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ed's avatar
Jan 7Edited

I feel you're over egging this a bit.

I am a lot like Jennifer; similar age, earn near the average wage. This time last year i was driving a base model 2009 family hatchback (RRP £13k) and I upgraded to a second hand 2020 car (RRP £26k) from the same marque, though not Ford.

But i don't feel poorer. At least not in this respect, although there are plenty of ways that the UK economy makes me feel poor these days! As a non car enthusiast, the 2020 car feels impossibly swanky to me. Far from being 'inferior', it is better in every way. As you might expect, going from a 2009 to a 2020 model.

Things that car people probably take for granted - heated seats, a HUD, reversing cameras, blind spot indicators, etc etc, to us normies feel space age and luxurious, especially if we're upgrading from the 00's. When i press the button to open the boot from 10 yards away i still don't know whether to chuckle at how posh my car is, or worry that everyone thinks I'm a yuppie showoff. This thing is amazing. Android auto! Adaptive Cruise! Parking sensors! It practically drives itself!

I also intend to keep it into the 2030s. Not because of my concerns about EVs, rather because its good and there's no need to ditch something that works perfectly well.

So if anything, this car is one of the few ways in which I actually feel richer...

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Liz Lutgendorff's avatar

The other thing that my brother often complains about as well (as a licensed mechanic) is the fact that new cars are not built in a way that makes sense for common repairs. Like replacing a lightbulb requiring 2.5h work. Or in the case of Tesla, changing something that will need regular maintenance requires removing the entire battery as the first step.

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