Cars! *sigh*

LadyisRed

Shared on Tue, 03/13/2007 - 20:04
When I was a little girl my dad was a mechanic. Anything made before 1980, he could take it apart and put it back together with his eyes closed. You would think that meant that we had cars that always ran. big WRONG. We always had some POS car that broke down constantly. I guess they figured that since my dad was a mechanic that they would buy cheap ass cars and he would fix them constantly. Out of the 30 years they lived in that house, I bet you for 20 of them there was an unusable car parked in the garage. When I was a senior in High school (class of 1998  ) I drove an '82 Honda civic hatchback. Half way through my senior year, it over heated and the head cracked. So they put a new engine in it. A month later it happened again. This time while I was on the busiest bridge in Portland with two logging trucks to the side and behind me. Anyway, 4 engines later I said screw it and bought my own car. Turns out the radiator hadn't been flushed in eons and that was causing the problem. I swear that every major family vacation I have been on, our car has some how broken down. So many memories of sitting on the side of the road waiting for someone to help us.

Anyway, I now have a STRONG aversion to older cars, and I also get sick to my stomach every time that the car doesn't sound perfect. Since my dad doesn't know what he is doing with the new cars, Ive had to take my car to mechanics. Sorry to any mechanics out there, but I'm not sure that honest ones exist in my town. (I would love to be proven wrong!) Once I had the catalytic converter installed in my Canadian made Pontiac. I was driving down the freeway with my old boyfriend and all of a sudden there was a horrible noise. We pulled off at the next exit and he checked it out. They hadn't braced it and the entire exhaust had disconnected in the middle. My boyfriend was pretty handy and there was a bike shop in the same parking lot. He got some break line (for bikes) and used that to support the exhaust until we could take it back to the shop. We get there and I tell them what had happened (leaving out the break line) and they went and took a look. They came back and told me everything was fine. Um HELLO! there is bicycle break line holding my exhaust together!

So that brings me to now. We bought a 2002 Toyota sienna 2 years ago. We decided to go for one nice car instead of two older cars so that hopefully we wouldn't have many problems. So far it has been a great car, but it needs some little things fixed. It needs some fluid flushing, a good tune up, and something is wrong with the suspension? that makes it bounce when you break. Plus the tires need balancing and all that jazz. I want to get it done before its an issue, but I'm so worried that some SOB mechanic is going to lie to us and tell us that we have $2k worth of work that needs to be done on it. Plus one car inst cutting it for our family anymore. With three kids that need to be places, and shakes working on campus now, its getting really hard to be everywhere we need to be. So we are looking at buying a second car. But we would have to get an older car to afford it.
So how does one find an honest mechanic, and Is buying a 20 year old VW begging for trouble?
I hate cars. Why cant we all ride horses. Or fly! Flying would be nice....

Comments

TheCrazyPerson's picture
Submitted by TheCrazyPerson on Wed, 03/14/2007 - 07:01
Our mechanic is one of our friends, he's been fixing stuff on Smoke's Vet and our other cars for years. We got lucky I guess, cause he's honest and doesn't charge us out the "booty". As for an old VW, they are hard to get worked on. My best friend has an old "bug" that she drove in High School, and it broke down all the time. They had to take it over 100 miles to get it worked on. Good luck with what you decide! Ice
CreeperJR's picture
Submitted by CreeperJR on Wed, 03/14/2007 - 10:36
Don't get an old VW. If you (or Shakes) are reasonably handy, you can fix just about anythign on it. THe problem is that there will always be something to fix. Plus, they aren't very safe at all. I think cartalk.com has reviews of local mechanics. Also, try the local better business bureau.
Smithcraft's picture
Submitted by Smithcraft on Fri, 03/16/2007 - 01:52
Honda has also been building cars in the US for about twenty-five years, and even exports US built cars to Japan! I know some people that live by Yreka, and they have an Audi. They can either drive to Portland, or Sacramento for service, so consider yourself lucky! SC
wareaglebeene1's picture
Submitted by wareaglebeene1 on Wed, 03/14/2007 - 14:03
Make sure the mechanics do not work for commission. Those are the ones that tend to "find" things. AAMCO tends to have guys that do not. I always use them but they are a franchise so you may not get the same service there.
wilderz's picture
Submitted by wilderz on Tue, 03/13/2007 - 20:14
That's ok. check this. Our Jeep has actually been submerged to the point where water was coming up over the back seat, and the insurance company didn't write it off. We have had sooooo many problems with this vehicle, and it's our ONLY transportation for my wife and myself.
Smithcraft's picture
Submitted by Smithcraft on Tue, 03/13/2007 - 22:01
Maybe you can find a good mechanic on Craigslist, or I think there is a Portland section in Usenet. Otherwise, get a Honda. SC
UnwashedMass's picture
Submitted by UnwashedMass on Tue, 03/13/2007 - 22:51
SC has a point- if you buy a Toyota, they're made in the USA. They last forever but you pay for that up front. the upside is that it will last you 15 years with just a little maintenance. I own a Honda, same deal. Last forever. A twenty year old VW is a SERIOUS mistake. You're buying a car that is going to need a lot of work to keep on the road and VW parts are not cheap. Been there- suckers cost an arm and a leg for parts. As far as finding a decent mechanic, I wish I were able to help. Good Luck!
CofC's picture
Submitted by CofC on Tue, 03/13/2007 - 23:42
We have great mechanics where I live. Must be a small town thing. However...a few years back, my dad dropped his station wagon off to be serviced at the local dealership. A couple of days after that he got a call from the police in South Carolina saying they found his car. Apparently, someone 'borrowed' it, then left it unharmed in a parking lot. When dad called the dealer to check on the car, the service manager said, "we're still working on it, and it'll be ready in a few days."

Join our Universe

Connect with 2o2p