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| Open Discussion (Work-safe) Open-topic moderated forum. Any all-ages-appropriate topic (within reason) is appropriate here as long as they can be discussed with at least a degree of tact, civility, and respect for differing opinions. |
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if that were the case, Louisiana and especially Texas would constantly have the cheapest gas in the country (yes I know we're paying less on average than the midwest is).
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as bad as I feel about my gas... I really feel bad for the truckers and their diesel.. it's a buck over regular
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Bare with me
Friday night used to be a good night to take the Corvette for a spin down River Rd and back. Now I sit at home and think of ways to save gas and spend less. Try this logic on for size. My present vehicle is a bit of a gas hog and needs to be replaced.
1. First, assume the car is paid for and all you spend for it is gas. 2. The car/SUV/truck gets 14 mpg and a 20 gallon tank lasts a week 3. So that's 20 x $4.00 = $80/week or $320 per month. 4. Cost for leasing a new Nissan Sentra/Honda Civic/Toyota Corolla is $200/mo. ( I know the Toyota and Civic may be higher but close to the Nissan) 5. A Nissan Sentra gets 33 mpg. So 20 gallons x 33 = 660 miles range or about 3 x the range of the current gas guzzler. 6. So spending $320/month gets you 800 miles in the gas guzzler 7. Buying a new Nissan at 33 mpg requires ~$200/mo for the car and $100/mo for gas = $300 for car and gas per month. 8. That leaves $20 in your wallet. 9. Now you can keep that money, invest it in Exxon stock or whatever or give it to BP and have a little fun. 10. Take the virtual drive in the Corvette, rent a few movies, buy a few beers and pizzas - you could even go to a movie but driving there would cut into the windfall. Note: if the gas guzzler isn't paid for yet, this plan becomes even more cost justified. Of course, a Nissan Sentra isn't a Mercury Mountaineer and some may want the luxury and comfort of a larger car. This is when we decide how much are we willing to pay for the comfort of a larger car or opt for the fuel efficient model and save hundreds per month. Last edited by utgrad73; 05-23-2008 at 11:39 PM. |
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So the real answer is to buy a scooter and find you an ugly woman who was rejected by the hog bikers to ride along as your cycle mama.
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![]() How about a motor cycle engine powered go cart? I mean a larger version with a body, frame and suspension. Let's go into production and start selling them here in T-Town. We can get the biker chicks to help with the sales. |
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![]() The Government is giving it to us without the KY ![]() |
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![]() 1. First, assume the car is paid for and all you spend for it is gas. 2. The car/SUV/truck gets 14 mpg and a 20 gallon tank lasts a week - 280 miles/week driven 3. So that's 20 x $4.00 = $80/week or $320 per month. 4. Cost for leasing a new Nissan Sentra/Honda Civic/Toyota Corolla is $200/mo. ( I know the Toyota and Civic may be higher but close to the Nissan) 5. A Nissan Sentra gets 33 mpg. 280 miles/33 mpg = 8.48 gallons/week x 4 weeks x $4/gal = $135.68. 6. So spending $320/month gets you 1120 miles in the gas guzzler 7. Buying a new Nissan at 33 mpg requires ~$200/mo for the car and $136/mo for gas = $336 for car and gas per month. 8. That leaves ($16) in your wallet. 9. Now you can keep that money, invest it in Exxon stock or whatever or give it to BP and have a little fun. 10. Take the virtual drive in the Corvette, rent a few movies, buy a few beers and pizzas - you could even go to a movie but driving there would cut into the windfall. Despite my minor corrections to the calculations, the overall point is good and solid one. ![]() |
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Went through the Indiana Toll Road yesterday. Two Mobil stations at the oases had $4.39 for their lowest grade, and 3 BP stations had $4.09 for theirs. It's been that way for weeks, with Mobil 20 or 30 cents more per gallon on the same Interstate (80/90).
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I didn't do the math, but $320 per month in gas (getting 14 MPG) is cheaper than $336 per month ($200 lease payment + $135.68 gas), so your logic is skewed.
![]() Plus, if you're spending $135.68 a month in gas, that works out to be 8.48 gallons per week, which is 279.84 miles per week (at 33 miles per gallon). 279.84 miles a week, over the course of a full year, comes out to 14,551.68 miles per year. Over the life of a three year lease, that's a total of 7,655 miles over your lease agreement (assuming you even get 12k miles/year). At 15 cents per mile, that means you would owe an additional $1148.25 when you turn in the vehicle. If yoiur lease is longer than three years, this gets even worse. I believe to get a lease payment that low, they only give you 10k miles/year, but I could be wrong. Either way, I'll just keep driving my Yukon... Besides, I get 16 MPG, not 14. And almost 20 on the highway. |
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Locally, I'm seeing lots of vehicles for sale including things like quad runners.
Great time to buy a quad runner or truck if you absolutely need one. |
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| gas is cheaper than beer? |
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| It's funny to look back on old gas threads.... - Bodybuilding.com Forums | This thread | Refback | 10-26-2008 07:24 PM | |
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