What are you driving? What's your favorite vehicle that you have owned? What are you lusting after? What should architects drive? What is important to you in a vehicle? Should we even drive vehicles?
My current car is a 2011 Prius. It's rock-solid and will last forever but it's looking old. It's actually peppier than most people think. But I'd like something a little nicer and more fun to drive. Reliability is very important to me, so unfortunately although I love European car design, I don't trust any of them. I need to be able to carry some tools and materials for miscellaneous projects, and hopefully do some travel with it. Currently at the top of my list is a Lexus RX hybrid.
The first few cars I drove were early 1980s Volvo 240s, and the first car I bought myself was a 1980 Volvo 245 painted cherry red. I loved that car and used it like a truck, until I really needed a truck.
I'm looking forward to prices for high-performance electric vehicles to come down. I'd like a Tesla, or any of the electric trucks soon to be on the market.
I've just recently reached a point where I am considering a car payment. Never had one, never wanted one. With the kids out of daycare and credit cards paid off, I finally feel like rewarding myself. I've always had this dream of owning a nice new crew-cab pick-up truck. (I drove an old beat-up F150 for years when I was a brick mason and loved it. That feeling has never left). But I struggle with whether it's that practical. The electric options coming to market do excite me. Alas, I will likely drive my 4-door sedan for at least another year.
I know what you mean. My Prius is long paid for and I'm not excited about taking on a payment. But life is short, and I love cars, so... I've had two F150s and a Dodge Dakota, so I also have a thing for trucks. In fact a Tundra with a flat bed caught my eye recently. But my MIL lives two miles away and I can use her Tacoma TRD whenever I want, which makes it hard to justify buying a truck. That doesn't mean I don't look. ;-)
I was driving a 2003 Audi A4 quattro until December, when it started to die, and I bought a 2011 Mini Cooper S, both very fun to drive. But the nicest car I've owned was a 2006 Saab 9-3 sport kombi turbo, unfortunately Saab disappeared and it was incredibly expensive to get parts, I sold it when I had to replace a head lamp bulb for $250.
Saabs were great. My wife had a 1990 Saab 900 with a manual shift when we got together and it was fun to drive until it fell apart. My MIL has had a lot of Saabs and still drives a 9-3, though it's on borrowed time. Our local mechanic is a Saab specialist but it's just not worth trying to keep them running. Did you find the Audi to be reliable? On my wish list is an Audi Allroad, among others.
That particular Audi model was very reliable, but I only had it for 3 years, I live in a place where some people use their second or third homes and have a car for 3 months out of the year, hence the audi had very low mileage, but wasn't really well maintained. I don't trust audi's in general, and now I have a mini with a bmw engine.... I think reliability is relative, and sometimes you get bad luck, but European cars are more expensive to maintain for sure.
In 2015 I bought the quintessential Architect's Car: a black Volvo V70R. It's gorgeous, but like Wood Guy said - I don't trust it. I've probably spent more in maintenance in the past 5 years than I spent to buy the car. I'm currently in the process of fixing it up one last time so I can sell it.
I'm selling it because in the fall we bought a lifted '06 Tundra (nicknamed it the "Tig Ol' Bundra"). I have a Leer canopy on order & working on a design for a minimalist camper build. Once that's squared away we're planning to trade in my wife's old Toyota Matrix for some sort of plug in hybrid. The overall scheme is to stop having "my car & her car" and start having "the city car" that we use when we need to go somewhere we can't walk / bike / bus, and "the mountain truck" for our weekend adventures. I'll post a photo set of the camper build when it's done.
As for a dream car, if money was no object I'd shell out six figures for a Bollinger or a convert a classic to electric:
It figures that you and I would have similar taste in vehicles. I think the Volvo V60 is one of the most beautiful cars made today. Unfortunately it gets terrible reliability ratings. The V70 is not quite as sexy but it's definitely architecty.
I remember your new Tundra from the last car thread. I've been considering both newer-style and older-style Tundras, but the newer ones get horrible milage, and the old ones like yours often have rusted frames around here. You're lucky to not be in salted road-land. Bollingers are awesome.
I'm on my third Nissan Altima. Current one is a 2020 SR with AWD. I commute 110 miles per day, and am getting 37.6 miles per gallon.
It's orange. And pretty sexy.
I don't really lust after much. I'd like to have a Jeep Gladiator, but don't want the payment for one. I have a thing for station wagons, but I can't make one fit my current full-time needs.
I've had a couple Altimas over the years - good cars. Second only to Toyota Corollas in reliability, particularly when they already have 100K miles on them when you get them, as was the case with every Altima and Corolla I've ever had.
Apr 7, 21 1:50 pm ·
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Wood Guy
I'm with you on the wagons. SUVs usually look bloated in comparison, and their handling matches the look. I love Wrangler-style Jeeps and keep looking at them, and the Gladiator, but they cost a lot for poor ratings. Still fun though. When I lived on Nantucket I used to rent a Jeep when visitors came out so I could take them on the beach without destroying my truck. Though I managed to do that too. Driving your truck IN the ocean is not recommended, apparently.
After a lifetime of whatever used car I could afford, I bought my first brand new car in 2014 (age 47) - a Jeep Patriot. I wanted a small SUV primarily for cargo capacity, as I have some equipment-intensive hobbies, and have been a little disappointed in the Patriot in that regard - they really took the small in "small SUV" seriously - but other than that I have been pretty happy with it.
I think architects tend to want either sports cars or trucks/SUVs, so I think the perfect architect's SUV/sexy sports car crossovers are the Infiniti FX series. I remember the first time I saw one thinking it looked like the bastard child of a Subaru Outback and an Audi TT.
My absolute favorite vehicle ever was actually a piece of crap - a '77 Datsun pickup (that model year had legendary terrible breaks, you can still Google it now and find rants about the brakes). What it did have, however, was a little camper shell just big enough for 2 people or one person with a couple dogs to stretch out in comfortably, with a carpet and padding kit of the ultimate '70s carpet in mottled shades of yellow/gold. That little camper and I had many adventures in my late teens to early 20s.
Rocking a sweet all black 08 Toyota Yaris sedan and I just passed the 200,000km line this past winter. I also take the light rail train to the office so I don’t drive to work. No panel on that car has less than 3 obvious cracks, dents, gouges (evidence of a life in an urban world and snow banks). Even at its age, it’s dirt cheap to maintain.
I like the idea of liking cars in general but I just don’t think I care enough about them. I know I need to replace the Yaris soonish because it is small, but everything available within reason are so blah. I do like the latest VW wagon tho.
I remember you mentioning the Yaris a few times over the years. It sticks in my mind because my 6'-8" BIL has one--great car, and fits him, believe it or not! I've been looking at the VW Golf Sportwagen and the VW Alltrack. I like everything about them except the famous VW reliability--the opposite of Toyota's.
Back when I would sometimes fantasized about having my own successful firm, I always thought I'd put it as close to a train station as I could get it and have a couple company cars for site visits so everyone could take the train to work. I still think it'd be a great idea, but someone more ambitious than I am will have to be the one to do it.
My dream once was once owning something like a larger sailboat. Setting up shop in it and traveling around the gulf and Caribbean; but I know nada about sailing or oceans :P Just sounded really cool to rent a slip for a couple months then move on to some next port.
I have train stations within a few blocks of home and a few blocks of work, but it's only 2 stops so it'd be 15-20 minutes of walking and about 3 minutes on the train vs a 10-15 minute drive. I really should get a bicycle.
I also have the sailboat fantasy despite never having sailed in my life. My mother thinks Lyle Lovett's "If I Had a Boat" is my them song.
Apr 7, 21 4:02 pm ·
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tduds
What sucks is that it is *technically
* possible for me to commute by train. I live less than a mile from an Amtrak stop that's 20 minutes from downtown, which is 1/2 mile from my office. There's an AM train that would get me downtown at 8:00, and a PM train that would get me home at 6:20. I even tried it for a while. The problem is that it's *never* on time, and occasionally I'd be delayed 60-90 minutes mid-trip. Few things are more enraging than being stuck indefinitely on a train. I'm extremely excited about the current administration's infrastructure plan and the attention it's been giving to trains. Our passenger rail system is an embarrassment compared to every other country I've visited (even the "developing" ones!) & it desperately needs upgrading.
We were shopping for used CR-Vs and the volvo popped up. I dismissed it as an anomaly, but I think we got lucky due to nobody buying cars during the pandemic.
Whenever I see one I imagine the designer looking at the model and saying it needs something... then giving it a little squeeze, and voila, the indented sides that give it personality. And that a lot of other brands are now copying.
The coolest thing about that move is the way it prevents the wheel wells from presenting inside the back. Somehow it has more space in the rear than an Outback yet the wheel wells are outside the interior space!
20-year-old Subaru Forester is my not-so-daily driver. I have not broken the 200k mile mark yet, but probably would have in 2020 if not for the pandemic. Used to be the family's only car, but we bought an Outback (late 2010's) when my wife and I needed to shuttle the kiddo around more and coordinating the one car was becoming a hassle. These last few years it's been relegated to getting me to and from the bus station when I was going into the office, and errands on the weekends (and shuttling the kiddo around obviously).
