Why it costs a fortune to fix a car! I've never seen parts cost SO much in my 30 years as a mechanic

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Car Wizard

Car Wizard

Күн бұрын

The customer of this 2007 Cadillac STS knew it would not be cheap to fix his car. The CAR WIZARD 🧙‍♂️ explains what was broken and why it cost $4K to repair.
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Пікірлер: 1 600
@thecarcanuck1951
@thecarcanuck1951 Жыл бұрын
This is my wife’s car , it was her late fathers car and it is worth more us than what it is worth so that is why we spent the money on it , thank you wizard
@philipparana9225
@philipparana9225 Жыл бұрын
Makes sense. Hope it brings her enjoyment
@stratonarrow
@stratonarrow Жыл бұрын
I think you all made the right choice fixing it! I hope she enjoys it for years to come.
@shanedottie
@shanedottie Жыл бұрын
Post a video of it
@johnfranklin5277
@johnfranklin5277 Жыл бұрын
My 58 cadillac is still on the road at 65 years old. My parents bought it in 1960. I was 1 . Tremendous sentimental value here, and yes I have spent many thousands of dollars on it, much more that its worth..BUT, its worth it to me..and now that it has become so very old, lots of people come up to me and want to ask me questions, get a good look at it etc...once at a car show some guy in his late teens early 20s come up to me and says, thats a great looking Impala.....I looked at the old girls face, and she definitely looked a little PISSED! LOL.
@thecarcanuck1951
@thecarcanuck1951 Жыл бұрын
@@johnfranklin5277 nice car
@adamsimmers1509
@adamsimmers1509 Жыл бұрын
"Fix what you have"" is great advice... but it's near impossible to find an honest & knowledgeable mechanic like The Wizard. Love your channel, Wizard.
@Bryan921SS1
@Bryan921SS1 Жыл бұрын
This is the real issue, it is hard to find someone you trust that will do a good job and not have huge markups. But it can be figured out my trial and error and checking part numbers/prices on line...if you know what is wrong with the car and you have the time/resources to do so. edit(Also the Wizard is an awesome guy, I am glad Hoovie introduced us to him!!!)
@MrFastFox666
@MrFastFox666 Жыл бұрын
This is one of the main reasons I work on my car. Almost every time I go to a dealer/mechanic they try to sell me shit I don't need. If I work on my car I can see what is good, what is starting to go out and what needs replacing/fixing. Plus, I save a ton of money and I know the job is getting done right.
@headhoncho4890
@headhoncho4890 Жыл бұрын
That’s for sure. I’ve paid for alignments and ac repair more than once to still not have the car fixed
@peterdevreter
@peterdevreter Жыл бұрын
Always been my motto. All my old cars from the last 15 years are still on the road today.
@noseboop4354
@noseboop4354 Жыл бұрын
@@Bryan921SS1 Always ask to see the old parts. Even better, mark the old parts before the repair to be sure. An honest mechanic will have no problem showing them to you.
@cvr24
@cvr24 Жыл бұрын
The toughest part about repairing older cars, even ones 15 years old, is finding quality parts that aren't overpriced junk. I can't afford to put unreliable parts into the car I rely on to generate income. You touched on this in an earlier video with trying to find quality lifters for a Nova.
@JollyGiant19
@JollyGiant19 Жыл бұрын
I doubt it’ll get better. The manufacturers and engineers that designed and built those parts are gone or onto newer things. The stock we have is the stock we have and no one is going to enter into such a high capital cost business just to sell to a niche market. The return isn’t there.
@Adierit
@Adierit Жыл бұрын
The issue with this car is actually the ever annoying electric door handles that fail constantly. So annoying to deal with and even more annoying to fix every time. I have an 05 that has gone through 3 door handles on both the driver and passenger door.
@donwan7181
@donwan7181 Жыл бұрын
Rockauto or 1a auto has always had great parts.
@jessieharbinjr.6589
@jessieharbinjr.6589 Жыл бұрын
I experienced this on my Lincoln Town Car. I went through 5 brand new AC compressors, 3 aftermarket, and 2 were OEM. All 5 went out and I had the entire ac system rebuilt twice in that time with 5 new condensers, flushed lines etc. I sold it because the ac went out AGAIN a year later. All crap parts!
@darrellsaunders4267
@darrellsaunders4267 Жыл бұрын
Another way to force you into an EV.
@vegestaples
@vegestaples Жыл бұрын
I too am an advocate of keeping older cars going. I have a 2001 Toyota Camry that I bought 10 years ago for $2,800, when it had 110,000 miles on the odometer. The previous owners hit a deer with it and the hood was slightly dented. Also in attempting to avoid the deer they scraped along the side of a barbed wire fence so the passenger side of the car has some scrapes on it but I don't care. It's still in the exact condition that it was when I bought it except I did replace the hood with one from the junkyard. It now has 260,000 Mi on it I've done the timing belt water pump twice and replaced the radiator twice. This last time I bought a Denso radiator, an original equipment supplier for Toyota... So my annual car purchase payment amount has averaged out to be $280 a year and that is awesome. My camRY still goes about 4,000 miles on a quart of oil runs absolutely perfect although it has just started to lose a little bit of coolant and I did the head gasket test and it is going to need a new head gasket but I don't care I can do it myself. Let someone ELSE buy the new cars and pay the ridiculous DEPRECIATION COST so that people like us can get those cars 5 or 10 years down the road at a much better price. Thank you for listening. By the way, I also have a 1994 Camry on 1999 Honda Civic, and a 2005 Subaru Baja. The respective purchase prices? $550 for the Camry, $1,200 for the Civic, and $1,000 for the Subaru. All three are rust-free solid very nice Texas cars that people just wanted to get rid of❗ Praise the Lord 💫
@gvi341984
@gvi341984 Жыл бұрын
That's because you got the last of the non interference Camrys
@muziklvr7776
@muziklvr7776 Жыл бұрын
Over 300K miles on my 01, all it needed since new (other than regular scheduled maintenance) is a drive side door handle and driver side window regulator.
@arvbergstedt3303
@arvbergstedt3303 Жыл бұрын
Veges. Watch out removing cam. Little spacers different thickness for valve adjustment. Keep spacers in proper order and very carefully remove stuff so spacers don’t fly all over the garage. Seen this happen. Guy took head to machine shop to get all back together in spec.
@piggy310
@piggy310 Жыл бұрын
Those 4th Gen Camry's are insane reliable.
@johnfranklin5277
@johnfranklin5277 Жыл бұрын
I bought my 1st NEW CAR in 1980. And I've only bought new cars ever since. I was 20 then and it was a Toyota Celica. I have no issues with buying new. I get immense pleasure from having a new car. Knowing I can jump in it anytime and drive clear across the country with no issues, or worries. I have always been a car guy, I maintain them very well, and usually trade them off about every 4 years at about 50.000 miles. The only used car I ever bought is a 1968 Mustang in 1977 from the original owner. I was 17 then. I'm 64 now. I still have it, lifelong Southern California car, its in excellent condition 289 engine, factory AC, etc...its worth around 25.000 now, but I'll never sell it. I have kept 1 car I bought new, a 1994 Trans Am, too much fun to let go of, its a keeper. Do yourself a favor, put buying a brand new car just once in your life on your bucket list. You will enjoy it.
@supertouring1
@supertouring1 Жыл бұрын
I think this car looks very good and is in decent condition. Spend $4K to repair it. I would be proud to drive this. Sometimes people feel their car is tired looking and has worn parts so decide they "must" get a new car. However, replacing some worn parts and a car detail, your car will feel/look like new again and you'll discover you don't "REALLY NEED" a new car.
@chodkowski01
@chodkowski01 Жыл бұрын
This car can easily turn into a money pit with its age and mileage. So many more reliable, cheap and easy to maintain vehicles to buy. I dumped my money pit sports car for a cheaper more reliable, easy to maintain, repair and plenty of parts because they sold hundreds of thousands of Honda Civics or Toyota’s.
@sunnohh
@sunnohh Жыл бұрын
Idk, Ill stick to replacing my new car every couple years
@FourFourSeven
@FourFourSeven Жыл бұрын
@@sunnohh _"Idk, Ill stick to replacing my new car every couple years"_ ..........PFFFFFTAAAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAAAH!!
@heiner71
@heiner71 Жыл бұрын
@@sunnohh, I usually swap my cars when they get dirty or the ash tray is full. Whichever comes first.
@dallysinghson5569
@dallysinghson5569 Жыл бұрын
Make it a project to make your worn car look nice. If you have time that is. But worn is better than broke.
@CeKyPuTo
@CeKyPuTo Жыл бұрын
Lets face it! Whats the point in buyng a new car when your 10-15 years old car do the job? Whats the reason to buy a brand new car? To show off in froint of your friends and neigbours? Its just a car, bunch of plastic and metal created to work for you, not the opposite!
@scoobsmcgee9325
@scoobsmcgee9325 Жыл бұрын
Depending upon what car you're looking at, $5k into repairs wouldn't even cover the markup on top of MSRP that many dealers are still getting away with.
@Midala87
@Midala87 Жыл бұрын
I am waiting for the day we go back to buying straight from the manufacturer. I am tired of having to pay more unnecessary money to the middlemen including high interest rates just to borrow money.
@markaruski
@markaruski Жыл бұрын
If I had a local garage and mechanic team that I had as much confidence in as I'd have in your team at Omega, I'd do this 'full fix job' price in a heartbeat.
