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I think you should stop caring what people think and stop justifying your purchase.
I wouldn't for a moment suggest that I'm so self absorbed and narrow minded to completely stop caring about what other people thought. But thanks for your advice on that, will give it some consideration. And on justifying my purchase, you're probably right, or though I suppose I could simply have not made the purchase, that may have been simpler and a damn sight easier on wallet. But again, good advice.
To everyone else who recognised this thread as an interesting topic to simply discuss for some light entertainment, cheers to you.
Like you said the Golf seems to cover all bases and you have no requirement to defend, compare or even belittle other cars with it.
You will be happy once it arrives .
Thanks mate, looking forward to it. Should be fun........ if it ever lands.
Haha, yeah, one day just for a "social experiment" I went into the Lexus dealership in my crappy old Foo Fighters t-shirt and a pair of shorts and thongs, and then went in later that day in my business attire - just to see what happened. Needless to say, they wouldn't even look at me the first time, the second time I was fighting them off.
My Dad used to sell cars in the '50s. Hated the job but liked talking to people. He tells me he sold quite a few cars (at a time) to blokes that the other salesmen ignored because they were dressed in boiler suits or work clothes & a bit unkempt. One was the owner of Miller's Coal who'd spent the morning helping fix a coal delivery truck. He bought 2 Austin utes off Dad.
carandimage The place where Off-Topic is On-Topic I used to think I was anal-retentive until I started getting involved in car forums
A bit off the original thread but following on from Brad. My son does the same thing in his selling job. He's happy to talk to any folk dressed in anything. He sold a 3 grand tele to a bloke in scruffy jeans and moth eaten t-shirt when a few others ignored the guy. You just never know.
MkVI GTD fitted with Bluetooth & MDI, CSG, DSG, Xenons, RNS510 with Dynaudio, ACC, Weathershields, Mudflaps, Sunroof, LED Tails, LED Indicators, LED Foglights, Interior LEDs, Tinted, RVC and Towbar - Gosford.
I don't see anything wrong in buying a Golf or something like that, even if you have the money for a Jaguar XK or something. It all depends on what you want in a car, really.
I would have loved to have had a second-hand Smart Roadster (half the price of my current car) however reliability was a concern. So I bought a brand-new car with a warranty.
sigpic TRADED THE BEE'12 Sport Yellow/Black Citroen DS3 DSport THP155 6-spd manual w/ tech pack.
SOLD '18 BMW 125i M-Sport | Sunset Orange | Sunroof | ZF 8-spd auto
'23 MINI Countryman SE ALL4 PHEV | MINI Yours | BRG
But that's only half the point. The other is that I believe the Golf R, and indeed the Golf GTI, as I currently drive a MkV, is one of the best all round performance cars money currently can buy you. Regardless of the spend. VW is now my car of choice.
QFT.
I recently scored a drive in a mate's Ferrari 360 Spider. The single word I'd use to describe the car overall was disappointing - even though it has bucketloads of presence and a huge "look-at-me" factor. Jumping back into the Golf, it felt so much better-built, more cohesive, and yet still fast and fun. Sure, there are mega-performance supercars out there that outdo everything else by miles (GTR, 458 Italia, GT2 etc), but when we're talking about the sort of money most mortals contemplate spending on a car, the fast VWs are pretty damn good on most measurable criteria.
Sure you could spend an extra $100,000, and get a car that's 10% faster, 10% more comfortable, 10% better in the bends. If the 10% is worth the extra to you, then trading up makes sense.
There are a million ways one can justify their choice of vehicle, because cars mean different things to different people. There's no point in getting hung over what someone else thinks of one's purchase (unless you've asked).
I wouldn't for a moment suggest that I'm so self absorbed and narrow minded to completely stop caring about what other people thought. But thanks for your advice on that, will give it some consideration. And on justifying my purchase, you're probably right, or though I suppose I could simply have not made the purchase, that may have been simpler and a damn sight easier on wallet. But again, good advice.
I take your point.
Perhaps my thoughts could've been expressed more diplomatically, but I stand by them.
In 2010 I had the same decision to make.
I can afford an S4 but at $140k should I?
I ended up with an R36 fully loaded with every option for just over half that and have been pleased with the car but I really miss Turbo power.
Now I'm due to order a car within the next six months and am not sure what to do.
The S4 is still desirable as is the new A4 and A6 but then my head says it's crazy to spend that sort of money on a depreciating asset.
So I'm considering a Golf R with the lot and adding some APR goodness into the mix.(If there is enough backseat room for the occasional passengers)
2010 R36 Sedan
2007 Audi A4 B7 Cabriolet
1997 R33 GTR Skyline V-SPEC ,2011 Harley V-Rod Muscle
My Dad used to sell cars in the '50s. Hated the job but liked talking to people. He tells me he sold quite a few cars (at a time) to blokes that the other salesmen ignored because they were dressed in boiler suits or work clothes & a bit unkempt. One was the owner of Miller's Coal who'd spent the morning helping fix a coal delivery truck. He bought 2 Austin utes off Dad.
A bit off the original thread but following on from Brad. My son does the same thing in his selling job. He's happy to talk to any folk dressed in anything. He sold a 3 grand tele to a bloke in scruffy jeans and moth eaten t-shirt when a few others ignored the guy. You just never know.
As pointed out above - don't judge someone based on what they are wearing etc. Even though it can be very hard sometimes. My brother sold an Audi R8 V10 (so close to $400k) to a guy in his Lee jeans from 1980, a mustard yellow shirt of the same vintage, coke bottle glasses, and leather "Jesus" sandals........not the kind of guy you'd expect to have $400k to blow on a car.
Just because they prance around in a fancy business suit doesn't mean they have wads of cash to burn.
So, just to re-iterate, the guy below owns the following car:
Whenever I'm checking out a car or art (I have a few investment pieces) I always go looking a bit scruffy.
It's a good way of judging who is going to deal or not deal.
As a result I tend to get the hungriest and most professional salespeople. Plus, it's just hilarious watching the double take when some dude in his mid 20s with cargo shorts and an old t shirt is buying a 25k painting.
Audi S3. Sold
Golf R. Sold
Citroen DS3 Dsport. Sold
2016 Skoda Octavia RS Wagon.
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