Been thinking about going electric recently though. Electric bicycle that is. Torn between getting a commuting setup that will go the distance into the city, or a cargo bike that will do the local trips to drop off the kiddo at school and pick up groceries, etc.
The one new car my wife and I bought was a 2005 Forester, manual shift. We drove the hell out of it, including one 3000 mile trip in 95° weather when the A/C decided to quit! We had it until two years ago, when rust got the best of it. That was a good thread, and I considered reanimating it but thought a fresh start would be good.
When we got rid of our outback it was 17 years old, had no working A/C, an oil plug that leaked like a seive, squeaky suspension (you can recognize a subaru squeak,) the gas lid switch was busted, none of the lighter provided power, and some body damage. The dealer laughed his ass off, showed the entire staff, then gave me 500 bucks as a gesture of good will.
Apr 7, 21 5:40 pm ·
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mightyaa
When I worked downtown, I seriously considered a electric skateboard. Basically, I'm a couple miles from the light rail. So I could ride the board, carry on-board, light rail downtown, then board another quarter mile to the office.... Then changed jobs and now commute 40 miles down the highway :/
I just checked SP and the subee is 20-years-young at 192k miles. I thought I was closer; probably a few more years before I'll break 200k with how little I drive it. It has had the normal subee woes like the notorious head gasket leak, but aside from that it's been pretty reliable for us. Electrical issues are starting to creep up here and there, like half my dash lights are out so it's a little difficult to see how fast I'm driving at night. The rear dome light doesn't work all the time when you open the back. Moonroof slipped off the track or something and we disconnected the power to it.
It's also a very strange spot to pose with your bike...unless you had to dump a dead body of course, for which this bike is perfectly suited: https://goo.gl/maps/5kKeY6LgWU15js5h8
1971 Datsun 240z; still titled under my parents the original owners. I grew up in this car. Favorite cruiser. Slowly figuring out how to tune dual SU carbs.
1973 Land Rover 88 Series III. My project car. Chevy drivetrain from a botched engine swap, non-runner, needs a ton of work including a frame. So it’s basically been my expensive rolling toolshed for a couple decades. Had so many things wrong it was cheaper to buy the next one.
1980 International Harvester Scout II. Mildly modified. 4-barrel, hot cam, family cage, lift and lockers. 4-spd, V8.
1990 Nissan 300zx Twin-Turbo. Always in a various state of something wearing out; original owner. This was my first hand-me-down office car. I kept after they only offered $2500 on a trade (for a Saab back in 2000).
2008 BMW M3. V8, 6-spd. Original owner and was my daily until last month. Was my office car when I had a firm. Like the Nissan, was offered shit on trade ($11k), so I just kept it.
2017 Range Rover TD6. Still on temp tags. Diesel, 4wd, can haul my stuff around the mountains, good gas mileage and range while surrounded in a leather cocoon with dolby digital while churning down the highway or stuck in traffic. I'm still transitioning from fast sports saloon to slow big land yacht.
Note the eclectic taste; American steel, JDM, and Euro's as well as sports and functional SUVS. There's also a admired design philosophy at work here; My 4x4's are real, as in low range transfer cases and off-road capable. The sports cars are RWD and corner carvers. Just different approaches and goals which I can appreciate.
I want a Scout so bad (or a first gen Bronco)! But other than being extremely beautiful, it doesn't suit my vehicle needs in almost any way. Maybe if I strike it rich and retire I'll get one as a toy. A boy can dream.
Apr 7, 21 3:54 pm ·
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JLC-1
this one came up in the local swap facebook page a couple of days ago, it's not too far from you might, in rifle.
I like the Land Rover 88. My dad just recently got into the Defenders. He's having one rebuilt & it should be ready sometime this summer, it's all he talks about lately.
Apr 7, 21 4:44 pm ·
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mightyaa
Oh lol JLC... $265k for that Defender with a LS-3. Ya... that's a rip off.
Can I be you when I grow up? Nice collection. I'm reminded of my childhood, collecting Matchbox cars and building things with LEGOs. Not much has changed, I guess.
Apr 7, 21 5:32 pm ·
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mightyaa
lol... that's pretty much it. "What do I want to play with today?" or even "Who do I want to be today?" and you grab a set of keys like you would picking out what shoes go with your outfit. Suit and tie? It pairs well with the Range Rover or BMW. Nice sunny day? Pop the T-tops off and blaze up the turbos on the 300z (or Scout with the top off if you're feeling a bit rustic). Feeling nostalgic, want strangers striking up conversations? Slip on your Vans and head out in 240z or Scout. Cars are about the design for me and the emotional feel. Oh and lol... btw I've told my daughter that if she wants a lot of attention from teenage boys, just borrow one of my cars.
The trouble with cars is 90% of them look terrible & the other 10% are relatively expensive.
I have a 2010 Wrangler now with only 65k ish miles that I plan to drive until either it craps out, becomes too expensive to fix, or we've got the expendable income. The plan is to replace my wife's Forerunner with an all black Tahoe when we start having kids & that will become the "family car" while my Jeep is the "parents & dogs only don't put a child in a jeep with no side airbags" car. We'll see how that works out though, may have to get a new car for myself sooner than anticipated.
Edit: Seriously though, most cars on the road look meh.
I can count on one hand the number of cars produced in the past decade that are even remotely aesthetic. And I'd go as far as to say there hasn't been a single good American truck built since the 90s. It's a shame, auto design had a good
run.
Apr 7, 21 4:00 pm ·
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RJ87
It used to terrify me when I'd pull into our office parking lot & see conservative sedan after conservative sedan lined up. A pickup truck trend has started in the last 5 years, but I now realize all of those sedans were a biproduct of people in our industry being generally frugal / environmentally conscious.
Money is what it is and you have to live within your means financially. But as an office perk certain employees receive gas cards for both business & personal use (I know that's abnormal), so as a result I couldn't care less what the gas mileage is.
Apr 7, 21 4:06 pm ·
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tduds
My 2006 "Full size" truck is smaller than 2018 "Mid-sized" truck. The old F-150 is smaller than the new Ford Ranger. The size trend is toxic and stupid and should be illegal. I don't know why but it just makes me so angry.
I edited my previous comment before your new comment popped up. But as a result of your anger please disregard my line about not caring about gas mileage hahaha.
Wrangler, 4Runner and Tahoe are all on my wish list. My brother had a mid-90s 2-door Yukon (Tahoe clone) and I've been a fan ever since. I agree about price and looks. Good to know that my preferences seem to be shared with my peeps here.
Apr 7, 21 5:34 pm ·
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mightyaa
One of the reasons I got my Range Rover; 28 mpg. I'm thrilled considering my BMW barely got 20 mpg and hates snow. My wishlist when shopping new included the new Bronco, Rivan truck, and Polestar 2... but all are waitlist. Bronco seems like it'll be a hit and a decent price. I think Ford did a good job with it and I've like their engine lineups; the office did have several F-150's (and Rav 4's and Prius's) before they made us start using our personal vehicles.
JLC, my old boss had a 2012-ish 4Runner I rode in a few times and I felt the same. They look cool and are good for off-roading, which I don't do, so there's no point in me getting one. I just like imagining my fleet including one someday, which won't happen. Mightyaa, I agree that the new Bronco looks great--they actually kept a lot of the cool stuff from the 70s-80s models. Ford in general does a nice job with design. I wish their trucks lasted more than a few years in the salt belt though. My two F150s were expensive to run. 13 MPG didn't help, though I know the newer ones get better mileage.
Apr 7, 21 6:35 pm ·
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Wood Guy
Tduds, I always liked the size of the T100--7/8 of full truck size. Too bad they have goofy proportions. And haven't been made in 20+ years. In the early 2000s I was torn between an F150 and a Tundra, and went for the Ford--very similar in size and style at the time, but the Ford (3 years old at the time) was a better color and came with a cap. Ah the lessons of youth.
Ya.. the office had newer F-150's with the ecoboost turbo v6's and I think aluminum bodies. Engine and drivetrain impressed me. They felt faster than the Dodge Ram pickups with the V8. Didn't have them long enough for me to judge how well the body holds up (Colorado also uses salt). One of my managers has a very nice Tundra; it has a great interior, but I think it was one of those special named versions. His complaint is its no different than our base model Prius: cheap arse switches, touchscreen and all. So, lovely leather, stitching and soft touch stuff, then same old crappy plastic interfaces like the rest of the lineup.
so i'm probably going to be getting a new car. a tree fell on mine. it needs to fit two saint bernards. i currently have a jeep renegade. more than likely i'll get the same. anything else i should really consider? i've never owned a car that isn't an american brand (chevy/ ford/ mopar) my favorite car was a '79 camaro, but i can't fit 2 dogs in one of those.
