Stay away from the GM sedans from 2003 thru 2007 or so. They all had a piss poor steering column designs and you'll be paying for a fix probably not once, but twice or more on the darn things. Ask me how I know.
The older ford taurus (and all other models that shared same engine) had problems with gasket. Before buying one I would suggest that you check maintenance forums to see what kind of recurring issues these have.
Head gasket failure was notorious with Ford's 3.8L V6 in the mid 90's, that engine was mostly in Gen II Taurus (1992-1995), and Windstars (I heard it was even worse with Windstar since the engine had to work a little harder to lug that bulk around). I had a blown one myself in a '92 Sable, woot. .
Mine let go going up an exit ramp in Atlanta GA, I made it another quarter mile to my motel with all the kids in the parking lot staring and pointing at the increasingly massive cloud of white smoke pouring out of the tailpipe. I laugh about that scene now, but it was not funny at the time.One of my first cars was a '92 Taurus with a 3.8L V6...had a head gasket blow as well.
Mine let go going up an exit ramp in Atlanta GA, I made it another quarter mile to my motel with all the kids in the parking lot staring and pointing at the increasingly massive cloud of white smoke pouring out of the tailpipe. I laugh about that scene now, but it was not funny at the time.
That engine felt quite a bit stronger than the Vulcan of that era, much torquier.
The new body style Taurus's are excellent cars. The new 'Taurus' wasn't even really that new - all of it's underpinnings were based on the Ford 500, but they killed the name and made the updates to bring back the Taurus name. That means the standard "don't buy the first model year" doesn't really apply here.
You'll get a double benefit too - you're going to get reliability because it's a Ford, but you're going to get more value than you would out of most Japanese cars because so many people are still buying into the 5 year old paradigm that they're better: the Japanese cars still have substantially higher purchase prices than a comparable domestic.
You can take a look at the Wards or Edmunds data - the new style Taurus scores very well in almost every category, and IS the safest sedan in that class on the road.
Having recently been in your shoes, I would look at the following:
1. Subaru Legacy/Outback/Forrester. Actual Subaru sedans are quite rare, but their various mid-size wagons are all fantastically reliable and very possibly the best cars for ice and snow money can buy. $7k will get you a fairly recent ('04-ish) wagon with no frills and reasonable miles, and considering the frequency with which these cars break 250,000 miles, that shouldn't be an issue.
A caveat: Prices on these vary by state a great deal - around here, they're prohibitively high.
2. Hyundai Sonata - though only the last generation model (approximately 2005-2009.) These cars are fantastically cheap, and if you don't mind the fact that it's not the highest quality car in the world, they're very good value. They're also reasonably reliable - the V6 version in particular scored quite well in Consumer Reports.
Agreed. My family has been purchasing used vehicles based on CR owner data for years - it's generally pretty good stuff.
Crown vic maybe worth looking at if you want a BIG car... built like lanks and generally under 5K and well maintained.
The mistake was test driving a GS300 a couple weeks ago. She loves that car... well, she loves how it looks. Which is apparently the only important thing in her mind.
That won't change...no matter how much you try.
LOL, I know. The best I can do is say "get any car you want" and let her bump up against the price problem on her own. So she doesn't blame me for X or Y car costing more than we can afford.
Paper get your head out of your . . . Who is the one pulling out the anecdotes first?
I had a 94 Corsica, hardly meticulously maintained that had 250k miles on it last time I saw it and still rolling. It had WAY less money put into it than my brothers 93 Integra
You're still living in 99 if you don't know all car brands today compete well with each other save some older Chev and Dodge models on the way out
"waits for snooty domestic fanboy "
Sorry not a fanboi just a realist. . . I've owned Toyota, Nissan, Honda, Chev, Dodge, and Ford, the Toyota worst by far BTW however that wouldn't stop me from considering another
Heads not anywhere but in the here and now, ive owned 3 cars, one domestic and it fell apart, also its not just based on those three cars, i wouldnt ever base such a strong opinion on just my personal small slice of the pie, my entire FAMILY has owned many domestics and toyotas/hondas, every SINGLE domestic we bought, GMC, Chevy, Ford, didnt matter, all of them were money pits. My father drives Tacomas exclusively now, never has a bit of trouble with them, my mother drives Honda religiously (im not a huge fan but she also has very little issues with her cars), my brother, being the redneck he is drives a GMC pickup, every friggin month i gotta listen to another sob story about how hes gotta take it to the dealer for this or that. and thats a 2008 (tells me its not just older cars that were bad/good/whatever). I'm just going off of real life experience here. I will never buy domestic.
Of course, you are going to get a million people with different life experiences that will turn them away from one brand or another, i'm just saying what i know to be fact. Late 90's early 2000's model camry with approx 100,000 miles will do him good for near a decade and should only run him around $5k. You can't beat that.
Do you live in any place with steep hills/mountains? If so then avoid the Taurus. I swear it has two gears...high and low. That transmission couldn't find the right gear to save it's live trying to climb mountains between Phoenix and Flagstaff.
I'd go for something with the GM 38000....Impala LS or Pontiac Grand Prix GT. You can also find some 2006 or so Malibus in that range. Comfortable cars that deliver great milage with the 3.5L V6. Good people space too. Other than some quirks with the steering the Malibus are pretty reliable.
Thank you for your anecdotal evidence. The statistics, however, prove you very very wrong. I'll take statistics from Edmunds, Wards, and even Motortrend before listening to someone talk about their own experiences on an intarweb message board.
Funnily enough, the used car market (auctioneers at wholesale auctions where used cars are sold) agree regarding the Taurus being better.
The 2009 Taurus was selling at a significant discount compared with the 2009 Toyota Avalon, Peng said. Now the 2010 Ford Taurus is commanding a $2,500 premium over the 2010 Toyota Avalon.
And Taurus ranks highest in its segment for initial quality, according to the J.D. Power and Associates 2010 Initial Quality Study (IQS).
In the first half of 2010, Taurus retail sales were up 154 percent over the first half of 2009 while incentives were reduced by more than $1,600 per unit, noting that third-party sources have recognized the vehicles best-in-class levels of customer satisfaction and quality.
In the latest survey, Ford Motor Company is #1 in quality over any other full-brand-line up manufacturer.
Just get your wife a car with a lot of buttons all over the place. It'll feel like a luxury brand...at least on the inside.