A friend of mine has several shotguns including some very nice doubles. When we hit the game fields though, it's his A400 that does the work. I only have ever had one auto-loading shotgun and have never shot it.... Ithaca 10 Gauge.
I could swear it was in the manual. Could be wrong.Wikipedia: At introduction, the MPV used the same 170 hp DOHC 2.5 L Ford Duratec V6 unit that powered the Ford Contour and Mercury Mystique and Cougar.[3
I wish I had the confidence in GM. I do. My BIL works for GM so my FIL buys exclusively. His latest Sierra is a 2010 and has vacationed at the shop at least twice now for transmission issues. It's almost no-big-deal to him. I find it entirely unacceptable. On the other hand, my Ford truck was awesome! I would buy another Ford in a heartbeat. We also had a Mazda MPV back around 2001 or so (made by Ford) and it had 100k flawless miles by the time we traded.
Obviously, a used car is the better purchase because there isn't an accelerated depreciation. The discussion, however, is about a new car. Those same 20 $35K vehicles at 4% interest would be $120k in payments alone (60 month terms), not to mention that you would always be under water when you traded and would likely have to pay to get out.... And would still not have anything to show. Buying a depreciating asset is never going to bring you out on top unless your original purchase was so far under the value that you beat the depreciation by the time you sell. Again..... The conversation is about new cars.
He may be tall for it (low may be way too low for him). My 2nd bike was an 883. I'd buy another in a heartbeat. For a low mile 2008, I'd pay $4000- $4500. Really was a pretty fun little bike.
If you can live within the miles, it's better to lease a depreciating asset and purchase an appreciating asset. My best lease was my 2007 f-150 4x4. It was $500 down and $189/month. Turned it in under miles and wasn't charged a dime for any dings or dents. Leased wife's Toyota Sienna and the buyout was do much lower than blue book, we bought it out.... No problem. With my current job, I can't lease. For perspective; I bought my 2013 Pilot on January 20 and have 22000 miles on it today. Long story, short.... It definitely can make sense if negotiated and is far enough under the sale cost.
I would not provide copies of anything. Bill of sale? Not a fan, but not a deal breaker. Tell him that you will be happy to show, but you are worried about ID theft and will not provide a copy.
I think it's just a tough price point. Generally, over $4-$5k is a financing venture. Once you've decided to finance $8k, dealerships usually have access to better terms and make it easier. Your pricing is good, don't get me wrong.
Gun safe battery died with guns aboard. Tried the crowbar..... Nothing. Threw it to the ground....nothing. Whacked it with a hammer.... Hidden key hole cover pops off. Oh. Forgot about the key.
Due to poor choices as a youngster, it's too late for me. Wear then while you can still hear! This message has been brought to you by Remington, Bush Light, Mötley Crüe, Metallica, and the U.S. Border Patrol.