Apr 7, 21 6:55 pm ·
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mightyaa
If you want the current 'hot' classics with rising values; mid 70's to 80's SUV's. Jeep Wagoneers, 2nd Gen Broncos and PowerWagons. There's also classics like the Willies Wagons or Jeepsters/Commandos. New? Ford Bronco, another Jeep, and you might look at Rivian's suv if you are considering electric. (Rivian is US, and funded by Amazon and Ford). I seriously looked at the Lincoln Aviator and Ford just introduced a new redesigned Explorer that looks nice. GM lineup looked dated but I think they have a new one as well; ?Trailblazer? Everybody has a SUV now.
I keep coming back to the Forester as an excellent value with everything you really need. My wife and her sister both have 2016 Foresters and they are nice little SUVs. The one I would want (and there is a decent chance I would actually get, when I finally pull the trigger on something) is a 2014-2018 Forester 2.0 XT. It has a peppy and reliable turbo engine (reliable for a turbo, anyway) that many reviewers say is almost as much fun as a WRX STI, Subaru's sports car. Zero to 60 in under 7 seconds, not bad for an affordable SUV. If you put the rear seats down, two Saint Bernards would fit, but they would be pretty tight with the seats up.
Currently driving a 1995 Mercedes e320 Wagon with < 120k. It's handy for art hauling.
Not mine, but same model. Between working at home and living in a village I'm driving maybe 3k/year. No new cars for me, I hate the gizmo electronics and don't want built-in tracking and monitoring.
Recently got rid of our '98 4Runner with 150k because the frame was rotting out. Bought it new, ordered from Japan, 6 cylinder with a 5-speed. That thing was a billy goat and the most reliable vehicle I've ever had. Aside from basic maintenance, over 22 years the only things I replaced were shocks, starter, valve cover gasket, and ball joints.
I would greatly prefer having public transit but here in Paradise it is basically non-existent. No self-appointed master-of-the-universe is going to leave his G500 in the city and rub elbows [[[shudder]]] with poor people. Bicycling here is a death wish with all the overentitled sociopaths racing around. And texting! WTF
That's a classic! Your comments on the other car thread have stuck with me, about what kind of car an architect [or designer] should drive. Old 4Runners and MBs fit the bill. I know at least two people who have converted older diesel MBs into biodiesels; apparently it's a good car for that.
I have a hard time articulating it, but older MBs feel like the quintessential architect car to me. Still precious in their own right, but also old enough to be considered utilitarian. Rarely ostentatious. Add in the idea that you're doing the maintenance yourself, and I think it sends a message that while you appreciate aesthetics, you know what it takes to get there.
8 year old Subaru Impreza with manual shifter. This is the most fun I have ever owned. Want to get a WRX but probably not a good idea if I want to avoid parking tickets...
I've looked at both of those too. I can't get a WRX for the same reason, plus when you see a slightly overweight, balding, middle-aged white guy get out of one it screams "midlife crisis." I want my midlife crisis to be more discreet.
Non sequitur (small s): my research shows that of all the European brands, Porsche actually has pretty good reliability ratings. My first Matchbox-car-love was a Porsche 944, back when it was a brand new model. So I've been looking at those, and other Porsches...
Ha ha, I finally clicked through to watch the video. That's a tricked out Toyota Previa.
We had an early 90's Previa that was our "reliable vehicle" until we bought the Forester. We drove the heck out of that thing, gave it to my wife's cousin who drove it cross country, and kept it going for another few years. She ended up giving it away when she moved back across the country. It might still be out there on the roads for all I know. Hopefully someone took a look at the transmission. Engine will be fine though. That engine will never die. It won't put out much power to get you anywhere quickly, but it will never die.
First new car I ever bought was my current daily driver - 2015 Subaru Crosstrek. It's been a tank so far. Great on snow and ice with the right tires and a lot more ground clearance than a ton of mid sized SUVs. Could use more power but otherwise it's been perfect.
For fun, we own a BMW Z3 convertible. Has never seen snow, rain, or a gravel road. 20k KMs (was stored properly in a heated garage for a decade before we got it). It doesn't have streaming or satellite radio, nor does it have a CD player - but it does have a tape player. Which is never not funny to point out.
Also for fun, I have a heavily (heavily!) modified 1978 Yamaha Kenny Roberts race replica. I think there's about 4 original parts on the bike by now, and it can be fussy, but it's a great time. I'm thinking of selling this one and getting something newer and a lot more reliable, but I have the feeling my better half would have something to say about that as we enter middle age. I've owned something like a dozen bikes, starting when I was a little redneck kid. Highly recommended.
If my cars weren’t allowed on a dirt road, I’d never get to go home.
Apr 8, 21 7:40 am ·
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Wood Guy
A Crosstrek was the first car I considered on this current round of car-dreaming. They definitely look like fun, though I'd like a car that actually has good power for once. Though I need to be careful to not get too carried away. I'm impressed that you can drive the Z3 and the bike without getting yourself into trouble! I'd love to get a bike but I'm positive I would kill myself on one.
Apr 8, 21 9:21 am ·
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bowling_ball
Yeah the Crosstrek is pretty underpowered. My wife insists on driving manual only, so that limits our choices. Compromise. But since I have the bike, it's fair. I've been riding since I was 8 and my father is a riding instructor on the side, so I'm about as comfortable as you can get on two wheels.
Funny, my wife prefers stick as well. Her new-to-her Forester is the first automatic transmission she's ever had. (Another quirk: she has only driven Subarus and Saabs in the 30 years she's been driving.) I enjoy driving stick as well, learned on one and have had several myself. But it's hard to drive stick with a coffee in one hand and a phone in the other.
The first motorcycle I drove was a Honda Goldwing with paniers. I was used to riding bicycles, 4-wheelers and snowmobiles, and didn't have the muscle memory to learn the critical difference of brake placement on a motorcycle. Doing a front wheelie on a big, expensive bike is not a good way to start! Luckily I didn't quite dump it.
After that I rode my brother's on/off road bikes, which were fun, until he crashed and the muffler landed on his bare leg and he got a 3rd degree burn and bone infection. He's much more comfortable on bikes than I am so it was an eye-opener. Proper training probably goes a long way!
The Crosstrek merely adds weight to the Impreza. We tried it, but then ended up getting an Outback 3.6R for my wife. Amazing car as well, and very zippy for being such a big car.
We opted for the 3.6 on our Outback and I'm glad we did. Salesman was trying to make some point that I could brag to others that I have the same engine as a Porsche, and in my head I'm like, "I don't think that really impresses anyone around here. A good portion of my neighbors probably have a Porsche."
first car was a 1990 Ford Taurus... I miss that car. It was a box, it handled great on the highway. It got us all from point A to B. Wouldn't recommend though because I got it when the transmission went for free (plus new transmission on my part) from family. 3 years later, the transmission went again. Was a ford thing back then I'm told.
Upgraded to 1997 Toyota Camry, $5k, first car I bought. That thing lasted. Wife got in a bad accident on the highway and it still drove, but the insurance company totaled it out. We used the totaled money to buy a 1997 Camry for $2k and used the old one for parts. Overall a bad idea, the 2nd camry already had a rebuilt engine and was a taxi beforehand. We eeked along for 3 1/2 years just canibalizing the old camry until we sold both to someone for $500.
Current car is a 2014 Corolla... $7k, a number of complaints for this one. Corollas are not as good as camrys. Handles funny on the highway, feels like you're going to be blown off the road. great gas mileage, but it's really finicky. First car we bought with less than 100k miles on it though. 4 years later and we've put just under 20k miles on it with no problems, just oil changes and the like. It's nice having a car that just works, even if it's not my preference.
We want to upgrade soonish, most likely to a hybrid, Prius's are good, have some friends with leafs that do well.
A fellow frugal driver! I remember going to Disneyworld in 1984 and they had a super-futuristic car on display, one of few memories of that trip. (The doughnuts at the all-you-can-eat buffet are another.) The car was a Taurus. It's funny how it's now seen as kind of frumpy--it was cutting edge at the time! Better than a K-car, at least.
I'm surprised to hear that about Corollas. I haven't driven one but I believe the Prius uses the same platform, and mine (2011) drives well on the highway. The battery weight probably helps. I'm slowly learning to like the look of the newer Priuses, but the Corolla hybrid looks good. I've also been seeing the new Honda Accord hybrid and it's pretty sexy. I had a 2006 Accord which was reliable but boring, so it's nice to see an attractive one. I think I want more cargo room, though.
Yeah, in 2010 corollas changed to electric steering. They did a patch on the software and changed how it worked for the 2014 corollas... but it is still a problem in my opinion. the Camry's kept the old steering at least for that era. I've had a chance to drive some prius's and they don't have the steering problem though they do use electric steering. Toyota's take is "there isn't a problem, that's just how electric steering works and everything's going that way" so in general I will be leery buying another Toyota (something I never thought I'd say).
Interesting article: https://www.treehugger.com/why.... The author, Lloyd Alter, is an architect in Toronto, though he no longer practices. He's a smart guy, and has been our guest on the BS + Beer Show.