@wendwllhickey6426
@wendwllhickey6426 Жыл бұрын
After 2002 that head gasket and other stuff was fixed
@patrickboyd3364
@patrickboyd3364 Жыл бұрын
I just spent a little over $1,000 to repair my wife 2002 Toyota Rav4 with only 110,000 miles, a lot cheaper than purchasing a New Rav 4
@socalpyrotechnics4493
@socalpyrotechnics4493 5 ай бұрын
Yep the local smog shop is so good thay do everything with 30 year experience love omega vids it reminds me the good shop I go to only some differences of course but same vibe!
@Guiltless765
@Guiltless765 Жыл бұрын
Starve our and break the working class in America. Worse times ahead unfortunately.
@Pericles777
@Pericles777 Жыл бұрын
I’ve got a 2007 HHR, it’s actually a very easy to fix car mechanically! My problem is that I’m a broke ass and just being able to afford the parts is tough, and that’s with ME doing the all the work. $60 here,$40 there,$100 there, another $120 there. I’m getting ten’d and hundred’ed to death 😂😂😂But I’m also slowly becoming a small time mechanic being forced to learn how to fix my own stuff!
@PeeterPuncher
@PeeterPuncher Жыл бұрын
you could just get a car payment and pay $500-$1000 every month for 3-5.
@Pericles777
@Pericles777 Жыл бұрын
@@PeeterPuncher thats so much more money, atleast 4x more, I already paid this one off 2 years ago 😂 $500-$1k for a car payment is absolutely insane to me man. I don’t know if you’re joking or not
@FourFourSeven
@FourFourSeven Жыл бұрын
@@Pericles777 I...............don't think he's joking, man.
@Pericles777
@Pericles777 Жыл бұрын
@@FourFourSeven How would be taking on a loan for $40k+ that I can’t afford be cheaper than repairing my paid off car?
@cormaro13
@cormaro13 Жыл бұрын
​@Pericles777 he was joking about the 500 obliviously but if u actually did things right on finance side u can have it at 400 for 2021
@matt.604
@matt.604 Жыл бұрын
This is the new reality of gouging at every step of the supply chain.
@hokie9910
@hokie9910 Жыл бұрын
Oh, these companies have it coming to them. Just wait, they are going to get railroaded.
@opengnosis8555
@opengnosis8555 Жыл бұрын
Lets not forget how it is SUPER IMPORTANT to find a great mechanic shop like yours, because I had a few experiences where I went to dealerships and got charged 4k+ for them to throw parts at my vehicles only for the vehicles to remain undriveable. Then when I complained how much money I spent to not have running vehicles, I got told that I can either trade the cars in for basically scrape price, and buy a new car off their lit, or leave, cause the vehicles are out of warranty and it is not in the dealerships interest to work on them. They WANT you to get rid of your car. They make all their money finacing new cars. I also got told they do not troubleshoot anymore.
@kibbles5724
@kibbles5724 Жыл бұрын
This this this
@digitalversatilediscjockey3465
@digitalversatilediscjockey3465 4 ай бұрын
or jus become mechanically inclined yourself out of frustration n do all your own fixes yourself
@opengnosis8555
@opengnosis8555 4 ай бұрын
Yeah.. I realized that you need A LOT of space for tools and to work on trucks.. Space, a backyard, and a garage I do not have.
@apileofrocks5142
@apileofrocks5142 Жыл бұрын
It's really paying off right now to be even halfway capable in working on your own car. My brakes felt like they needed new pads, and multiple shops quoted me 2.5-3k for all pads, rotors, and both front calipers. Did everything ourselves over a day's work, and it cost us 600 in parts. Turned out only one caliper needed replacing too. I understand that you pay a mechanic so you don't have to work outside in the heat doing it all yourself, but right now that is a luxury I cannot afford.
@adamhayden5152
@adamhayden5152 Жыл бұрын
It more then pays! I try to do as much as I possibly can with my cars. Some stuff I just can’t do and then I’ll pay someone. But I would rather buy some tools and spend a day outside working on my car and save tons of money. I have an 05 STS4 v8 that needs some work. Have all the parts just gotta get it done before winter. It’s my winter car.
@ruthlessmofo
@ruthlessmofo Жыл бұрын
It's also rewarding fixing your own car 😊
@zfunk9
@zfunk9 Жыл бұрын
Pretty sure your caliper was fine.
@samuelellis7459
@samuelellis7459 Жыл бұрын
Ok
@actually5004
@actually5004 Жыл бұрын
Until your factory reject "new" part fails twice in a row and you realize how valuable that warranty on parts and labor can be. Hell, I recently got all-new wheel studs on my car because the shop I took it to told me they did the tire rotate (which they obviously didn't or they would have noticed the fucked up studs from the last shop). Did that shop's techs screw up my studs? No, but they lied and because of that I got free shit.
@Thomas63r2
@Thomas63r2 Жыл бұрын
I’ve been an automotive hobbyist for ~ 45 years, so I get a lot of questions from friends about car decisions. I too have been telling everyone who asks that it’s far better to spend $4k $6k $8k - and more if it’s a truck- to give their old war wagon a new lease on life.
@actually5004
@actually5004 Жыл бұрын
So do you not know enough about cars yet to hate them?
@Subreon
@Subreon Жыл бұрын
​@@actually5004if you're a fellow infrastructure reformation fan, you're showing it in a bad way
@Thomas63r2
@Thomas63r2 Жыл бұрын
@@actually5004Lol. Says the kid with no car. Pobrecito!
@actually5004
@actually5004 Жыл бұрын
@@Subreon I like cars, but as they're engineered today they aren't worth $10k new much less $25k especially since the same exact same Buicks and Cadillacs that I'm unfolding at my bodyshop are sold in eastern markets for half of what the average American pays.
@actually5004
@actually5004 Жыл бұрын
@@Thomas63r2 My chauffeur laughed when I asked him what that word meant, thanks for making his day! :)
@VintageSpeedFinland
@VintageSpeedFinland Жыл бұрын
Here In Finlandia they add 12,2 to 48,8% "car tax" based on co2 emissions on top of the purchase price. Your 30k Camry is 50-60k pile here if you want any extras". Yeah I just keep my 6k pile of Alfa Romeo and have it fixed it until the end of time. 😂😂😂
@GBG993.
@GBG993. Жыл бұрын
Sounds like some liberal socialist bullshit. "Own nothing and be happy"
@milan1845
@milan1845 11 ай бұрын
I have never been there although am from Europe...please tell me, what looks like vehicles on the road there, is it new as it is in sweden or you drive a lot vehicles from 2008 od 2004...I am from south Europe and have 08 fiesta and 05 c class both as new, and in next 10 years I am not tending to buy a car, no needed
@VintageSpeedFinland
@VintageSpeedFinland 11 ай бұрын
By heart most vehicles are about 10-15 years old. Mostly Volvo, VW, Skoda in grey or silver color. It's rare to see a new car from where I live. Even expensive cars are 5-10 years old in my hometown. @@milan1845
@jomama01
@jomama01 Жыл бұрын
Great reason to own a Saturn SL - they made millions, and while OE parts are becoming unobtainable, the aftermarket supported these for years profitably. Gave away my ‘02 with 400,000 miles (original clutch, exhaust and rear brakes), and picked up a ‘93 with 80,000 on the clock. RockAuto has some decent close out parts, and even regular maintenance items are cheap - name brand rear brake pads, rotors, calipers, anti-friction springs and flex brake lines under $200.
@allewis4008
@allewis4008 Жыл бұрын
Driving an 07 Saturn Aura. She's still going like a dream with minor work.
@STG44musikmeister
@STG44musikmeister Жыл бұрын
I'm at 415k. Never getting rid of my SL. Very fun with moog springs and kyb struts.
@mattc9875
@mattc9875 Жыл бұрын
SL are sure fun cheap agile daily drivers!
@billnasburg1361
@billnasburg1361 Жыл бұрын
You are 100% correct about keeping an older car in good condition and keeping it on the road for many years to come. Many would say that you check these cars thoroughly just so you can pad the bill. I am impressed that you check all these areas and ADVISE the customer of additional problems. I appreciate that you do these thorough inspections and advise the customer and the choice is up to the customer. As I have said many times before: I AM IMPRESSED AND APPRECIATIVE OF THE HONESTY AND KNOWLEDGE OF MR and MRS CAR WIZARD. I wish the best for both of you always and I really enjoy your vids and advice.
@b4804514
@b4804514 Жыл бұрын
Unfortunately all cars are not created equally. This car is IMO a piece of junk and was when it came off the assembly line. This is not Lexus quality or even Honda. People make bad financial decisions all day long everyday.
@jameswhite1319
@jameswhite1319 Жыл бұрын
I did
@ecchioni
@ecchioni Жыл бұрын
@@b4804514 Dude, any properly maintained car will run forever.
@lucwolf1
@lucwolf1 Жыл бұрын
@@b4804514. Actually you have no idea what you are talking about. Did you own one? I had one of these, put 234 000 miles on it, replaced the tires and brakes twice, changed oil regularly, and that was it. Stay informed. Personal opinions need to be based on facts.
@HR-wd6cw
@HR-wd6cw Жыл бұрын
While I would agree, modern day Caddy's like this one, are known to pretty much be junk. They don't make them like they used to. I'd say from about 2000 onward, I would not buy a GM product as you will get stuck fixing it and it will not be cheap in most cases. You may be better off buying a new higher-end Toyota Camry or something like it, than one of these cars used (yes the Toyota is not as fun or luxurious, but it will be a better value in the end).
@free2chasehappy
@free2chasehappy Жыл бұрын
Speaking about GMC Acadia... Just serviced one today with the 3.6 V6 for belt and pulleys. It has 204k miles and still original engine and transmission. The owner changes oil and fluids religiously. Goes to show that a supposedly unreliable car can last with luck and proper maintenance. I hope the see many more miles in that car.
