy new cars.
Typical MSRP price for the options on this truck was over $38,000 when new in 2004.
(By the way, government inflation numbers say the same truck today should be $43,000. MSRP is actually $48,000 on an identical truck. Take that for whatever it's worth. Just find it entertaining.)
First owner paid, let's be generous and call it $34,000 because they were a good negotiator. Even so, they probably only got back about $12,000 for a net of $22,000 paid ... since I found it at a Ford dealership who had eight Yukons they needed to get off their lot.
Their capital / depreciation cost: $0.55/mile.
I've put an additional 110,000 miles on it. I bought it at 40,000 miles in 2008 for $17,000 in pristine condition.
My capital / depreciation cost: $0.065/mile
Repairs so far:
- Water pump ($150)
- Fuel pump ($350)
- Dash cluster servos and lights ($100)
- Climate control control panel ($70)
- 4WD center differential position sensor ($240)
- Various light bulbs (replaced with LED) ($15)
- Normal wear items and fluids (brakes, spark plugs, serpentine belt, tires all normal stuff) ($whatever)
And... I haven't done it yet but... it needs a new driver's seat cover. ($250)
The only time it has ever left me stranded was the fuel pump. Ever. I've owned it since 2008.
They're known for blowing transmissions at this age. So I don't tow with it anymore. If it blew, a good rebuild with a Corvette servo is about $1500.
This is also why I couldn't bring myself to sell this truck when I realized I don't need multiple vehicles. I can't replace it for anywhere near how cheap it is to operate it. So, it gets driven on doggy dropoff/pickup days or if we need to haul humans around, and the dogs like the room in the back better than the Subaru.
It needs new brakes before the end of summer. I'll do that here shortly. Might need rotors this time too.