DannyB1954 said:
You see a lot of vehicles for sale with 200k. You don't see many for sale with 260k. The vehicle is more than an engine. Transmissions, differentials, suspension parts, brakes, steering gear boxes, they all wear. If you are capable of doing the work yourself, buying something mostly worn out isn't a bad way to go especially if the body and interior are nice.
But if you are paying $100 an hour for labor, and you spend $9k on buying the vehicle, $3k on engine, (if it is a diesel, at least double that), $3k on a transmission, $1k on a rear end, $1k on front suspension, $800 on brakes, drums, disks, lines, master cylinder, calipers, wheel cylinders, probably another $1k for truck tires, etc. you have more into the vehicle than it is worth. You have about $20k tied up in a vehicle that is worth $3k.
It is not likely that all of these things will go bad at the same time, but eventually you can have more money into it than a newer low mileage vehicle would have cost you. Then when something breaks, do you put more money into it, or cut your losses and start over?
If the vehicle gets wrecked, the insurance is going to give you blue book or less. They really don't care what it cost you to keep it running. For $9k, I think you could get a nice lower mileage vehicle.
A person who buys a 200k vehicle isn't a person who's gonna sell a running vehicle if it runs well, these folks will drive their 200k vehicles untill they have a problem that renders them scrap, that's why you don't see them for sale
sometimes this person is an adroit mechanically skilled person, but as often they're just flat poor, and many of them will scrimp on repair because, let's face it, if you bought it for $1k and it lasts a year, you're happy
The only reason I would consider selling or swapping my Ranger would be for a full size van or truck, period, or catastrophic failure
Yes, all this components wear, and they can all be renewed
I have bought older vehicles and discovered that they were actually in like new condition
The owner sold because a lot of stuff went bad in rapid succession, and it frightened him
I drove that car for 3 years with not a problem or care in the world, untill someone hit it and totalled it
That is the only time resale value matters: if you're selling or if you get hit, otherwise you are far better off with a 200k mile vehicle that's well taken care of, than a 50k mile vehicle that's been 'rode hard and put away wet'
As far as buying a pig in a poke, not if you know how to properly inspect a used vehicle
all the components you named, you're supposed to check before purchase at any mileage if the vehicle is used
I've seen more newer cars than older ones on the side of the road broken
You are however more likely to get service records with a newer car, as they add more to the car's value than they weigh
But I agree, I would NOT pay 9k for a van with 200k miles on it, that's far too much, for a van that old or that high mileage