@cormaro13
@cormaro13 Жыл бұрын
😂 its just good luck really, I hope they did timing chains , even with good service those transmission are trash lol
@heiner71
@heiner71 Жыл бұрын
If he would have bought a Toyota, he could still run on the first oil and tires.
@Subreon
@Subreon Жыл бұрын
​@@heiner71stop this crap. "These cars are famous for never breaking so I don't have to do anything for them" and then it breaks. Yeah. You still gotta take care of the famously reliable cars. Like an oil change using the highest grade oil every 3k miles. Stuff like that is what REALLY makes them run forever.
@matthines5150
@matthines5150 Жыл бұрын
Great episode - I’m going to keep buying great condition used cars and paying trustworthy shops like this to keep them moving!
@xjssts7127
@xjssts7127 Жыл бұрын
Just buy Toyota and Honda, stay away from American cars, European cars, no Hyundai. I am 30+ years mechanic.
@rosen9425
@rosen9425 Жыл бұрын
@@xjssts7127 The problem with Toyota in many places is they offer nothing. Where I live it's Hybrids or go home. I would snag a conventional Camry immediately but no can't have that for some reason 🙄
@craigfin3222
@craigfin3222 Жыл бұрын
Some parts cost a lot, BUT majority of the time nowadays the labor is going to cost way more. Like back in the early 2010s and 2000s, shops charged 40-60 an hour. Now a shop will charge anywhere from 120 to 200 an hour.
@andrewdonohue1853
@andrewdonohue1853 Жыл бұрын
$200 per hour. Good grief
@dojocho1894
@dojocho1894 Жыл бұрын
and they charge flat rate hr 20 minutes but you get the hour charge
@YaRight2986
@YaRight2986 Жыл бұрын
Friend had trouble with his truck, Las Vegas Ford dealer is charging $250/hour. Unheard of.
@FrontDesk-bk4rg
@FrontDesk-bk4rg Жыл бұрын
Out local shop charges 85.00 an hour
@mysticstarhf9265
@mysticstarhf9265 Жыл бұрын
$200/hour is the lowest labor rate I've seen around by me. Some are now at $220/hr. Shortage of mechanics also, my dealer has a 2 month waiting list for to get an appointment.
@MatthewTheCCMA
@MatthewTheCCMA Жыл бұрын
This whole car market boggles my mind, I grew up in a lower income hole. New cars were just not something that was ever within our reach, we’ve always bought vehicles preowned. Now the gap has gotten even larger with new cars and being able to afford them. But personally I don’t think I will ever buy a brand new vehicle, I currently drive a 2017 Toyota Corolla SE I bought for 15 K with 50,000 miles on it. This just seems like so much better of a deal than I think it was $22,000 brand new and I was back at 2017. Now I really have to buy used😂😂
@noseboop4354
@noseboop4354 Жыл бұрын
You're very rich compared to me. I paid 5k for a 2013 Mazda3 this year with 120,000 miles on it. There was literally nothing else available in my area, all the sub-5k cars were rust buckets or complete junk. People are asking 8k for their 2007 Civic or Corolla, it's insane.
@evoman44
@evoman44 Жыл бұрын
​​@@noseboop4354The 2nd car I bought when I was young and broke was a 95 Acura Integra with 100k miles for $7,600. I still have that car to this day with 275k miles as my daily driver because it has been such a reliable and fun car. I have a new ish 2005 WRX that I bought for $16k as my nicer car. But I don't plan to ever get rid of the Integra because it has become a sought after JDM classic and I plan on restoring it when I can. I still get people asking me if I am selling it.
@DUNEATV
@DUNEATV Жыл бұрын
I am 50 years old and what I’ve learned about buying new cars or fixing old ones is this statement. “ it cost money to drive a car, regardless if it is new or used” A reliable, used car with a trustworthy mechanic on your side or if you are a do it yourselfer it is definitely cheaper than a new one. However, if you could find a new car you can afford and you pay it off and maintain it it will then turn into, a reliable car for you for years to come….pick your poison!
@josephdominics5935
@josephdominics5935 Жыл бұрын
Right on ! That is the way it is. If one buys a used car one should know what a good car and a good deal is at purchase time. I have had some awesome used cars over the years foreign and domestic. The best most reliable car in my life was a 2011 Ford Taurus. I got it in 2012 slightly used and never needed anything except for tires and brakes, that is IT ! I was really let down when Ford stopped production as I would have surely purchased another and then another.
@curtisrenninger1886
@curtisrenninger1886 Жыл бұрын
The newest lines of cars are designed to have a service life only as long as a 7 year car loan. Look at the all the battery hybrids coming out with 3k cost for lithium battery replacements and electric motors dragging down the combustion motor for an average mpg as good as the same cars from a decade prior, the on/off starter crap at red lights, the gen3 hemi tick OBVIOUSLY designed to fail, the failing lifters in the chevys along with 60k transmissions, EGR systems got the engine running as dirty as possible with maximum carbon and debris build up in combustion chamber. Lets not forget aluminum body pickups and tailgates. The cost to fix the latest EPA approved cars will not justify keeping them moving forward. For a few short years the big three actually tried to compete for reliability but that's all been negotiated out now in the backrooms.
@josephdominics5935
@josephdominics5935 Жыл бұрын
@@curtisrenninger1886 lol. We complained about the cars in the 80's and now look what we have across the board. You just never know, you could be living the good times right now and not even notice it until way way later on down the roads of time. Just imagine 20 years from now? We may be drooling over the same cars that we slam on today. Just a thought.
@DUNEATV
@DUNEATV Жыл бұрын
@@josephdominics5935 I think you’re spot on sir!
@angryshoebox
@angryshoebox Жыл бұрын
Better a new Camry than a 2007 Cadillac any of the day of the week IMHO. Plenty of good new cars for under $30k out there, it's just that they're not Caddies, BMWs or Mercedes' ;-).
@bernardwarr4187
@bernardwarr4187 Жыл бұрын
Good cars for under 30, might be worth looking at the residuals! Cheap cars
@rhinowlf
@rhinowlf Жыл бұрын
That "cash for clunkers" trash a few years ago didn't do anyone any favors. I heard they only took cars that were currently running. It seems like a lot of things adding up to get things to the way they are, nowadays. I've always advocated for keeping decent vehicles running as long as possible. I have a '98 park ave that's VERY pleasant with the 3800 engine. and a trans that no longer wants to do 4th that needs to be looked at. haha. It's still cheaper than anything remotely new equivalent.
@Xaivin
@Xaivin Жыл бұрын
It wasn't until the Pandemic that I woke up about the price of cars and the expenses with it. I would take my 2019 Chevy Impala to a quick lube place to get the oil change, and have other people work on things here and there. Now those places want 100 bucks for just an oil change. Now I do it all myself for 30 bucks, and now I've got the repair book and utilize KZbin for anything else. I'll be doing the 97k mile tune up myself instead of shelling out 500 to have someone charge me an hour of labor on it. It's insane how everything has jumped so much.
@TakuroSpirit77
@TakuroSpirit77 Жыл бұрын
Yeah imagine paying people for doing skilled labor. Good on you for learning to do the most basic work yourself, but think of all the poor lube kids not able to put food on the table thanks to that kind of mentality.
@Stressless2023
@Stressless2023 Жыл бұрын
Wow I have a 2020 Chevy Impala V6 and my oil changes are only $65 and that's at the Chevrolet dealership - I never go to quick lube places so wasn't aware that they charge more than the dealer but I always feel like they use cheap or refurbished oil anyway so I stay away.
@Xaivin
@Xaivin Жыл бұрын
@@Stressless2023 Well, I will also say that I live in California. So everything is batshit more expensive than the rest of normal US. Even the dealerships are doing it at 150+ (Granted, they do more of a "full service" job and not just oil changes, but trying to get them to JUST do an oil change is like fighting those timeshare weirdos)
@guzzijack9714
@guzzijack9714 Жыл бұрын
Good for you Xaivin. And you'll wind up with a respectable tool set and the satisfaction that the job was done right all for less than you would have paid someone else to do the work. Just be careful, tools are addictive.
@bb5242
@bb5242 Жыл бұрын
5 quarts of oil is $30 now so I don't believe you
@chrisperry3525
@chrisperry3525 Жыл бұрын
I tend to keep my cars till they die...not always. Had a 6 year old outback that at 66k needed rear wheel bearings....dealer quoted $1800!! I did them myself..took all day and about $200 for parts. One good thing is cars do last a LOT longer than when I was young.. as long as they dont rust and you keep up on maintenance keep em and run em!
@8650mack
@8650mack Жыл бұрын
Not to give you a hard time but you kept saying they “kind of” solved the North Star head gasket issue. So they didn’t really solve it??
@sergeantspeed5941
@sergeantspeed5941 Жыл бұрын
I kept hearing that too. either they did or they didn't
@scottimusgarrett15
@scottimusgarrett15 Жыл бұрын
We all knew that when the supply chain failed during COVID, and prices went up dramatically, that the manufacturers weren't going to level out their prices, because, supply and demand. If people are willing to pay that higher price, then they'll just keep it there. Very sad situation. Thanks for the episode, Mr. and Mrs. Wizard!🤘❤️🙂🇨🇦
@saulgoodman2018
@saulgoodman2018 11 ай бұрын
Yep. People kept saying the price of things are going to come down. Yet for most things, they haven't.
@H0kieJoe
@H0kieJoe 8 ай бұрын
​@@saulgoodman2018Raising minimum wages baked in higher prices for everything. Add in supply chain disruption and the goofy EV push.
