trevor wrote:
One problem though; I would want to use it as a daily driver instead of just a weekend car and have been told it won't work that way.
In my Buyer's Guide it says, "While Cabriolets are best used today as secondary or pleasure vehicles, thousands of Cabriolets throughout the world are still performing daily driving duties." That's a recommendation, not requirement.
Here are the reasons why it's
recommended that old cars (
any old car) be used as secondary vehicles:
1) Their age... parts wear out and need replacing, which means time off the road and money out of your pocket.
2) People buy $500 Cabriolets for cheap transportation to work/school and then bitch about them breaking down all the time and costing money (and time) to repair them. They find forums or other sites online and bitch about how unreliable the cars are and many don't bother to listen to repair advice (i.e. what might be wrong, what to check, how to fix/replace the part yourself to save some cash, etc.). These people, 9 times out of 10, do not have another vehicle.
3) People buy $2500 Cabriolets and complain about the car having one issue after another: first it's the fuel system, a year later it's something electrical, another year later it's the transmission not shifting... They too whine about the cars being unreliable and costly to repair and usually have only one vehicle.
These are 20+-year-old cars; parts wear out over time and need replacing. What the previous owner(s) hasn't yet done, you will be doing. Do not buy an old car --
any old car -- no matter how well it's been maintained, and expect it to be 100% problem-free for the next 5 years.
You have two other vehicles so you're already ahead of the game. Should a problem arise with the Cabriolet, you have back-up transportation. Buy a Cabriolet that's been well-maintained (with the records to prove it), and keep up with the maintenance on it, and by all means, daily-drive it.
And now, I'm off to change some wording in the Buyer's Guide.
