
06-24-2013, 09:59 AM
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Member
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Join Date: Jun 2013
Location: New York
Posts: 814
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Quote:
Originally Posted by epdarks
Calculate the break-even point on a daily driver.
Let's say you drive 10,000 miles per year. Gas costs $4/gallon. The X5 we will say gets 18 MPG on average. Annual fuel expense: $2,222
Now let's try an E30. Same numbers, but 28 MPG. $1428/year.
Savings of ~$800.
Cost of E30 = $4k. Insurance, tabs, maintnence, misc = $1-2k per year.
So in theory you are looking at 5 years before you really "break even" on your gas expense. Year 6 you can finally "save money" with your E30.
There are other advantages to a daily driver. Less wear on the X5, more fun to daily an E30, etc.
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Even more reason to buy a civic
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