@RichieRouge206
@RichieRouge206 Жыл бұрын
I keep my 2005 V70 on the road and it runs perfectly. People give a hard time because it is high tax and isn’t the most economical. Yet I say to them well it’s a quality car and the money I save from it not going to the garage for repair. And I have zero monthly payments so that saves £300-500 a month (estimated) and cars from my Volvo’s era and the Cadillac look far nicer than all the terrible cars now. Great video Wizard.
@zm321
@zm321 Жыл бұрын
You can take heart from the fact that just last week on the Sytner group auction (big main dealer group that has a trade only online auction for it's part exchanges) a 70,000 mile 2005 V70 2.4 SE auto sold for over £4100. I could see minimum of £800 worth of minor prep needed straight away, just servicing, MOT and some smart repairs so this car is going to stand a dealer at nearly 5 grand before any retail mark up. Not that long ago we were retailing V70's like this for £2500. I go along with everything that Wizard says in this video; even if a retail customer were to spend 6 grand on this car it still makes far more sense than putting thousands down as a deposit on a new V90 on PCP and having payments of around £700 a month going out for 3 years on a car that you don't even own!
@rosen9425
@rosen9425 Жыл бұрын
My S80 has 370,000km / 230,000 miles on it. Still solid after 13 years and that much driving. A taken care of Volvo will not quit on you. It does takes a liter/qrt of oil between oil changes tho 👀
@goodtimejohnny8972
@goodtimejohnny8972 Жыл бұрын
Not only are parts expensive but I'm seeing weird stuff happening now. I was always accustomed to hub bearings coming as a matched pair, the bearing and the race together. Now they separated them and charge for the race and bearing separately. Total cost at the counter for the bearings and seals for a 90's f350 nearly 100 dollars. Not so long ago you could rebuild a hub for under 20 dollars.
@spallwalker5683
@spallwalker5683 Жыл бұрын
You don't mean unit bearings? Just regular old tapered roller bearings? Wild
@goodtimejohnny8972
@goodtimejohnny8972 Жыл бұрын
@@spallwalker5683 correct, regular tapered bearings. You now order the race and find the part number for the roller bearings.
@senseofstile
@senseofstile Жыл бұрын
You are correct. I bought a 2008 Ford Crown Victoria P71 Police Interceptor SAP (street appearance package) October 2022. It must have been a detective or big shot car because it only had 66,000 miles and 300 idle hours. The guy I bought it from bought it at the auction. He went through everything and had the transmission rebuilt. It was good to go. It is the only car I have so, it gets driven a lot. I took it on a road trip from Los Angeles to the Texas coast and back. I haven't had any problem at all. Just oil changes. Yes, it is flex fuel. Regular gas is about $4.80 a gallon. Ethanol is $2.89 a gallon. It now has 77,000 miles on it. Runs great.
@mysticstarhf9265
@mysticstarhf9265 Жыл бұрын
I love mine as well. 'Ole Reliable' as I call her. These Panther platform cars are the best choice I've ever made for a daily commute car.
@senseofstile
@senseofstile Жыл бұрын
@@mysticstarhf9265 The Panther platform cars are outstanding. It might be difficult to find lower mileage cars since the last year model was manufactured in 2011. Although Ford did make a 2012 Crown Vic but, all the 2012 models were shipped to Saudi Arabia. Nonetheless the parts are reasonable if needed for the high mileage cars. Some folks might wonder what fuel mileage they get since it is a big "body on frame" car. The best I got was 24 mpg on regular gas highway.
@matthewharlowehrscyclespor668
@matthewharlowehrscyclespor668 Жыл бұрын
So VERY true! Thanks Wizard! Go out and have a DELUXE Day. I do a "reverse car loan". We purchase all of our vehicles with cash. We have a separate account strictly for future vehicle purchases. We stay within that account balance to acquire a replacement vehicle. It took years of commitment to accomplish this. We understand that we need to review monthly deposit amounts. We have been surprised by new vehicle prices. We have also been surprised by the cost of repair. That seems to be life at the moment. Be good Remain safe.
@jus10four20
@jus10four20 Жыл бұрын
I'm considering going to an automotive tech school after completing my electrical tech degree at school so that I can know how to fix my vehicle,and help others, being that all vehicles are moving towards all electric componenta
@FWDSUXARSE
@FWDSUXARSE Жыл бұрын
That will definitely help having the electrical background. Everything is modules in cars now.
@JollyGiant19
@JollyGiant19 Жыл бұрын
Now your next problem is going to to be getting circuit diagrams from any of these -misers- manufacturers
@wolfgangpreier9160
@wolfgangpreier9160 Жыл бұрын
@@JollyGiant19You can have any circuit diagrams and you will still not be able to repair a Inverter, DC-DC Converter oder charger anyway. You can do all of those if you build your own EV with DIY parts. Neither GM, nor Ford, Lucid, Rivian or any of the other manufacturers will give you a manufacturer specific IGBT Module or specialized diodes, new circuit boards, plugs etc to be able to repair your EV. They use only few general available items like resistors or capacitors. And then there are many SMD parts and SMD circuit boards are not made to be repairable. Those need equipment to desolder and resolder sub millimeter parts under a magnifying glass and help by robot hands. Or do you think you can place those in 1/10th millimeter? I do not.
@OmarHudson
@OmarHudson Жыл бұрын
Probably would be better off saving money and just becoming an apprentice to an older mechanic. Plenty of mechanics tell me that they don't really learn the ins and outs of fixing car until they are out in the field.
@JollyGiant19
@JollyGiant19 Жыл бұрын
@@wolfgangpreier9160Just because you can’t do it all yourself doesn’t make it pointless! If I can do 70% myself but need a independent shop to do the other 30%, that’s a win no matter how you look at it 😃 Otherwise manufacturers would rather you just part swap or buy something new, poor options in my eyes. Not everything needs to be a perfect solution, just better than the existing state
@tony_25or6to4
@tony_25or6to4 Жыл бұрын
My Mom paid $5000 to have her 2000 DeVille's NorthStar head studs done. It's only worth $3000. She said, "where can I get a car in this shape for $5000?"
@dafff08
@dafff08 Жыл бұрын
car costs in europe been pretty much like this for decades now. imagine having to pay about 1.5-2 times of your entire years net worth income on a mid trim corolla. no eating, no electricity, no going out, absolutely nothing for almost 2 years. just to afford whats considered there a middle class car.
@WilliamHaisch
@WilliamHaisch Жыл бұрын
The past five years have made me appreciate “old man cars”: specifically the Grand Marquis, Crown Vic, and the Buick LeSabre models. Great design, efficient running, low maintenance, cheap parts (ok, maybe not for the Buick but the parts last a long time)… but even these models are running low on parts. RIP Old Man Cars.
@seanhealey5931
@seanhealey5931 Жыл бұрын
Love my '04 Corolla. Learned to maintain and repair it myself. 2023 maintenance costs so far: $332. Paid $2700 for it with 75k miles. Needed some bodywork, but that's it.
@zfunk9
@zfunk9 Жыл бұрын
Stop being cheap and get yourself a decent new car. Nobody cares how you keep wanting to drive and dump money into your old unsafe rickety beater.
@joshuabrown3525
@joshuabrown3525 Жыл бұрын
I bought my 2005 Chevrolet Impala 9c1 for $2200. It's doing good and runs strong. Getting parts through is becoming a nightmare and quite expensive. One taillight costs me $72. Also, I had to pay $300 to a local shop to fix the suspension. The gas mileage is less than I expected. It needs some body work too.
@ads1035
@ads1035 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing this STS. Up until this past March, I had a 2011 STS with the 3.6L v6 engine. It was and still is my favorite car. I loved every mile, every minute I logged in that car. Unfortunately, the piston rings in one cylinder failed, and car began rapidly consuming oil. It quickly fouled up one of the catalytic converters. Since the car had been in a wreck in 2018 and had never QUITE handled properly since then, I couldn't justify the cost needed to work on the engine. What good is a sorted engine when the body's still off? I replaced the STS with a 3rd gen CTS... And the CTS is just... not the same. It just isn't as comfortable as the STS was. Its faster, but it doesn't feel as poised and confident. And every sound the CTS makes, from the exhaust note to the doors closing, just doesn't sound as good as the STS sounded. I miss my STS...
@moniack
@moniack Жыл бұрын
Here is a tip on the CTS. Check the rear diff for leaks. The ATS and CTS can get clogged vents which will then blow out a seal. The fluid runs low and you burn up the diff. I smelled gear oil a couple weeks ago and saw mine was leaking. The vent was caked in grime. I changed the oil cleaned the vent, and am crossing my fingers.
@HotRod-wv4vm
@HotRod-wv4vm Жыл бұрын
Thanks sir. I have an 04 Honda Element that I bought new. While I would love to buy a new car, my wife’s illness prevents me from working. One of issues that I have encountered is parts availability. I prefer OEM parts. Luckily I have maintained the car religiously so the only maintenance that I need involve the suspension. I already bought the parts and had to wait months for the parts. Unless the car frame rots away, I intend to keep my car. Thank you so much for the information that you put forth on your channel. My only suggestion is that you should wear the wizards 🧙‍♀️ hat in your videos 😅
@stevemcphail4746
@stevemcphail4746 Жыл бұрын
The price of OEM parts is way out of line. I need new fuel injectors four of them used to cost $34.00 now they want $71.00 for reconditioned ones and $300.00 each for OEM parts they tell me they stopped making parts fr my car in 2007 and my car and motor has been a staple since 1994.