Apr 8, 21 11:14 am ·
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atelier nobody
I live in the Los Angeles area, and I feel genuinely unsafe when I'm driving an economy car on a freeway full of suburban assault vehicles - I know a lot of people who have jumped on the yuppie tank bandwagon purely in self defense. It's like safety in LA traffic is based entirely on the doctrine of mutually assured destruction...
Apr 8, 21 3:28 pm ·
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Wood Guy
I don't blame you. Though my Prius and Forester are two of the safest cars on the road, including for crash protection. Many of those behemoths don't perform all that well in crashes.
Apr 8, 21 3:32 pm ·
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bowling_ball
A good friend just bought an Escalade. It's ridiculously huge. (And no, he's not filling up his $120k vehicle with crap to take to the lake - that's what his Ram pickup is for).
Oh man, nice selection! I guess there are perks to running a bigger firm, eh? How do you like the Allroad and the X3? Both are on my not-so-short list. And I need to get into bicycling.
Apr 8, 21 4:18 pm ·
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whistler
The All road is a great one quiver car. It does most everything I need with a bike and ski box. The X3 is really a nice small SUV that my wife really likes as a commuter and decent highway vehicle. ( I find BMW too finicky I prefer the Audi engineering and logic how how it all works and laid out )... probably going swap out the X3 for a new 4 runner and my wife will take over the Audi. My son has pretty much taken the Tacoma. I am finding some of my winter / summer adventures need a more robust vehicle and the Audi doesn't cut it when I can 't get the use of the Tacoma, which is more often now that he has a dirt bike that requires the tacoma to cart it around. I've looked at Defender / Land Rovers but for the price/reliability the Toyotas are a good bet..... i would hate to be suck up north with a broken down Land Rover, you'd be better off getting service on the Moon!
My son was t
I was saying my son was taken out by a deer in the Tacoma last year and even it was difficult to get serviced in a not so remote spot. Need to drive a north American truck to get anyone to work on them up north.
A few years ago the 4Runner was T-boned by a deer. I had just canceled the collission coverage three days before. Found a junkyard door in the same color and bolted it on.
Ouch, My son was travelling at about 80 km on a clear day on his way to a hunting trip and the deer jumped right across the hwy and took out the whole front end and nearly totalled the car. Crazy stupid those deer... nothing left of the front end or the deer!
I hit deer twice, on the same stretch of road that I don't travel often, with the same car. The first time it totalled the car (my parents' 1984 Volvo 240 that I drove) but my dad was on the board of the vocational school and got it student-repaired for free, AND got the dirty ivory color repainted to metallic blue. Pretty sweet car for a high school kid in rural Maine. Within a week a deer ran into the side of the car and dragged its face down the side, leaving a big gouge. I felt bad for the deer but technically it hit me.
I definitely keep in mind what vehicles can be easily repaired around here. There is civilization within a 1/2 hour drive but for higher-end vehicles the closest dealers are 1 1/2 hours away. The closest shop is a Subaru specialist, not a dealer, just a few miles away, which skews me in that direction even if I don't love Subaru's long-term reliability.
Sadly it now just has a racing stripe on the hood; I got backed over by a truck and had to replace the hood. Husband didn’t want to do the custom graphic again.
Very important: I drive it with the top down every day it is above 28° F and sunny.
It’s my first ever new car, but my third Miata. I’ll never drive any other car except a Miata. The day Miatas become electric and therefore not stick shift is the day I stop driving.
I was hoping you'd share this photo, Donna! I know what you mean about manual shift, but have you driven an electric vehicle? The ones I have driven--a Tesla, and a custom mid-90s Chevy S10) have amazing acceleration. But there's nothing like physically connecting with the transmission.
I grew up with electric garden tractors and learned to shift on the fly from low gear to high gear, though it wasn't recommended. (I also learned young how to shift manual transmission cars cleanly, without using the clutch, though I know that's not recommended either.)
The graphics are stickers, Miles. The Firechicken graphic was birthed from me asking husband if the Trans Am Firebird graphics were painted or stickers and he said "All factory graphics are stickers, but you can order the stickers, you could even order one and stick it on your Miata".
The FJ-40 is well known as a rust bucket, the US was exporting low-grade steel to Japan. I had an FJ-60 before there was such a thing as SUVs. It was a tank and drank gas like one.
First car was an '02 Mini Cooper, which I really miss and reminisce over. It was time for it to go, but I definitely find myself browsing Craigslist for '06 Mini Cooper S. At $3-5K it's awfully tempting. Every change they've made after that model has bastardized the center console more and more. That Mini was a super fun car, but it went through oil so quickly I carried a quart in the trunk. Mechanic could never figure out exactly why it was so thirsty. Ultimately sold the Mini to pick up the current vehicle, a 2017 Subaru Forester.
It checks all the boxes a car should from a utilitarian sense. But I'd be lying if I said it was fun to drive, zippy, or any other 'fun' adjective used to describe cars. I love it though, because while it doesn't necessarily excel in any one segment, it does everything I need a car to do at a high level. I should say it's pretty phenomenal in the snow.
The wife and I share that Forester, and before WFH was the norm I'd bike into work most days. One way commute over the last 4 years ranged from 6-11mi. Current ride is a Kona Wheelhouse, which I like a lot.
We just traded our son's Mini and I have to admit I did enjoy zipping around in it. Not as much as the Miata, but not too far off in terms of fun and a significantly smarter car - damn could it fit a lot inside!
2019 XC40. My first car in years. Been living the past 13 years in London, NYC, and Munich so haven't needed a car in some time. It is nice to have one now. Glad to see a lot of Volvo love here. They're cheap to insure which makes the monthly cost to lease close to a Mazda 3 or even a Crosstrek all in. I'm pretty tempted to move up to the Polestar 2 when this lease is up.
I have to say that Volvo's recent design direction change is really quite good. I looked seriously at the XC60CC. Unfortunately the Volvo dealer just wasn't prepared to bargain much and the Audi Allroad became the next best bet. ( first world problems ). I love the styling across all the volvo models.
Haha, I don't know what kind of car your previous one was but I think I had the same model! I like Kia Souls, especially the hybrid version--just not different enough from my Prius to justify a change. You must not live with a gravel driveway or gravel roads--I've had black vehicles and let's just say that having to constantly clean them, or having them constantly look/be dirty, is not my idea of a good time. Whatever vehicle I get, I'm leaning toward silver color because I've found it's much easier to keep clean-looking but has some of the cool factor of black.
Apr 13, 21 10:06 am ·
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mightyaa
lol.. Most mine are black, or really dark shades of grey. Just one white, and one sort of a oxidized grey with a hint of olive undertones and bare dull aluminum highlights. :P
Apr 13, 21 12:42 pm ·
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whistler
I am never buying a black or grey car again. Too many on the road and only look good when perfectly detailed... sorry not in my nature to keep them that clean, also Canadian winter kinda gets in the way eh!
Apr 13, 21 2:59 pm ·
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Automotive Central
What are you driving? What's your favorite vehicle that you have owned? What are you lusting after? What should architects drive? What is important to you in a vehicle? Should we even drive vehicles?
My current car is a 2011 Prius. It's rock-solid and will last forever but it's looking old. It's actually peppier than most people think. But I'd like something a little nicer and more fun to drive. Reliability is very important to me, so unfortunately although I love European car design, I don't trust any of them. I need to be able to carry some tools and materials for miscellaneous projects, and hopefully do some travel with it. Currently at the top of my list is a Lexus RX hybrid.
The first few cars I drove were early 1980s Volvo 240s, and the first car I bought myself was a 1980 Volvo 245 painted cherry red. I loved that car and used it like a truck, until I really needed a truck.
I'm looking forward to prices for high-performance electric vehicles to come down. I'd like a Tesla, or any of the electric trucks soon to be on the market.
I've just recently reached a point where I am considering a car payment. Never had one, never wanted one. With the kids out of daycare and credit cards paid off, I finally feel like rewarding myself. I've always had this dream of owning a nice new crew-cab pick-up truck. (I drove an old beat-up F150 for years when I was a brick mason and loved it. That feeling has never left). But I struggle with whether it's that practical. The electric options coming to market do excite me. Alas, I will likely drive my 4-door sedan for at least another year.
I know what you mean. My Prius is long paid for and I'm not excited about taking on a payment. But life is short, and I love cars, so... I've had two F150s and a Dodge Dakota, so I also have a thing for trucks. In fact a Tundra with a flat bed caught my eye recently. But my MIL lives two miles away and I can use her Tacoma TRD whenever I want, which makes it hard to justify buying a truck. That doesn't mean I don't look. ;-)
I was driving a 2003 Audi A4 quattro until December, when it started to die, and I bought a 2011 Mini Cooper S, both very fun to drive. But the nicest car I've owned was a 2006 Saab 9-3 sport kombi turbo, unfortunately Saab disappeared and it was incredibly expensive to get parts, I sold it when I had to replace a head lamp bulb for $250.
Saabs were great. My wife had a 1990 Saab 900 with a manual shift when we got together and it was fun to drive until it fell apart. My MIL has had a lot of Saabs and still drives a 9-3, though it's on borrowed time. Our local mechanic is a Saab specialist but it's just not worth trying to keep them running. Did you find the Audi to be reliable? On my wish list is an Audi Allroad, among others.
