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Sing Your Own Song

Mom's House, Dad's House

The Single Mother's Survival Guide
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"TIPS
ON CARS"
I was surfing yesterday and found this fantastic
freebie online. It's for a completely free
subscription to Parents magazine. That's pretty
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Kyle's Corner -
Options
for That Expensive Car Repair
Adapted from
"Drive the Best for the
Price..."
He has
been interviewed about the topic of
transportation by
Southeastern Public Radio
and The Driving Force on
Wheels (Detroit,
MI). In addition to being included in a Los
Angeles Times transportation
article, on June 17, 2002 he was a guest
on The Elaine
Smitha Show
(Olympia, WA). Additionally, on August
9, 2002 Drive the Best for
the Price ... was featured
on MotorWeek-Maryland
Public
Television.
If you would like to receive more information about the article, please
contact Mr. Kyle Busch or
visit his Web site: www.DriveTheBestBook.com
Have you ever been in
the tough position of owning a vehicle
that is not worth too much money but
that needs an expensive repair? Maybe
you have recently even dumped some
pretty good change into the
vehicle for items like new tires,
a battery, a muffler, etc. And
now it needs a major repair!
You realize that
you cannot sell the vehicle for much
without getting it repaired, and you
know that you can't afford to trade
it in on another vehicle.
Given today's soft economy, what a time
to face an expensive vehicle repair.
What can you do? What are some possible
options?
A driver recently wrote to ask
my advice. The women owned a 1998
minivan with 125,000 on the
odometer. She explained that the engine
was loosing oil, smoking
at idle, and making a knocking sound.
Additionally, It was the only
transportation for her and three kids
She went on to
ask about having it fixed or buying
another vehicle. If my answer was to
have it fixed, she inquired if I knew of
an honest mechanic in her community. It
turned out that she still owed about
$1,000 on the vehicle, and she could not
really afford to buy other
transportation.
I knew that
the smoking engine would require new
oil rings and that the knocking could
indicate the need for a total
engine rebuild costing anywhere between
$1,500 and $2,500. Since it had
over 125,000 miles on the
clock, repairing it at a private
garage would mean dumping allot of money
into a vehicle with a limited value.
Since I was not familiar with her
community, I could not suggest a
mechanic. I did suggest, however, that
she use the telephone book to
contact vocational technical schools
located up to about 20 miles from her
home. I suggested that she inquire if
the schools had automobile (mechanical)
repair classes and, if so, for her
to get the instructors' names and jot
them down.
If possible, she would then make an
appointment and take the minivan to an
instructor for his unbiased evaluation.
She would then see if the instructor and
the class could repair the engine. If
one instructor could not help her, she
would need to go on to the next.
The cost of parts needed for the
repair would be about $150-$250 (the
labor costs would be eliminated). The
parts would cost her less money since
they would not be marked up as can be
the practice at dealership or private
garages.
If the engine could not be rebuilt, the
instructor could likely identify a
used engine from a salvage yard, and the
class could possibly install it in the
minivan. The used engine would cost
about $250-$300. And even if the class
were unable to work on the vehicle, the
instructor could likely contact
reputable salvage yards, some of
which would also install the engine. If
needed, the instructor could contact a
private mechanic (with whom he is
familiar) to have the engine installed.
The used engine would likely cost
$250-$300 and the instillation would
cost about $200-$250.
Thus, rather than having to pay off a
$1,500-$2,000 repair bill, the
driver would have the
vehicle repaired or about $150-$550.
Regardless of the chosen repair option,
the instructor's informed and
unbiased advice is the key to ensuring
the driver's best interests.
The owner will have to spend some
time doing telephone work and meeting
with the technical school instructor (it
is best to make contacts well before the
end of the school year). Also, the
driver will need to make arrangements
to car pool or barrow a relative's car
to drive when the vehicle is being
repaired. However, such work can pay the
owner a pretty good hourly rate in
savings when faced with
that expensive car repair.
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