@acemobile9806
@acemobile9806 Жыл бұрын
The classic bumper sticker "dont laugh, it's paid for" has finally become words of truth! The problem I'm running into, specifically with my mom's '97 Sidekick, is finding parts that aren't junk out of the box. And some things like a PS pump, for example, are pure unobtainium 🤷
@FourFourSeven
@FourFourSeven Жыл бұрын
Out of sheer curiosity, I went ahead and looked up a PS pump for that Suzuki on RockAuto. If it's a 1.6L engine, then you're right, even RockAuto doesn't have it. The closest thing they have is a rebuild kit consisting of only the seals. But if you have the 1.8L variant, then you're in luck because RA has them from brands Cardone and BBB Industries.
@neildean7515
@neildean7515 Жыл бұрын
What about a clone car to use for parts… i suppose condition is everything
@acemobile9806
@acemobile9806 Жыл бұрын
Hers is a 1.6 16V, by far the most common model. Strangely enough the particular pump Suzuki fitted to that year range ('95 to '97 w A/C) was only used on that car & a very limited run of Hyundais of that same vintage, from what I can find from research. The problem stems from where they transitioned to the "grand Vitara" model, evidently everything was changed, including the accessories. 🤷 go figure. I'd like to put my size 13 into some of these automotive educated idiots! Anyway, I decided in the interest of prevailing parts availability (and in no small part to acquiescing to what she's been wanting for years) to buying her a super low miles R53 Mini Cooper. Yeah, I know but at least parts are easy to come by. The Sidekick is gonna be put up for sale but I DID find what may be the last remaining PS pump made for that particular configuration. I should know, the damn thing was $350!!! I did keep the original just in case parts are available to rebuild it. The paint is rough however it's a damn nice car, I totally rebuilt the A/C on it last year & runs like a new one. But the parts availability is scaring me. I've put 4 starters on it inside of a year, tired of changing them! And interior/trim bits, forget it, nonexistent.
@trey8872
@trey8872 Жыл бұрын
I’m not a Cadillac fan, but I always liked the styling of the STS.
@Mizacke5555
@Mizacke5555 Жыл бұрын
Make sure you trust your mechanic before saying fix it all! My son has a mercury grand marquis that broke down last week 30 minutes from home. We had it towed to a shop to give us an estimate and they said it needed an alternator, radiator, and the exhaust replaced all for 6 grand! I went to go see the car for myself and was able to start it by tightening the battery terminal wire. The battery light was flashing on the dash though. I took it to my local shop (so lucky to have an honest mechanic) and he said it did need an alternator but the radiator and exhaust are just fine. He had it back on the road the same day I brought it in for $250. Had he said the radiator and exhaust needed done I would have had him do it. The big thing is having a mechanic you can trust. When he says something needs done I don’t question it. He has gone above and beyond for me so many times. I’m only 2 hours from car wizard, if my mechanic retires I guess I’m making the 2 drive from now on so I don’t get scammed by shady mechanics trying to charge 6k on something that needed $250 in work.
@Crusher103
@Crusher103 Жыл бұрын
Part swapper vs Mechanic, there is a huge difference.
@77nizzova53
@77nizzova53 Жыл бұрын
That's a thief company!!!!
@ericelander9936
@ericelander9936 Жыл бұрын
I have a pretty good guy. Retired mechanic from Detroit who moved down here to the Arkansas Ozarks. Wish I was closer to Wizard. He's about seven hours away.
@javieracevedo9352
@javieracevedo9352 Жыл бұрын
SUVs in particular have have an incredibly absurd markup. Some tundras are still 100k on the lot. You can take an 2007 f150 for cheap, buy new engine and transmission and suspension, new tires and rims, send it to the paint shop and voila 20k later you have a new truck for less than 30k in total. New F150 are absurdly expensive.
@evoman44
@evoman44 Жыл бұрын
I had been thinking about the same thing. At current prices your better off restoring an older car of choice. And you can even build it and customize it better than it came from the factory new.
@mysticstarhf9265
@mysticstarhf9265 Жыл бұрын
I agree. My Ford dealer wants $60K to $70K for basic XLT F150s. That used to be pricing for F250 King Ranch. Crazy, they aren't worth that much and certainly not worth a 10 year loan.
@jwelchon2416
@jwelchon2416 Жыл бұрын
I keep my 2000 Marquis for what it doesn't have. No turbo, or variable valve timing, GDI, auto start-stop, CVT, DUAL CLUTCH, ABS, cylinder deactivation, keyless ignition ..etc...etc. There are so many undesirable features on new cars.
@orionwarren4244
@orionwarren4244 Жыл бұрын
0:00 / 17:58 Why it costs a fortune to fix a car? Who cares? The people who can't afford to have their cars fixed will eventually be taking the bus or riding small displacement motorcycles. You know, like they do in most 3rd world countries. Which, the USA is fast becoming. Hey, I didn't make the rules. The people that CAN afford to get their cars fixed by guys like Wizard did. And they won't care what it costs anyway!🤣😎👍
@terry_willis
@terry_willis Жыл бұрын
The problem with the car in the video is that it's a GM vehicle. No surprises there.
@michaelwright1602
@michaelwright1602 Жыл бұрын
Thank YOU Car Wizard! I turned in my 2018 leased Silverado in 2021... You remember the car situation then, and no way was I going to pay THAT price for another. I now drive a 2003 Buick Park Avenue, by choice. I did a lot of research before buying this vehicle. It was Car Wizard that turned me on to the GM 3800 motor, and he was correct. I paid $2000 for the car, it has a solid body, some rust, it is Michigan, but it is solid. I put tires, exhaust, did the upper intake, brakes, struts shocks, etc... Parts are readily available, many from GM so the parts are of good quality and fit. I think I have around $6000 in this car. Everything works and it is paid for. My insurance is $200 a year. I put gas in it and change the oil here in the driveway. I will never own or lease a new car. It is simply a waste of resources that could be used elsewhere, like buying groceries.
@Cruzinator4500
@Cruzinator4500 Жыл бұрын
🙌🏽 keeping good, ol’ reliable cars alive.
@robertfrank886
@robertfrank886 Жыл бұрын
I had a recent repair on my 2012 Cadillac SRX (I have a good mechanic)- had a bad coil (I had changed the plugs and coils only ~ 20K miles ago so it was surprising that one failed that quickly but ‘made in China’ as many parts are) and purge valve- runs like new and cost to repair those 2 items was $336- money well spent to keep it on the road as to replace it is $60K these days, and I won’t pay that. So I can see how even a more expensive repair may be worth it in the long run. 118K miles and oil changes every 5,000 miles - plan to keep it past 200K miles if I can.
@cormaro13
@cormaro13 Жыл бұрын
Wow u couldn't do that yourself ? Lol 336 is Hella expensive when the parts for both only cost 70 total lol And u may be planning on keeping it but sadly gm product don't last that long lol
@actually5004
@actually5004 Жыл бұрын
It's not that the parts are "made in China", it's that they're literally all blemish and factory reject parts that are being sold as "new".
@whammond511
@whammond511 Жыл бұрын
I just put $9,000 into my 18 yr. old Daily Driver with 270K+ miles on it because I refuse to be a part of this new car stepped up sales program that makes me a slave 😢to a car payment!!
@jimsmalleimb7709
@jimsmalleimb7709 Жыл бұрын
Thank our erected leaders in government for all this and good ol' Uncle Klaus at the WEF. All of this is deliberate. The whole point is to eventually make personal transportation impossible to afford for the average person to "save the planet". "You will own nothing and you (won't) be happy".
@GranMastaDee
@GranMastaDee 3 ай бұрын
The cabal and global bankers are loving this. Wait until the Wizzards try to buy a new house! It doesn't help that mechanics immediately bumped their rates unilateraly to $200++/hr without certification or licenses.
@golden.lights.twinkle2329
@golden.lights.twinkle2329 Жыл бұрын
I recently took my daughter's 2004 Ford Focus in to a brake specialist to have a brake problem fixed. They fitted new rear brake drums. The bill was $700 ($200 for each drum, $300 labor). When I drove the car the problem was exactly the same as it was before. I found the rear drums are $50 each on RockAuto. I believe the real problem is the brake master cylinder.
@runner3033
@runner3033 Жыл бұрын
Oh man, parts are (were?) so cheap for those Mk1 Focii. Great car, cheap to buy and run. I had problems with my rear brakes too though. Hardware rusted/froze up easily... bearings were very sensitive to being torqued properly... Spent a fair amount of time on mine, rear brakes were the only thing I needed to spent time on repeatedly.
@AT-wl9yq
@AT-wl9yq Жыл бұрын
There are huge differences between cheap and quality brake rotors and drums. Cheap ones don't last long and warp very easily. Adjust the rear wheel cylinders before you put a new master cylinder in the car. Also do a service bleed on the car before you replace parts to make sure there is no trapped air in the ABS pump. Both of those things can feel like a bad master cylinder and are very common issues.
@thunderroad7289
@thunderroad7289 Жыл бұрын
You got ripped off…..
@petrosaguilar8916
@petrosaguilar8916 11 ай бұрын
American car mechanics. LOL
@xjet
@xjet Жыл бұрын
Surely this indicates that there would be an eager market for a cheaper, simpler car that wasn't filled with eye-watering amounts of electronics and other stuff to break. Imagine if you built a car designed back in the 1970s/80s using 2020 technologies... you could make it *so* much better than it was without breaking the bank in terms of the final price.