That particular Audi model was very reliable, but I only had it for 3 years, I live in a place where some people use their second or third homes and have a car for 3 months out of the year, hence the audi had very low mileage, but wasn't really well maintained. I don't trust audi's in general, and now I have a mini with a bmw engine.... I think reliability is relative, and sometimes you get bad luck, but European cars are more expensive to maintain for sure.
PS the most reliable car I've had was 1986 Saab 900 S, I donated it when the wheel hub came off over a speed bump in 2012.
Yep.. I had a 2000 Saab 9-3 Viggen 5dr. Loved that car.
In 2015 I bought the quintessential Architect's Car: a black Volvo V70R. It's gorgeous, but like Wood Guy said - I don't trust it. I've probably spent more in maintenance in the past 5 years than I spent to buy the car. I'm currently in the process of fixing it up one last time so I can sell it.
I'm selling it because in the fall we bought a lifted '06 Tundra (nicknamed it the "Tig Ol' Bundra"). I have a Leer canopy on order & working on a design for a minimalist camper build. Once that's squared away we're planning to trade in my wife's old Toyota Matrix for some sort of plug in hybrid. The overall scheme is to stop having "my car & her car" and start having "the city car" that we use when we need to go somewhere we can't walk / bike / bus, and "the mountain truck" for our weekend adventures. I'll post a photo set of the camper build when it's done.
As for a dream car, if money was no object I'd shell out six figures for a Bollinger or a convert a classic to electric:
https://bollingermotors.com/bo...
https://www.zerolabs.com/
Sadly money is an object.
It figures that you and I would have similar taste in vehicles. I think the Volvo V60 is one of the most beautiful cars made today. Unfortunately it gets terrible reliability ratings. The V70 is not quite as sexy but it's definitely architecty.
I remember your new Tundra from the last car thread. I've been considering both newer-style and older-style Tundras, but the newer ones get horrible milage, and the old ones like yours often have rusted frames around here. You're lucky to not be in salted road-land. Bollingers are awesome.
The new Polestar wagon is the first electric car I've seen that's actually *wowed* me with its design. Hoping that's the beginning of a trend.
Same body as the V60, I believe.
Yep, pretty sure it is. I'm just a sucker for Volvos.
Polestar 2 is on the same platform as the XC40 and upcoming C40.
I'm on my third Nissan Altima. Current one is a 2020 SR with AWD. I commute 110 miles per day, and am getting 37.6 miles per gallon.
It's orange. And pretty sexy.
I don't really lust after much. I'd like to have a Jeep Gladiator, but don't want the payment for one. I have a thing for station wagons, but I can't make one fit my current full-time needs.
I've had a couple Altimas over the years - good cars. Second only to Toyota Corollas in reliability, particularly when they already have 100K miles on them when you get them, as was the case with every Altima and Corolla I've ever had.
I'm with you on the wagons. SUVs usually look bloated in comparison, and their handling matches the look. I love Wrangler-style Jeeps and keep looking at them, and the Gladiator, but they cost a lot for poor ratings. Still fun though. When I lived on Nantucket I used to rent a Jeep when visitors came out so I could take them on the beach without destroying my truck. Though I managed to do that too. Driving your truck IN the ocean is not recommended, apparently.
I have Black 2011 Kia Sorento with 294,000 kms, that I bought from my firm 3 years ago for 1$
Good car, great price!
After a lifetime of whatever used car I could afford, I bought my first brand new car in 2014 (age 47) - a Jeep Patriot. I wanted a small SUV primarily for cargo capacity, as I have some equipment-intensive hobbies, and have been a little disappointed in the Patriot in that regard - they really took the small in "small SUV" seriously - but other than that I have been pretty happy with it.
I think architects tend to want either sports cars or trucks/SUVs, so I think the perfect architect's SUV/sexy sports car crossovers are the Infiniti FX series. I remember the first time I saw one thinking it looked like the bastard child of a Subaru Outback and an Audi TT.
My absolute favorite vehicle ever was actually a piece of crap - a '77 Datsun pickup (that model year had legendary terrible breaks, you can still Google it now and find rants about the brakes). What it did have, however, was a little camper shell just big enough for 2 people or one person with a couple dogs to stretch out in comfortably, with a carpet and padding kit of the ultimate '70s carpet in mottled shades of yellow/gold. That little camper and I had many adventures in my late teens to early 20s.
2015 Nissan Altima 3.5 sl. The last model for 3.5 in the Altima trim. Fast.
Coolest? 1971 Dodge Demon 340 4 speed. Drag car.
Want? Either the latest Challenger Hellcat, or 1970 Hemi Dart.
Rocking a sweet all black 08 Toyota Yaris sedan and I just passed the 200,000km line this past winter. I also take the light rail train to the office so I don’t drive to work. No panel on that car has less than 3 obvious cracks, dents, gouges (evidence of a life in an urban world and snow banks). Even at its age, it’s dirt cheap to maintain.
I like the idea of liking cars in general but I just don’t think I care enough about them. I know I need to replace the Yaris soonish because it is small, but everything available within reason are so blah. I do like the latest VW wagon tho.
I remember you mentioning the Yaris a few times over the years. It sticks in my mind because my 6'-8" BIL has one--great car, and fits him, believe it or not! I've been looking at the VW Golf Sportwagen and the VW Alltrack. I like everything about them except the famous VW reliability--the opposite of Toyota's.
WG, we had 4 yaris in my group of friends at one time a while back. 2 are left. I agree with the entirety of your VW statement.
Did you drive them in parades, clown-car style? I still like VWs. Just last night I was looking online at Golfs and Eurovans. And Super Beetles.
No parade, but we would park them side-by-side whenever there were get-togethers. We did once pack 7 people in a the 2door hatchback yaris.
I suppose you could drive them like the Italian Job mob!
"Should we even drive vehicles?"
Back when I would sometimes fantasized about having my own successful firm, I always thought I'd put it as close to a train station as I could get it and have a couple company cars for site visits so everyone could take the train to work. I still think it'd be a great idea, but someone more ambitious than I am will have to be the one to do it.
I'm obsessed with the fantasy of taking the train to work. Too bad rail service in America sucks so bad outside of Bos-Wash.
My dream once was once owning something like a larger sailboat. Setting up shop in it and traveling around the gulf and Caribbean; but I know nada about sailing or oceans :P Just sounded really cool to rent a slip for a couple months then move on to some next port.
I have train stations within a few blocks of home and a few blocks of work, but it's only 2 stops so it'd be 15-20 minutes of walking and about 3 minutes on the train vs a 10-15 minute drive. I really should get a bicycle.
I also have the sailboat fantasy despite never having sailed in my life. My mother thinks Lyle Lovett's "If I Had a Boat" is my them song.
What sucks is that it is *technically * possible for me to commute by train. I live less than a mile from an Amtrak stop that's 20 minutes from downtown, which is 1/2 mile from my office. There's an AM train that would get me downtown at 8:00, and a PM train that would get me home at 6:20. I even tried it for a while. The problem is that it's *never* on time, and occasionally I'd be delayed 60-90 minutes mid-trip. Few things are more enraging than being stuck indefinitely on a train. I'm extremely excited about the current administration's infrastructure plan and the attention it's been giving to trains. Our passenger rail system is an embarrassment compared to every other country I've visited (even the "developing" ones!) & it desperately needs upgrading.
We gots an xc60 and we likes it, precious.
That is a nice looking car. Volvo does design right! Quite a change from the "boxy but good" era. Though I've always liked how they look.
We were shopping for used CR-Vs and the volvo popped up. I dismissed it as an anomaly, but I think we got lucky due to nobody buying cars during the pandemic.
It's by far the nicest card I have ever owned. And it goes over the rough stuff better than our subee ever did.
Whenever I see one I imagine the designer looking at the model and saying it needs something... then giving it a little squeeze, and voila, the indented sides that give it personality. And that a lot of other brands are now copying.
The coolest thing about that move is the way it prevents the wheel wells from presenting inside the back. Somehow it has more space in the rear than an Outback yet the wheel wells are outside the interior space!
20-year-old Subaru Forester is my not-so-daily driver. I have not broken the 200k mile mark yet, but probably would have in 2020 if not for the pandemic. Used to be the family's only car, but we bought an Outback (late 2010's) when my wife and I needed to shuttle the kiddo around more and coordinating the one car was becoming a hassle. These last few years it's been relegated to getting me to and from the bus station when I was going into the office, and errands on the weekends (and shuttling the kiddo around obviously).
Been thinking about going electric recently though. Electric bicycle that is. Torn between getting a commuting setup that will go the distance into the city, or a cargo bike that will do the local trips to drop off the kiddo at school and pick up groceries, etc.
Also, older related thread but still a good one: What kind of car should an architect drive? Shame most of the links to images are broken.
TWENTY YEAR OLD subee with sub 200k miles?!
