Blog Archive

Sunday, August 25, 2013

Buying a secondhand car

Buy a secondhand car is a very confusing thing to do.

I live in Spain. There is one thing that I know without any doubt, and that is that every secondhand car sold through a dealership is well overpriced. It's as though there were some kind of unspoken conspiricy. If you were a new entrant to selling secondhand cars you would simply take your lead from what everybody else was doing and you would price your cars in line with the market. The mere fact that I would only be offered a pittance by the dealer to take my car off my hands, say fifty to one hundred euros, would not be any reason why it should not be offered for sale for three or four thousand euros.

It is true that a dealer has to offer a guarantee to the buyer for twelve months, but the guarantee has to be carefully examined because it may be virtually worthless. There is an expression that says "money for old rope." That´s what seems to be taking place in my mind on the used car sales lot. I have bought a few cars from dealers and that has led me to this conclusion. I even think that they must shake their heads when another deal has been concluded, in the disbelief that another member of the public has just walked in and given them a fist full of money for nothing.

To scientifically value a car for secondhand sale one should start with the book value that depreciates the vehicle over the years, according to a formula. As a potential buyer with the car in front of you, value can be either added to the car depending on how well it has been maintained, or deducted if it has been badly treated. There must surely be an agency that provides the book value of secondhand vehicles in Spain, but if so it must be a closely guarded secret.

The fundamental problem in buying secondhand is that we are buying someone else's problem without knowing what that problem is. This is the one activity where "Buyer Beware!" applies more than any other. You know that the money you pay that changes the title on the car is only a downpayment. You hope that you will be able to work through the problems that await you without the need to fully renovate the car.

I bought a 1995 Volvo 850 about six or seven years ago. I bought it from the owner of a dealership selling secondhand cars. He had bought himself an "S" class Mercedes as people kept handing him gobs of money. However, it was not too long before the Volvo started simply dying in the middle of traffic. After about 30 seconds I could turn the key again and it would re-start. The solution was to change the main fuses, but for far too long I ran a great risk of getting killed by traffic behind me who were not expecting my car to stall.

The car has run reliably ever since and I absolutely love it. I also have a Jaguar XJ6 Sovereign that is in such good condition that it seems to have just come out of the showroom. However, when I bought it the seller didn't tell me that it was impossible to lock it. For more than a year I drove the car around and left it parked, think it was locked, and it was only by accident I discovered the truth. Only God knows what else is wrong with it, but I drive it so rarely that nothing else has shown up. It is a real Jag classic, and just having it parked in my garage gives me such joy as I am a real Jag man.

I have been lucky! I have a friend who has three cars that he bought and are all rotting away in his back yard as they are all lemons. But then, my friend is a professional victim, so what can I tell you?

Copyright (c) 2013  Eugene Carmichael  

Sunday, August 18, 2013

Who needs Cars?

Elon Musk: A man of Ideas.

(The way to unlimited riches is to build a better mousetrap.)
I don't know who I am paraphrasing, but if you want to get rich simply come up with a better way to do what we do as routine.

Elon Musk is the man who brought us what is now Paypal, and the Tesla electric car, and SpaceX, and now he is focusing on the public need to travel faster and safer.  In fact, he envisions a system to travel on land at speeds up to 760 miles per hour. You probably have heard the announcement by now that he is proposing the Hyperloop, which may, or may not ever become a reality.

There are a whole lot of obstacles in the way of completing a real life system between two major cities, but for the moment that is not the point. The fact is that Elon Musk is still cooking and coming up with fabulous ideas. The science in Hyperloop seems sound and worth serious consideration.

This is an idea worth following to see how it turns out. The point is that the day of safer and faster travel by car is coming, including driverless cars.

Stay tuned!

Copyright (c) 2013   Eugene Carmichael 

Sunday, August 11, 2013

On the road once more

Driving the roads of Green Britain

For those of us who live in Spain it's a real treat to drive the roads of the U.K. as the countryside is so green and lush. There is a reason for that. It's called rainfall that can make driving something of a real challenge at times. When you mix torrential downfalls with fog and large lorrys throwing even more water at you it is very tempting to just pull off at a rest stop and have a cup of tea.

I hired a car from Sixth, and I was satisfied with our transaction. They had promised me a VW Polo or similar. What I got was a Citroen C3 Picasso. I  had not noticed the car before. When I saw it I felt certain I would be disappointed driving it, but it handles really well, with plenty of leg and head space. It is a light car which suggests to me that it might plane on wet surfaces, but other than that it went really well.

I would add one word of caution: when booking a car hire next time, I will do so directly with Sixth rather than one of the other booking agents. The problem to avoid is that of purchasing insurance. I will want to have a contract directly with the company I am renting the vehicle from, and not with a third party. Also, it is important to be sure that the vehicle's glass and tyres are covered as well as the excess.

The other thing that concerns the visitor to England is the purchase of British pounds. At the airport there are many Currency Exchange booths. The traveller simply goes to one of them and makes a purchase. However, I suspect that each booth is in competition with the other and by shopping around you might be able to find a better deal. That no one does that is probably taken advantage of by the dealers.

Driving the country lanes is a real hairaising thing to do. There is barely room for one car, but you are constantly encountering cars coming the other way and they are usually moving fast. Why there are not more crashes remains a mystery. However, some of the seaside towns are so charming. One such place is Mousehole, although you are advised to park on the outskirts and take a walk through the town. It is such a rewarding thing to do.

Copyright (c) 2013      Eugene Carmichael