@knurlgnar24
@knurlgnar24 Жыл бұрын
I have a 2005 STS just like this one. They made few of these models and the vast majority had the 3.6l. Most parts for the V8 are different. When GM only sold 20k of this version total it makes the parts pretty expensive. I replaced a rear shock on mine and it was $350 for the part. I get it, they hardly make any of them so they have to charge more. Could have gotten an eBay part for under $100 but I went OEM. Not from the dealer of course, then it would have been nearly $1000 for the same part. :)
@danielhartin7680
@danielhartin7680 Жыл бұрын
To be honest, I can see both sides of the argument. Taking that 13 year old Caddy as an example, the customer sinks 5 or 6 grand into it to fix everything that needs attention. A couple of months down the road, another major (expensive) repair pops up. Now the financial hemorrhaging really begins. And you're more or less trapped into paying on that second repair since you're already into it for the 5 or 6 grand. As outrageous monthly payments are on new vehicles, you have much more peace of mind knowing any and all repairs are covered under warranty. Monthly payments are much easier to budget for than costly, unexpected repairs that can crop up any time and in any amount. Plus, if you live in the Rust Belt, you also have to worry about the damned thing literally disintegrating beneath your feet.
@omnimoeish
@omnimoeish Жыл бұрын
I think the "Fix it all!" mindset is a combination of the fact that a good quality newer vehicle should last a long time if maintained properly, the fact that Wizard is very well respected and people don't think he's trying to rip them off, the clientele he's attracting these days are probably able to drop $4k on a car repair, the fact that newer vehicles are so expensive especially by the time you add in all the add ons, options, extended warranty, taxes and doc fees and then pay 7-10% interest on all that. It's nothing to have a $1k/month car payment (I have one myself), so $4k to have a car go another 75k miles is a no brainer.
@aygwm
@aygwm Жыл бұрын
It’s nothing to have a $1000/mo car payment?
@actually5004
@actually5004 Жыл бұрын
"the fact that a good quality newer vehicle should last a long time if maintained properly" Engineers are paid millions of dollars to design cars to shatter into a million pieces once the warranty expires and you unironically believe that?
@parkerbohnn
@parkerbohnn Жыл бұрын
I'll tell ya that Car Wizard's a gut burger!
@neoanderson7
@neoanderson7 Жыл бұрын
As it turns out, I was in this very dilemma about a month or 2 ago. I wasn't planning on changing my vehicle for at least another 4-5yrs, if at all. However, the tranny started to give me issues for no reason. Diving deep down the rabbit hole, I found out it's a known issue and not something that will be permanently fixed. Even if you get a new tranny. Now, you start to weigh the cost of the tranny, the cost of installation, the down time you're going to have... it just keeps adding up and up and I did some quick math to see that I would be paying double what I paid for the vehicle to begin with. It's still in good shape but at the same time, I knew it was going to give me engine trouble in the not so distant future. So I decided to bite the bullet and move into something a little more modern. Took me close to 2 months and 2 bogus deals before finding an ideal situation. I'm extremely happy with my recent purchase. This will probably be my permanent vehicle for the next 10-15yrs easy. Still got it 2nd hand, but it had hardly any use. Completely out of the norm but I'm getting used to it.. :-)
@hackfabrication139
@hackfabrication139 Жыл бұрын
Sounds like a GM 6 speed auto (6L80/90-E?) that are in the 1/2 ton pickups (and other models). Even if the recommended maintenance is done, they are likely to fail before 150k. Gonna cost 4k+ for the rebuild.
@evoman44
@evoman44 Жыл бұрын
That's why it's important to do your research first if you plan to keep a vehicle as long as possible. Every manufacturer has made bad models even Toyota. Nowadays with the internet it's more easy to research than before when you had to interview mechanics or car owners that have owned a particular car.
@neoanderson7
@neoanderson7 Жыл бұрын
@@hackfabrication139 No. Not a truck. It was actually an Rx8. 🙂 A series 2 R3 actually. Was hoping with all the updates they did to it, it'll be a solid foundation for a long term car. In truth, it gave me no issues for 5yrs. Not until 3rd gear started to pop out for no apparent reason. 😞 With only 104k km's on the clock, and never being certain how long the engine will last, I decided to not roll the dice anymore. Especially if I was going to start to pay the amount of money, if not double, what the car initially costed me.
@neoanderson7
@neoanderson7 Жыл бұрын
@@evoman44 Oh for sure. I waited for the series 2 of the model. Where they fixed a ton of things and redesigned others. Unfortunately there was still somethings that didn't get tested all that well... Alas, its water under the bridge now. Much happier with the replacement vehicle I found. Can't wait till next season to start to personalize it a bit. 🙂
@cigarsgunsanddiesel8032
@cigarsgunsanddiesel8032 Жыл бұрын
I have NEVER bought a new car, except for my current vehicle, because I got an offer I couldn't refuse... I rather buy used!
@ssz28envy
@ssz28envy Жыл бұрын
Totally with you. I'd hate to have to buy a new car. I make pretty decent money but with supporting a family of 4 with the insane prices of everything now there's no way I could afford any new car.
@daviddavidsonn3578
@daviddavidsonn3578 Жыл бұрын
simple, just steal one 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@piggy310
@piggy310 Жыл бұрын
Rectangular headlamps were the ugliest design element , thank God they're gone.. They just seemed like a cheap, lazy design compromise.
@man_on_wheelz
@man_on_wheelz Жыл бұрын
Yeah, I drive a 2010 Lincoln MKS I've had for 6 years now, and I'm really feeling like this will remain my car for pretty far into the foreseeable future, regardless of what happens with it mechanically. The engine could explode in a million pieces, and I think I'd rather get a new junkyard engine put in it than go searching for another car, new or used.
@stevenlamb8726
@stevenlamb8726 Жыл бұрын
Watch out for the internal chain-driven water pump on that MKS. Keep and eye out for coolant leaking or crusty residue on the engine block behind the alternator. If it fails catastrophically, it can mix the coolant and oil and grenade the engine. I have a 2010 MKZ with the 3.5 (same water pump design) with 140K miles and no water pump leak yet! But on my Mom’s 2010 Mazda CX-9 with the Ford 3.7 the water pump failed catastrophically at around 85K miles so you never really know. I would change the oil every 3K and do a full coolant flush every 30K to try and maximize the life of the seals of the water pump. Good luck! Love the MKS
@Alex88302
@Alex88302 Жыл бұрын
I daily a 94 camry wagon. 313k miles and runs great. I replaced the engine in 2018 because it had a rough life, 1100 for a low mile warrantied engine and 700 and a good local shade tree guy to swap out the same week. Did an engine out in September for the timing belt, head gasket and other gaskets. That whole job wjth parts and labor was about $1400. Bought the car in 2017 with 190k mi and have been to 13 states in it. Shows no signs of stopping. My only complaint is its pretty damn slow lol.
@man_on_wheelz
@man_on_wheelz Жыл бұрын
@@stevenlamb8726 Oh yes, I am all too aware of the internal water pump situation and it haunts my nightmares thinking about it since I’m sitting at 160k+ miles and have not had any issues there since I bought the car at 105k miles. I’ve got the 3.5L Ecoboost model which not only am I worried about the water pump, but also the twin turbos, the cam phasers, the PTU, and the rear diff unit. I’ve already shelled out $2,100 to replace my PTU because it was leaking onto the exhaust and both my turbos leak a small amount of oil either internally or externally respectively. But I love that thing… and now that I have a garage, I’m willing to let it sit there and wait for money for repairs if it ever gets so badly broken. But yeah, I do full synthetic oil changes every 5k and have already changed the coolant and trans fluid once since I’ve had the car. Probably high time I do it again now that you mention it. But yeah, no coolant leaks as of the time I’m typing this.
@matthoch7175
@matthoch7175 Жыл бұрын
@@stevenlamb8726my 2016 MKS just started leaking from the water pump. $2,500 repair quote.
@hm12460
@hm12460 Жыл бұрын
You may want to start looking now because you will be replacing the engine. The way around it is to replace your water pump BEFORE it pukes engine coolant into your oil pan. A costly repair, but cheaper than another engine.
@newcarpathia9422
@newcarpathia9422 Жыл бұрын
I bought a brand new Hyundai Elantra Nline last year here in Canada. Since I also have American citizenship, I figured it would be pretty simple to buy it in the USA if it's cheaper there. So, I ran the calculations. I was absolutely flabbergasted that the 2022 Elantra Nline in Canada is $4500 Canadian cheaper and had more features than the USA version. This is before taxes and, yes, I did the currency conversion. In short, y'all gettin' hosed down there.
@kennethross786
@kennethross786 Жыл бұрын
My 2006 Ford Explorer mechanically totaled itself last year when the transmission deleted itself (well, 2nd gear and 5th gear) at 176k miles. I didn't care - I sank $5k into a remanufactured tranny, and here's why: as the Car Care Nut has said, how many miles a car has is often less important than HOW it got those miles. All else being equal, I'd rather have a well-maintained car with 250k miles than one with 150k miles that was badly maintained. I knew how my Explorer had been maintained over the preceding 4+ years and 64k miles and I considered knowing that history made it worth replacing the transmission instead of buying another vehicle that I knew nothing about.
@theniceneighbor
@theniceneighbor Жыл бұрын
I was literally saying this justnow. I can only find what i need at a junk yard or the factory. The aftermarket stuff is junk. And to top it all off, i cant find a place to even repaint the car because its not an insurance claim. The industry pushes a new car. Insurance has said my rate will not cover what it takes to replace the car and kbb has no intention to modify the value of the cars to what they are actually worth. Taxes and registrations increase. Its a market shift that happened and it was fueled by the new car industry and pushing a new EV instead of repairing your combustion engine. Needs to swing back the other way a bit to balance things out.
@kevin9c1
@kevin9c1 Жыл бұрын
Random price check here: GM genuine lower control arms are around $213 so with Wizard's standard parts markup that checks out. Mevotech (which is actually a quality part and includes a greaseable BJ) is $180. Moog is $156.