The one new car my wife and I bought was a 2005 Forester, manual shift. We drove the hell out of it, including one 3000 mile trip in 95° weather when the A/C decided to quit! We had it until two years ago, when rust got the best of it. That was a good thread, and I considered reanimating it but thought a fresh start would be good.
When we got rid of our outback it was 17 years old, had no working A/C, an oil plug that leaked like a seive, squeaky suspension (you can recognize a subaru squeak,) the gas lid switch was busted, none of the lighter provided power, and some body damage. The dealer laughed his ass off, showed the entire staff, then gave me 500 bucks as a gesture of good will.
When I worked downtown, I seriously considered a electric skateboard. Basically, I'm a couple miles from the light rail. So I could ride the board, carry on-board, light rail downtown, then board another quarter mile to the office.... Then changed jobs and now commute 40 miles down the highway :/
I just checked SP and the subee is 20-years-young at 192k miles. I thought I was closer; probably a few more years before I'll break 200k with how little I drive it. It has had the normal subee woes like the notorious head gasket leak, but aside from that it's been pretty reliable for us. Electrical issues are starting to creep up here and there, like half my dash lights are out so it's a little difficult to see how fast I'm driving at night. The rear dome light doesn't work all the time when you open the back. Moonroof slipped off the track or something and we disconnected the power to it.
This is my ride, with electric support when needed:
I like your hair
Nice yacht.
For some reason I thought you were a guy...
^gents... it's a stock image of the product.
(https://www.bikesland.nl/cargo...) 3rd image
Party pooper
how do we know randomised isn't a model on the side?
This on my n+1 list.
It's also a very strange spot to pose with your bike...unless you had to dump a dead body of course, for which this bike is perfectly suited: https://goo.gl/maps/5kKeY6LgWU15js5h8
That 'nice yacht' is the Eye Filmmuseum by Delugan Meissl ;-)
https://www.eyefilm.nl/en/visi...
2018 Toyota 4 runner. Love it. It’s my favorite car I’ve owned this far. I’m not a big car person, but it’s very comfortable and reliable.
It’s my Achilles heel. I own:
1971 Datsun 240z; still titled under my parents the original owners. I grew up in this car. Favorite cruiser. Slowly figuring out how to tune dual SU carbs.
1973 Land Rover 88 Series III. My project car. Chevy drivetrain from a botched engine swap, non-runner, needs a ton of work including a frame. So it’s basically been my expensive rolling toolshed for a couple decades. Had so many things wrong it was cheaper to buy the next one.
1980 International Harvester Scout II. Mildly modified. 4-barrel, hot cam, family cage, lift and lockers. 4-spd, V8.
1990 Nissan 300zx Twin-Turbo. Always in a various state of something wearing out; original owner. This was my first hand-me-down office car. I kept after they only offered $2500 on a trade (for a Saab back in 2000).
2008 BMW M3. V8, 6-spd. Original owner and was my daily until last month. Was my office car when I had a firm. Like the Nissan, was offered shit on trade ($11k), so I just kept it.
2017 Range Rover TD6. Still on temp tags. Diesel, 4wd, can haul my stuff around the mountains, good gas mileage and range while surrounded in a leather cocoon with dolby digital while churning down the highway or stuck in traffic. I'm still transitioning from fast sports saloon to slow big land yacht.
Note the eclectic taste; American steel, JDM, and Euro's as well as sports and functional SUVS. There's also a admired design philosophy at work here; My 4x4's are real, as in low range transfer cases and off-road capable. The sports cars are RWD and corner carvers. Just different approaches and goals which I can appreciate.
I want a Scout so bad (or a first gen Bronco)! But other than being extremely beautiful, it doesn't suit my vehicle needs in almost any way. Maybe if I strike it rich and retire I'll get one as a toy. A boy can dream.
this one came up in the local swap facebook page a couple of days ago, it's not too far from you might, in rifle.
Here's 3 of them
The Scout is probably the one I'll be selling in the next few years after new paint and some interior. They're worth a ton now and I'm out of space.
And the 240z; it gets the garage.
I like the Land Rover 88. My dad just recently got into the Defenders. He's having one rebuilt & it should be ready sometime this summer, it's all he talks about lately.
Oh lol JLC... $265k for that Defender with a LS-3. Ya... that's a rip off.
Can I be you when I grow up? Nice collection. I'm reminded of my childhood, collecting Matchbox cars and building things with LEGOs. Not much has changed, I guess.
lol... that's pretty much it. "What do I want to play with today?" or even "Who do I want to be today?" and you grab a set of keys like you would picking out what shoes go with your outfit. Suit and tie? It pairs well with the Range Rover or BMW. Nice sunny day? Pop the T-tops off and blaze up the turbos on the 300z (or Scout with the top off if you're feeling a bit rustic). Feeling nostalgic, want strangers striking up conversations? Slip on your Vans and head out in 240z or Scout. Cars are about the design for me and the emotional feel. Oh and lol... btw I've told my daughter that if she wants a lot of attention from teenage boys, just borrow one of my cars.
my 20 yr old son would kill you for that datsun.
Get dat son a Datsun!
What about dis son?
mightyaa that Z is GORGEOUS.
Well, he is in med school so I'm sure he'll be able to afford it in a couple of years.
The trouble with cars is 90% of them look terrible & the other 10% are relatively expensive.
I have a 2010 Wrangler now with only 65k ish miles that I plan to drive until either it craps out, becomes too expensive to fix, or we've got the expendable income. The plan is to replace my wife's Forerunner with an all black Tahoe when we start having kids & that will become the "family car" while my Jeep is the "parents & dogs only don't put a child in a jeep with no side airbags" car. We'll see how that works out though, may have to get a new car for myself sooner than anticipated.
Edit: Seriously though, most cars on the road look meh.
I can count on one hand the number of cars produced in the past decade that are even remotely aesthetic. And I'd go as far as to say there hasn't been a single good American truck built since the 90s. It's a shame, auto design had a good run.
It used to terrify me when I'd pull into our office parking lot & see conservative sedan after conservative sedan lined up. A pickup truck trend has started in the last 5 years, but I now realize all of those sedans were a biproduct of people in our industry being generally frugal / environmentally conscious.
Money is what it is and you have to live within your means financially. But as an office perk certain employees receive gas cards for both business & personal use (I know that's abnormal), so as a result I couldn't care less what the gas mileage is.
My 2006 "Full size" truck is smaller than 2018 "Mid-sized" truck. The old F-150 is smaller than the new Ford Ranger. The size trend is toxic and stupid and should be illegal. I don't know why but it just makes me so angry.
I edited my previous comment before your new comment popped up. But as a result of your anger please disregard my line about not caring about gas mileage hahaha.
Gas mileage is a thing, but it's a small concern when large trucks are literally killing pedestrians. That's the real source of my outrage.
Wrangler, 4Runner and Tahoe are all on my wish list. My brother had a mid-90s 2-door Yukon (Tahoe clone) and I've been a fan ever since. I agree about price and looks. Good to know that my preferences seem to be shared with my peeps here.
One of the reasons I got my Range Rover; 28 mpg. I'm thrilled considering my BMW barely got 20 mpg and hates snow. My wishlist when shopping new included the new Bronco, Rivan truck, and Polestar 2... but all are waitlist. Bronco seems like it'll be a hit and a decent price. I think Ford did a good job with it and I've like their engine lineups; the office did have several F-150's (and Rav 4's and Prius's) before they made us start using our personal vehicles.
wood, rent a 4 runner if you can, I wasn't impressed here in the rockies, windows are too small.
JLC, my old boss had a 2012-ish 4Runner I rode in a few times and I felt the same. They look cool and are good for off-roading, which I don't do, so there's no point in me getting one. I just like imagining my fleet including one someday, which won't happen. Mightyaa, I agree that the new Bronco looks great--they actually kept a lot of the cool stuff from the 70s-80s models. Ford in general does a nice job with design. I wish their trucks lasted more than a few years in the salt belt though. My two F150s were expensive to run. 13 MPG didn't help, though I know the newer ones get better mileage.
Tduds, I always liked the size of the T100--7/8 of full truck size. Too bad they have goofy proportions. And haven't been made in 20+ years. In the early 2000s I was torn between an F150 and a Tundra, and went for the Ford--very similar in size and style at the time, but the Ford (3 years old at the time) was a better color and came with a cap. Ah the lessons of youth.
Ya.. the office had newer F-150's with the ecoboost turbo v6's and I think aluminum bodies. Engine and drivetrain impressed me. They felt faster than the Dodge Ram pickups with the V8. Didn't have them long enough for me to judge how well the body holds up (Colorado also uses salt). One of my managers has a very nice Tundra; it has a great interior, but I think it was one of those special named versions. His complaint is its no different than our base model Prius: cheap arse switches, touchscreen and all. So, lovely leather, stitching and soft touch stuff, then same old crappy plastic interfaces like the rest of the lineup.
so i'm probably going to be getting a new car. a tree fell on mine. it needs to fit two saint bernards. i currently have a jeep renegade. more than likely i'll get the same. anything else i should really consider? i've never owned a car that isn't an american brand (chevy/ ford/ mopar) my favorite car was a '79 camaro, but i can't fit 2 dogs in one of those.
