The IRS helps this process as well. If I buy a business truck / suburban /
or other vehicle over 6,000 pounds GVW, I can write it off in one year. If
the vehicle is a car or smaller SUV then I must write it off over five
years. So, what the IRS is encouraging is "The bigger the better."
Bob Dicke
rtdengr@chorus.net
608.770.0228
6205 Knollwood Dr
Oregon WI 53575
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-datsun-roadsters@autox.team.net
[mailto:owner-datsun-roadsters@autox.team.net]On Behalf Of Hall, Phillip
Sent: Wednesday, January 16, 2002 8:57 AM
To: Roadster List
Subject: RE: Light trucks (OT)
My "other" car is a '01 Nissan Frontier Crew Cab. It works great for
hauling kids, fire wood, lumber, all in the same trip and pulls a Roadster
nicely! To me people buy (myself included) SUV's and trucks because - most
are built heaver with full frames, they hold their resale value, and they
typically last longer. My wife likes 4 door sedans. They are front drivers
and no matter how much you spend on one, they are throw away cars. Nobody
wants a front driver with 150,000 plus miles on it. They gravitate to the
junk yard very quickly after this many miles. A truck on the other hand is
rebuilt, modified, and stays on the road. Like any car, people buy
SUV,s/trucks for all the wrong reasons, but there is some logic to owning
this type of vehicle.
OK, I should not say anything about front drivers - I am make good Roadster
money keeping my friends 135,000 mile Honda on the road:)
Sorry to keep the OT going, but the list is slow lately. And tired of
waiting for the other Group to deliver parts so I can finish this robot
stuff here at work.......
Phil
SEROC
-----Original Message-----
From: snyler [mailto:marc@animalfirm.com]
Sent: Wednesday, January 16, 2002 8:25 AM
To: Roadster List
Subject: Light trucks (OT)
For the first time, over 50% of the new vehicles sold in the US were
light trucks as opposed to cars (Pickups, minivans, SUVs) Do over 50% of
the population really need a truck-based vehicle, or are some of us being
sold a bill of goods. I see a lot of longbed-crew-cab-duallie super duty
4x4 behemoths that have never seen a puddle, much less a load of gravel.
I guess they hold a lot of groceries. I can get over 10 bags of
groceries in the roadster when the top is up, and it's not going to roll
if I swerve to avoid that puddle.
Some folks need a big hauler/towing vehicle, but many, I suspect are
just pretending to be cowboys (and cowgirls)
-Marc T.
'70 1600
'93 Escort wagon (all you really *need *for a daily driver, will carry
engine blocks, trannies)
'88 Dodge 318 pickup (shortbed) Drive only when needed (trips to dump,
towing)
'65 Datsun 320 When this is restored, bye-bye Dodge :^)
/// datsun-roadsters@autox.team.net mailing list
/// datsun-roadsters@autox.team.net mailing list
|