@jamesstewart3771
@jamesstewart3771 Жыл бұрын
I love greasy bj ‘s !
@centralparkfitness
@centralparkfitness Жыл бұрын
Bro, stop whining about the costs of new cars and loan terms etc....for as long as I've been alive people have been irresponsible about buying cars. This is nothing new
@robertwright5487
@robertwright5487 Жыл бұрын
I am now retired. However, the shop that I worked at is racking up big ticket repair bills because, like you said, stupid prices. Then, figure in taxes and insurance, it becomes a no-brainer. One of the issues is finding the repair parts for some of the cars and trucks.
@dojocho1894
@dojocho1894 Жыл бұрын
I used to have a 06 h3 hummer ...loved it divorced... wife took it. I want to buy another older one again for the winter but I'm afraid there isn't parst for it.
@timothythompson4036
@timothythompson4036 Жыл бұрын
I have a 2017 Chrysler Pacifica. Last summer in July 2022 the AC failed. I take my car to an independent repair shop here in Queens, NY. It needed a new AC compressor. Last summer huge parts shortage. They finally got a used AC compressor at a salvage yard in the Bronx. The used compressor still cost $350. New freon and labor and tax the whole job cost $1100. Repairs are now a fortune!!
@nancyflusa9992
@nancyflusa9992 Жыл бұрын
Thank you. I don't feel so stupid for putting more in than the 13yo Volvo's book says it is worth it last year. Plus I know its history and weakness better than any other used (or new auto). Its build quality is better than new anyhow.
@hokie9910
@hokie9910 Жыл бұрын
Good for you. So many people don’t understand what you just said. It’s not always the value of the car vs the repair. It’s the ability to keep your current car vs what a new car costs. I am anti payment. I made my last car payment in August of 2008, I vowed to never have a payment again. So far, I have been fortunate enough to keep that promise.
@heiner71
@heiner71 Жыл бұрын
@@hokie9910 , same. If I can't buy it with cash, I can't buy it. I only buy slightly used cars (2-3 years), where the first owner already took the big new car hit and also already had the initial issues he had with the new car resolved.
@jamesmustin7289
@jamesmustin7289 Жыл бұрын
I am thé original owner of a 1997 Honda Del Sol Si. It is my only car. It has 218,000 miles . It runs and looks great. I have not had a car payment since 1999. The car cost me $17,000 . I just put $700 in repair of the air conditioning. It worked great for 25 years. The car still has many original parts. I am so far ahead financially on this car. I called it my mid life crisis car and I am still in it. It is a fun car. It handles like a slot Car . It has double wishbone suspension front and rear. It has front and rear sway bars. The motor is strong and quick. It is a Sohc Vtec. Can still get In the mid 30mpg using regular gas. It is quick with a 5 speed manual transmission and easy get to 100 per hour and cruise. This is truly a forever car.
@laveritesurlestemoinsdejeh8522
@laveritesurlestemoinsdejeh8522 Жыл бұрын
Same situation here in the Montreal area. "Do it all" is a sentence we hear a lot these days, whereas just a few years ago it would have been "No way!" We regularly do 2, 3 and even 4000 dollar jobs. Especially on trucks.
@bryancarlson3673
@bryancarlson3673 Жыл бұрын
THIS is why I drive a TOYOTA. Never a need for parts or repairs. Just regular maintenance!
@jeffzekas
@jeffzekas Жыл бұрын
It's not just expensive parts, but here in Oregon, some techs will add on "shop profit" to the price of a part. Example: mechanic charged me $193 for a part that cost $12 online. He charged $650 for a $200 part.
@keithbird8910
@keithbird8910 Жыл бұрын
Every business will do this. If you buy a TV, computer, indeed almost anything, the retailer will have added at least 50% to the wholesale price. Having said that, the example you quote is simply ridiculous - in fact I would call it highway robbery!
@brent4073
@brent4073 Жыл бұрын
Because it costs money to ship that part, time for a parts manager to order it, there is a lot of logistics that you are paying for.
@petrosaguilar8916
@petrosaguilar8916 11 ай бұрын
That's why you bring your own parts. If he won't accept them go somewhere else.
@LionsGateCorp
@LionsGateCorp Жыл бұрын
Buy a lift, read a book, then do it yourself. Easiest method to save a hundred thousand over a lifetime.
@ilc-nl3yy
@ilc-nl3yy Жыл бұрын
I bought a set of Roush axle backs for my 2014 Mustang GT, and 2 shops said it would take almost 8 hours to install and wanted over $1k labor. That's ridiculous. I ended up doing it myself and it took about an hour and I've never done this.
@PoweredByLS2
@PoweredByLS2 Жыл бұрын
So you just watched a KZbin tutorial or what?
@ilc-nl3yy
@ilc-nl3yy Жыл бұрын
@@PoweredByLS2 Yup. The mechanic by me was full of crap
@keithprinn720
@keithprinn720 Жыл бұрын
just wait for battery replacement and screen replacements on electric vehicles with big central operating screens.
@dennisfahey2379
@dennisfahey2379 Жыл бұрын
The financing extending to 8 - 10 years is certainly a way to compensate for sticker shock but it is also the biggest revenue generator for dealers. That is the modern model of car dealerships - they are more in the finance and service businesses than the actual sale. The same trick for the extended warranty package. If I can make you use my service center - I can banks a little more on the overall profit potential of the car throughout its life cycle.
@zm321
@zm321 Жыл бұрын
The dealer only gets his finance commission once; at the start of the finance term. He has to keep selling cars to survive and really doesn't want to sell his customer a new car once every 8-10 years. He needs to sell them a car about every 3-5 years and still service it during the ownership term. I don't see dealers doing well out of all this in the longer term.
@dallasbrat81
@dallasbrat81 Жыл бұрын
Could all this expensive ICE repairs cost and new cost be on purpose to drive us to horrible EV cars
@tonychavez2083
@tonychavez2083 Жыл бұрын
GM Northstar is a great motor. love the older rear drive STS... well worth fixing in my opinion.
@TheJ602
@TheJ602 Жыл бұрын
Car wizard hates north star engines has many videos on it.
@knurlgnar24
@knurlgnar24 Жыл бұрын
This Northstar engine has no known problems. The older Pre 2000 Northstars are the ones to stay away from. 2000 through 2003 are good, 2004 and up are rock solid. This is the RWD version of the Northstar and shares few components with the transverse ones BTW. @@TheJ602
@tonychavez2083
@tonychavez2083 Жыл бұрын
@@TheJ602 I get it, everyone has their opinion. I’m a fan of 8 cylinder 4 door rear drive sedans, in a world of lame Crv’s , rav 4’s and lame front drive mini utes that pose as trucks.
@BadWolf762
@BadWolf762 Жыл бұрын
30 years ago an expensive gallon of automotive paint was $70 for DuPont Centari single stage enamel. Today a quart of base can be $400, then add clear on top of that.
@Riketorian
@Riketorian Жыл бұрын
The other side to consider is I think there is a brain drain for the larger jobs done by shops. I am completely against car payments, but I paid $5,000 to have an engine repaired from a snapped timing belt on a 07 Honda Pilot and I got it back with the engine smoking after it idles and the shop refuses to fix it. Before this I paid $3,500 for a transmission rebuild on another car only for it to slip 2nd to 3rd gear when it was heated up and it eventually stopped shifting gears altogether at 30,000 miles. If I could go back I would have a junkyard engine/transmission put in because I lost faith in the capabilities of my neighborhood mechanic.
@mph5896
@mph5896 Жыл бұрын
I was taught to NOT do a head job on a high mileage car due to the risk of oil burning post repair. The valves seal up much better, and the weak point now is past the rings.
@evoman44
@evoman44 Жыл бұрын
Automatic transmission rebuilds are not worth it. Your better off either buying a salvage transmission or a remanufactured transmission with a warranty.
@mph5896
@mph5896 Жыл бұрын
@@evoman44 Rebuilt transmissions from companies can be terrible as well. They are only as good as the warranty they come with. I refer people to a trans shop that has been in business for a LONG time and know their stuff. Their warranty is 3 years 50k. They only do transmissions. My personal stuff, I still rebuild transmissions. I am not paying $3-4k for a rebuild installed when I can do it for $1k in parts and 5-8 hours of my time.
@jamestabor587
@jamestabor587 Жыл бұрын
$300 per control arm? Yeah because you are not properly buying any OE/OEM products like an independent shop should for there customer’s. No way $300 each is what they cost. GENUINE GM is $100-$214 max for any kind so you are overcharging. Get an OE/OEM replacement it’s not even $100 a piece. $70 each. This is what I have issues with. It happens everywhere
@phr3ui559
@phr3ui559 2 ай бұрын
ok
@Coodeville
@Coodeville Жыл бұрын
I was just watching the financial advisor named Dave Ramsey. He tells everyone get rid of the loan and get a 2 thousand dollar car. I'm not sure if he knows a $2000 car might need $5000 in work to be road worthy
@r.l.strange1897
@r.l.strange1897 Жыл бұрын
He is removed from the common persons reality. He thinks you pay 2k and drive off into the sunset 😂
@andrewdonohue1853
@andrewdonohue1853 Жыл бұрын
2k car in ny is an absolute pile of rust front to back. The subframe has holes, the gas tank is falling off and it's ready for the shreader. Years ago I bought an old 91 Cavalier 2.2 southern car, no rust for $1,800. I drove it over 7 years and sold it for $600. Those days are OVER. I wished those 2nd gen Cavaliers were still common. Cheap to buy, relatively reliable, good on gas, cheap to insure, easy to work on. The perfect beater car that would keep money in your pocket
@peterchen9763
@peterchen9763 Жыл бұрын
I am sure it has been a few years since the last time Dave Ramsey bought a $2,000 car, so I am sure he isn't aware things are a little different now. I bought a 1982 Chrysler LeBaron convertible as a weekend car last year. Sure I only paid $2,500 and it runs good. However, I wanted the car to be reliable enough for the occasional road trips, not just for cars and coffee a few miles away. Let's just say I spent more than $5,000 catching up on deferred maintenance on a 40 yo car. Sure Mopar parts is nowhere as expensive as Audi or Mercedes, but as the Wizard said it adds up quick. It is also true I don't see the difference in labor cost between fixing this car from fixing the Audi I used to own.