If you want the current 'hot' classics with rising values; mid 70's to 80's SUV's. Jeep Wagoneers, 2nd Gen Broncos and PowerWagons. There's also classics like the Willies Wagons or Jeepsters/Commandos. New? Ford Bronco, another Jeep, and you might look at Rivian's suv if you are considering electric. (Rivian is US, and funded by Amazon and Ford). I seriously looked at the Lincoln Aviator and Ford just introduced a new redesigned Explorer that looks nice. GM lineup looked dated but I think they have a new one as well; ?Trailblazer? Everybody has a SUV now.
Subaru Forester. 'nuff said
I keep coming back to the Forester as an excellent value with everything you really need. My wife and her sister both have 2016 Foresters and they are nice little SUVs. The one I would want (and there is a decent chance I would actually get, when I finally pull the trigger on something) is a 2014-2018 Forester 2.0 XT. It has a peppy and reliable turbo engine (reliable for a turbo, anyway) that many reviewers say is almost as much fun as a WRX STI, Subaru's sports car. Zero to 60 in under 7 seconds, not bad for an affordable SUV. If you put the rear seats down, two Saint Bernards would fit, but they would be pretty tight with the seats up.
Currently driving a 1995 Mercedes e320 Wagon with < 120k. It's handy for art hauling.
Not mine, but same model. Between working at home and living in a village I'm driving maybe 3k/year. No new cars for me, I hate the gizmo electronics and don't want built-in tracking and monitoring.
Recently got rid of our '98 4Runner with 150k because the frame was rotting out. Bought it new, ordered from Japan, 6 cylinder with a 5-speed. That thing was a billy goat and the most reliable vehicle I've ever had. Aside from basic maintenance, over 22 years the only things I replaced were shocks, starter, valve cover gasket, and ball joints.
I would greatly prefer having public transit but here in Paradise it is basically non-existent. No self-appointed master-of-the-universe is going to leave his G500 in the city and rub elbows [[[shudder]]] with poor people. Bicycling here is a death wish with all the overentitled sociopaths racing around. And texting! WTF
That's a classic! Your comments on the other car thread have stuck with me, about what kind of car an architect [or designer] should drive. Old 4Runners and MBs fit the bill. I know at least two people who have converted older diesel MBs into biodiesels; apparently it's a good car for that.
I have a hard time articulating it, but older MBs feel like the quintessential architect car to me. Still precious in their own right, but also old enough to be considered utilitarian. Rarely ostentatious. Add in the idea that you're doing the maintenance yourself, and I think it sends a message that while you appreciate aesthetics, you know what it takes to get there.
8 year old Subaru Impreza with manual shifter. This is the most fun I have ever owned. Want to get a WRX but probably not a good idea if I want to avoid parking tickets...
I've looked at both of those too. I can't get a WRX for the same reason, plus when you see a slightly overweight, balding, middle-aged white guy get out of one it screams "midlife crisis." I want my midlife crisis to be more discreet.
In that case, get a WRX, but rip the badge off!
Nice thread, Wood Guy. Looks like you hit a goldmine!
Thanks! Apparently you're right.
Non sequitur (small s): my research shows that of all the European brands, Porsche actually has pretty good reliability ratings. My first Matchbox-car-love was a Porsche 944, back when it was a brand new model. So I've been looking at those, and other Porsches...
My ride's a 2015 Tartan Prancer.
Albanian state of the art.
Nice suicide doors... but why are there 2 pairs of side mirrors?
Isn't it obvious?
sorry, I was distracted by the sweet karate kicks
i thought it was because it has no reverse gear, just swivel the seats and drive from the other end
Ha ha, I finally clicked through to watch the video. That's a tricked out Toyota Previa.
We had an early 90's Previa that was our "reliable vehicle" until we bought the Forester. We drove the heck out of that thing, gave it to my wife's cousin who drove it cross country, and kept it going for another few years. She ended up giving it away when she moved back across the country. It might still be out there on the roads for all I know. Hopefully someone took a look at the transmission. Engine will be fine though. That engine will never die. It won't put out much power to get you anywhere quickly, but it will never die.
yup
First new car I ever bought was my current daily driver - 2015 Subaru Crosstrek. It's been a tank so far. Great on snow and ice with the right tires and a lot more ground clearance than a ton of mid sized SUVs. Could use more power but otherwise it's been perfect.
For fun, we own a BMW Z3 convertible. Has never seen snow, rain, or a gravel road. 20k KMs (was stored properly in a heated garage for a decade before we got it). It doesn't have streaming or satellite radio, nor does it have a CD player - but it does have a tape player. Which is never not funny to point out.
Also for fun, I have a heavily (heavily!) modified 1978 Yamaha Kenny Roberts race replica. I think there's about 4 original parts on the bike by now, and it can be fussy, but it's a great time. I'm thinking of selling this one and getting something newer and a lot more reliable, but I have the feeling my better half would have something to say about that as we enter middle age. I've owned something like a dozen bikes, starting when I was a little redneck kid. Highly recommended.
If my cars weren’t allowed on a dirt road, I’d never get to go home.
A Crosstrek was the first car I considered on this current round of car-dreaming. They definitely look like fun, though I'd like a car that actually has good power for once. Though I need to be careful to not get too carried away. I'm impressed that you can drive the Z3 and the bike without getting yourself into trouble! I'd love to get a bike but I'm positive I would kill myself on one.
Yeah the Crosstrek is pretty underpowered. My wife insists on driving manual only, so that limits our choices. Compromise. But since I have the bike, it's fair. I've been riding since I was 8 and my father is a riding instructor on the side, so I'm about as comfortable as you can get on two wheels.
Funny, my wife prefers stick as well. Her new-to-her Forester is the first automatic transmission she's ever had. (Another quirk: she has only driven Subarus and Saabs in the 30 years she's been driving.) I enjoy driving stick as well, learned on one and have had several myself. But it's hard to drive stick with a coffee in one hand and a phone in the other.
The first motorcycle I drove was a Honda Goldwing with paniers. I was used to riding bicycles, 4-wheelers and snowmobiles, and didn't have the muscle memory to learn the critical difference of brake placement on a motorcycle. Doing a front wheelie on a big, expensive bike is not a good way to start! Luckily I didn't quite dump it.
After that I rode my brother's on/off road bikes, which were fun, until he crashed and the muffler landed on his bare leg and he got a 3rd degree burn and bone infection. He's much more comfortable on bikes than I am so it was an eye-opener. Proper training probably goes a long way!
The Crosstrek merely adds weight to the Impreza. We tried it, but then ended up getting an Outback 3.6R for my wife. Amazing car as well, and very zippy for being such a big car.
We opted for the 3.6 on our Outback and I'm glad we did. Salesman was trying to make some point that I could brag to others that I have the same engine as a Porsche, and in my head I'm like, "I don't think that really impresses anyone around here. A good portion of my neighbors probably have a Porsche."
first car was a 1990 Ford Taurus... I miss that car. It was a box, it handled great on the highway. It got us all from point A to B. Wouldn't recommend though because I got it when the transmission went for free (plus new transmission on my part) from family. 3 years later, the transmission went again. Was a ford thing back then I'm told.
Upgraded to 1997 Toyota Camry, $5k, first car I bought. That thing lasted. Wife got in a bad accident on the highway and it still drove, but the insurance company totaled it out. We used the totaled money to buy a 1997 Camry for $2k and used the old one for parts. Overall a bad idea, the 2nd camry already had a rebuilt engine and was a taxi beforehand. We eeked along for 3 1/2 years just canibalizing the old camry until we sold both to someone for $500.
Current car is a 2014 Corolla... $7k, a number of complaints for this one. Corollas are not as good as camrys. Handles funny on the highway, feels like you're going to be blown off the road. great gas mileage, but it's really finicky. First car we bought with less than 100k miles on it though. 4 years later and we've put just under 20k miles on it with no problems, just oil changes and the like. It's nice having a car that just works, even if it's not my preference.
We want to upgrade soonish, most likely to a hybrid, Prius's are good, have some friends with leafs that do well.
A fellow frugal driver! I remember going to Disneyworld in 1984 and they had a super-futuristic car on display, one of few memories of that trip. (The doughnuts at the all-you-can-eat buffet are another.) The car was a Taurus. It's funny how it's now seen as kind of frumpy--it was cutting edge at the time! Better than a K-car, at least.
I'm surprised to hear that about Corollas. I haven't driven one but I believe the Prius uses the same platform, and mine (2011) drives well on the highway. The battery weight probably helps. I'm slowly learning to like the look of the newer Priuses, but the Corolla hybrid looks good. I've also been seeing the new Honda Accord hybrid and it's pretty sexy. I had a 2006 Accord which was reliable but boring, so it's nice to see an attractive one. I think I want more cargo room, though.