@Coodeville
@Coodeville Жыл бұрын
@@r.l.strange1897 I said the same thing
@andrewdonohue1853
@andrewdonohue1853 Жыл бұрын
@@peterchen9763 i have a 2003 pontiac bonneville SSEi with the 3800 supercharged (i do not drive in the winter). we also have a 97 grand prix L36 3800. the car i drive in the winter is a 2022 crosstrek. those 3800's are ultra reliable, but their numbers are dwindling. fewer and fewer on the used car market every year. i will keep them both until i cant, they are both paid for and i can drive them anywhere.
@piggy310
@piggy310 Жыл бұрын
God that was a horrible era for Cadillac, that dash looks like it could be from a Chevy Cobalt.
@HammerJammer81
@HammerJammer81 Жыл бұрын
Was so happy to get rid of my Cadillac ATS. What a money dump
@The98deville
@The98deville Жыл бұрын
Insurance companies need to adjust what they value cars to keep up with the cost of replacing them.
@komradkolonel
@komradkolonel Жыл бұрын
The later Northstars weren't bad engines. I wouldn't touch an early one for any amount of money, as well as the GM 3.6. One thing that one of my neighbors did was he bought a used F-150 with a worn out transmission and replaced it with a remanufactured one. It had the 2 valve 5.4 that was in good condition and didn't have any rust or frame damage. He could probably drive that truck for another 200,000 miles and spent a fraction of the cost of a new one.
@evoman44
@evoman44 Жыл бұрын
That F-150 can last a long time as long as they treat any chassis rust and if the 3 valve engine ever give out it can simply be replaced with a better engine.
@hokie9910
@hokie9910 Жыл бұрын
Keep the oil on the 3 valve changed constantly and you might be able to keep it running a long time.
@darrellsaunders4267
@darrellsaunders4267 Жыл бұрын
I bought a new VW Super Beetle in 1973 when gas prices jumped from 25 cents to 60 cents overnight....24 month payment @ 59 smoleans per month. Making 2.15 per hour.
@jessicagreene1773
@jessicagreene1773 Жыл бұрын
I agree 100%. I have a 2006 Dodge Daytona that I had repainted because of clear coat failure and got it tuned, brakes and new fan motors. It wasn't cheap but I love the car, and a new Daytona is around 64K to start.
@jackcrisci2957
@jackcrisci2957 Жыл бұрын
I love my STS. Paid about 10k to restore it (100% a rescue. It's lived a hard life) but it's been nothing but rewarding. The RWD V8 handles like a grand tourer in a sedan body. The Northstar is no joke. You're never lacking for power. But yeah everything Wizard is describing I've replaced myself or had replaced.
@Madlux14
@Madlux14 Жыл бұрын
The Northstar is riddled with issues
@21Piloteer
@21Piloteer Жыл бұрын
​@MTBPRO14 The earlier ones yes.
@jackcrisci2957
@jackcrisci2957 Жыл бұрын
@@Madlux14 it actually makes sense to ask you 'which one?' There were like 7 separate iterations of the engine that GM went through. Anything with an LH2 (the one in my STS) or newer won't have head gasket issues because they fixed the bolts just like Wizard said. All of them will need to be gone through for oil leaks around 100k miles, sure. Mine needed valve cover gaskets. But mated to the RWD or AWD platforms you've got an really reliable and powerful engine. Pain in the @** to work on, though
@knurlgnar24
@knurlgnar24 Жыл бұрын
I have exactly the same car as you. It's not perfect but it's a nice car. This Northstar has almost nothing in common with the Northstars that everyone thinks of as problematic. This engine has no known issues to worry about. it IS difficult to work on when something goes wrong though as I'm sure you know!
@jackcrisci2957
@jackcrisci2957 Жыл бұрын
@@knurlgnar24 That's been my only complaint! There is a lot that you can do in your garage, but it takes longer and is more labor intensive without a lift. There were some jobs that I just had to leave to a mechanic. Wizard isn't kidding: the exhaust manifold had to come off to access some of those valve cover bolts!
@kevin9c1
@kevin9c1 Жыл бұрын
I had an 05 STS wV8 AWD with almost every option except the adaptive cruise control (and HUD). It was a fun car with still the best factory audio system I've had (BOSE Studio 15). However, I replaced it with a 2007 Mercedes S550 and it has been a much more problem free vehicle for me. Yeah that's gonna blow some minds.
@rosen9425
@rosen9425 Жыл бұрын
are you sure it was a true BOSE? High-end sound options on cars like Bowers & Wilkins, Harman Kardon etc are major money. I bet the S550 might be the real deal but that was in the $100k price range when new. I've got BOSE badges in my car (Opel Insignia GS 2018) but can't find anything in the owners manual saying BOSE anywhere tho, I swear I got badge trimmed up the rear. I had insanely better factory sound in my Golf 7🤭
@kevin9c1
@kevin9c1 Жыл бұрын
@@rosen9425 My STS was BOSE. My S550 is H/K and is decent but the STS was still better overall, despite having less power. I found an old Edmunds review of that STS system and they said it was a very good system only bested by the Lexus Mark Levinson (at the time in 05).
@Dallen9
@Dallen9 Жыл бұрын
Well the supply chains are broken. The price to make them didn't change just the cost to ship it. We lost 1/3rd of the global shipping fleet to the scrapers over Covid. So shipping has been slowed tremendously and the west coast ports shutting down getting backed up hasn't helped any also.
@garyclark979
@garyclark979 Жыл бұрын
I just spent $100 in parts and fluids to perform an engine carbon cleaning, oil change and radiator service on my 2012 Toyota Camry hybrid LE with 148k miles. This $4K horror story is why I purchased a Toyota. Thank you for your videos. You remind me so much of my late father who was exactly the same type of auto mechanic that you are. 👍
@CarShopping101
@CarShopping101 Жыл бұрын
Toyotas with a decent maintenance history all day, every day when you are buying used.
@thunderroad7289
@thunderroad7289 Жыл бұрын
Funny I have a 2013 Ford f 150 with a 5.0 with 365 thousand miles and zero problems all these years later. don’t need a Toyota to get a good vehicle….also we get a lot of Toyotas in for repairs all the time. They are not as perfect as you think
@belltolls1984
@belltolls1984 Жыл бұрын
This is an example why I keep repairing and putting money into my 23 year old Chevy Express conversion van with almost 300k on it, the price to replace it is astronomical to my family and at almost 38 years old I am DONE with car payments.
@NageiaNagi
@NageiaNagi Жыл бұрын
Put a decent amount into suspension work and a coolant leak on my 06 Lucerne this year, worth it especially since its still relatively low mileage (60ish thousand) and the 3800 not the Northstar.
@parkerbohnn
@parkerbohnn Жыл бұрын
The money he talks about is just pocket change.
@billtodd6509
@billtodd6509 Жыл бұрын
You cant go wrong when you have Crazy D doing PR and writing up your orders. He just seems like an old fashioned honest midwesterner that is easy to deal with. We watch his tractor channel all the time. You sure can get great people to work there. Have a great day,, Bill
@actually5004
@actually5004 Жыл бұрын
Cracked rims and lifters causing catastrophic engine failure is pretty damn wrong but literally every car you can buy is a pos designed like a cell phone to explode once the warranty expires.
@dylano7242
@dylano7242 Жыл бұрын
Cars aren't expensive. Just stupid people buying stupid junk cars that were always junk and wasting money fixing them. Buy the right cars to begin with. In 2023 I bought all in colorado 1. 2008 Toyota sienna 190k Miles $2000 2. 2001 sierra 1500hd excab 4x4 180k miles $4k 3. 2011 camaro v6 5sp 160k miles $4k
@davidjames2910
@davidjames2910 Жыл бұрын
I spent a lot on replacing the whole clutch mechanism on my 2010, 87,000-mile car. Now it runs like new again and the new generation of cars aren't just expensive, they're unproven, so I will pay to keep this car in good health.
@midcenturymodern9330
@midcenturymodern9330 Жыл бұрын
Howdy Wizard, can you please do a video on the ridiculously complex battery replacement procedures in newer cars? I had to replace the battery on my 2018 VW and the technician was making 101% sure that while the old battery was taken out, the car was still getting uninterrupted 12 Volts. He then had to use a scan tool to program the new battery into the car's computer. A scan tool to replace the battery! I think we are approaching the point of overengineering our cars.
@bwest-yq3uc
@bwest-yq3uc Жыл бұрын
True, VW and European vehicles and Ford needs a scan tool when batter is changed. It tells the computer how much the alternator should be charging the new battery. Sad. I just got me a scan tool and do it myself now.
@jerrykorman7770
@jerrykorman7770 Жыл бұрын
My 2013 Ford Focus doesn’t need a scantool to reset the Battery Management System after changing the battery. I’ve changed my battery twice since new. Easy if you follow this procedure: 1. Ignition on 2. Flash high beams 5 times 3. Press brake pedal 3 times, keeping the brake pedal down the third time. 4. Watch the battery warning light on the dash. It can take up to a minute, but once the battery warning light blinks twice, you’re done.
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