Yeah, in 2010 corollas changed to electric steering. They did a patch on the software and changed how it worked for the 2014 corollas... but it is still a problem in my opinion. the Camry's kept the old steering at least for that era. I've had a chance to drive some prius's and they don't have the steering problem though they do use electric steering. Toyota's take is "there isn't a problem, that's just how electric steering works and everything's going that way" so in general I will be leery buying another Toyota (something I never thought I'd say).
Yeah, "fly by wire" is tricky to get right. Also, congrats on being comment #100!
Bummer to hear about the Corollas - I've had 2 and loved them, but both were pre-2010...
Interesting article: https://www.treehugger.com/why.... The author, Lloyd Alter, is an architect in Toronto, though he no longer practices. He's a smart guy, and has been our guest on the BS + Beer Show.
I live in the Los Angeles area, and I feel genuinely unsafe when I'm driving an economy car on a freeway full of suburban assault vehicles - I know a lot of people who have jumped on the yuppie tank bandwagon purely in self defense. It's like safety in LA traffic is based entirely on the doctrine of mutually assured destruction...
I don't blame you. Though my Prius and Forester are two of the safest cars on the road, including for crash protection. Many of those behemoths don't perform all that well in crashes.
A good friend just bought an Escalade. It's ridiculously huge. (And no, he's not filling up his $120k vehicle with crap to take to the lake - that's what his Ram pickup is for).
Daily Driver - 2019 Audi All road
Alternate Driver ( Wife's Car ) - 2013 BMW X3
Weekend Hauler ( wood/tools/bikes/skis ) - 2015 Tacoma
Desired Weekend Driver- vintage porsche 911
Preferred Commuter - 2017 Santa Cruz Hightower
Oh man, nice selection! I guess there are perks to running a bigger firm, eh? How do you like the Allroad and the X3? Both are on my not-so-short list. And I need to get into bicycling.
The All road is a great one quiver car. It does most everything I need with a bike and ski box. The X3 is really a nice small SUV that my wife really likes as a commuter and decent highway vehicle. ( I find BMW too finicky I prefer the Audi engineering and logic how how it all works and laid out )... probably going swap out the X3 for a new 4 runner and my wife will take over the Audi. My son has pretty much taken the Tacoma. I am finding some of my winter / summer adventures need a more robust vehicle and the Audi doesn't cut it when I can 't get the use of the Tacoma, which is more often now that he has a dirt bike that requires the tacoma to cart it around. I've looked at Defender / Land Rovers but for the price/reliability the Toyotas are a good bet..... i would hate to be suck up north with a broken down Land Rover, you'd be better off getting service on the Moon! My son was t
I was saying my son was taken out by a deer in the Tacoma last year and even it was difficult to get serviced in a not so remote spot. Need to drive a north American truck to get anyone to work on them up north.
A few years ago the 4Runner was T-boned by a deer. I had just canceled the collission coverage three days before. Found a junkyard door in the same color and bolted it on.
Ouch, My son was travelling at about 80 km on a clear day on his way to a hunting trip and the deer jumped right across the hwy and took out the whole front end and nearly totalled the car. Crazy stupid those deer... nothing left of the front end or the deer!
Lucky it didn't come through the windshield. That is the definition of a very bad day.
I hit deer twice, on the same stretch of road that I don't travel often, with the same car. The first time it totalled the car (my parents' 1984 Volvo 240 that I drove) but my dad was on the board of the vocational school and got it student-repaired for free, AND got the dirty ivory color repainted to metallic blue. Pretty sweet car for a high school kid in rural Maine. Within a week a deer ran into the side of the car and dragged its face down the side, leaving a big gouge. I felt bad for the deer but technically it hit me.
I definitely keep in mind what vehicles can be easily repaired around here. There is civilization within a 1/2 hour drive but for higher-end vehicles the closest dealers are 1 1/2 hours away. The closest shop is a Subaru specialist, not a dealer, just a few miles away, which skews me in that direction even if I don't love Subaru's long-term reliability.
my daily driver:
Sadly it now just has a racing stripe on the hood; I got backed over by a truck and had to replace the hood. Husband didn’t want to do the custom graphic again.
Very important: I drive it with the top down every day it is above 28° F and sunny.
It’s my first ever new car, but my third Miata. I’ll never drive any other car except a Miata. The day Miatas become electric and therefore not stick shift is the day I stop driving.
Were the graphics paint or wrapped?
Always love this picture
I was hoping you'd share this photo, Donna! I know what you mean about manual shift, but have you driven an electric vehicle? The ones I have driven--a Tesla, and a custom mid-90s Chevy S10) have amazing acceleration. But there's nothing like physically connecting with the transmission.
I grew up with electric garden tractors and learned to shift on the fly from low gear to high gear, though it wasn't recommended. (I also learned young how to shift manual transmission cars cleanly, without using the clutch, though I know that's not recommended either.)
The graphics are stickers, Miles. The Firechicken graphic was birthed from me asking husband if the Trans Am Firebird graphics were painted or stickers and he said "All factory graphics are stickers, but you can order the stickers, you could even order one and stick it on your Miata".
And he won't do it again? Sounds like doghouse time.
Of course this is my dream car, the car I learned to drive on that now sell as vintage resorations for $80K:
<swoon>
Would also look good with a firechicken decal.
Perhaps a soft top?
It's in Indiana... https://bit.ly/3dMk1pL
The FJ-40 is well known as a rust bucket, the US was exporting low-grade steel to Japan. I had an FJ-60 before there was such a thing as SUVs. It was a tank and drank gas like one.
First car was an '02 Mini Cooper, which I really miss and reminisce over. It was time for it to go, but I definitely find myself browsing Craigslist for '06 Mini Cooper S. At $3-5K it's awfully tempting. Every change they've made after that model has bastardized the center console more and more. That Mini was a super fun car, but it went through oil so quickly I carried a quart in the trunk. Mechanic could never figure out exactly why it was so thirsty. Ultimately sold the Mini to pick up the current vehicle, a 2017 Subaru Forester.
It checks all the boxes a car should from a utilitarian sense. But I'd be lying if I said it was fun to drive, zippy, or any other 'fun' adjective used to describe cars. I love it though, because while it doesn't necessarily excel in any one segment, it does everything I need a car to do at a high level. I should say it's pretty phenomenal in the snow.
The wife and I share that Forester, and before WFH was the norm I'd bike into work most days. One way commute over the last 4 years ranged from 6-11mi. Current ride is a Kona Wheelhouse, which I like a lot.
We just traded our son's Mini and I have to admit I did enjoy zipping around in it. Not as much as the Miata, but not too far off in terms of fun and a significantly smarter car - damn could it fit a lot inside!
2019 XC40. My first car in years. Been living the past 13 years in London, NYC, and Munich so haven't needed a car in some time. It is nice to have one now. Glad to see a lot of Volvo love here. They're cheap to insure which makes the monthly cost to lease close to a Mazda 3 or even a Crosstrek all in. I'm pretty tempted to move up to the Polestar 2 when this lease is up.
They just look fun to drive!
I have to say that Volvo's recent design direction change is really quite good. I looked seriously at the XC60CC. Unfortunately the Volvo dealer just wasn't prepared to bargain much and the Audi Allroad became the next best bet. ( first world problems ). I love the styling across all the volvo models.
Polestar 2 looks really nice, I couldn't find the range per charge on their website though.
An architect's car, like an architects sweater and eye glass frames should be black. All other details are irrelevant.
I drive a black KIA soul 2016 I dove a clunker before and having a new (now new ish got it in 2017) car is great for the flowing 13 reasons:
1. I can drive through puddles with out stalling
2. If I turn hard left my radio now stays on
3. Radio is in stereo! (who knew this was a possibility)
4. Instead of a tape deck adapter I have a USB port
5. In the winter I can unlock and open all 4 doors and the hatch
6. Also in the winter I can close all 4 doors and they will latch the first time and stay closed while driving.
7. All 4 tires are inflated all of the time, even on the weekends.
8. The car starts every time on the first try, even on the weekends
9. My headlights are bright and not obscured with yellowing plastic and I can see more than 10 feet in-front of the car at night.
10. The headlights don't dim when i turn on the windshield wipers.
11. My turn signals work all of the time, even in the rain.
12. When getting the vehicle serviced the mechanic does not ask "do you really want to do this?"
13. The neighbors stop calling city services to ticket my car for being "abandoned"
Over and OUT
Peter N
I have colourful eyewear and sweaters but my car is still black.
Haha, I don't know what kind of car your previous one was but I think I had the same model! I like Kia Souls, especially the hybrid version--just not different enough from my Prius to justify a change. You must not live with a gravel driveway or gravel roads--I've had black vehicles and let's just say that having to constantly clean them, or having them constantly look/be dirty, is not my idea of a good time. Whatever vehicle I get, I'm leaning toward silver color because I've found it's much easier to keep clean-looking but has some of the cool factor of black.
lol.. Most mine are black, or really dark shades of grey. Just one white, and one sort of a oxidized grey with a hint of olive undertones and bare dull aluminum highlights. :P
I am never buying a black or grey car again. Too many on the road and only look good when perfectly detailed... sorry not in my nature to keep them that clean, also Canadian winter kinda gets in the way eh!
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