- May 20, 2010
- 4,020
- 1
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Hey guys; my car has put me into a bit of a bad spot and I am trying to consider the best way out of it:
I bought a used car back in 2008 for about $6000. With the extended engine warranty, interest, and unemployment insurance it cost about twice that. Anyway... my payments are about $320 per month, but the problem is the car is a total piece of garbage. Since buying it I have had to put about $7000 worth of repairs into it just to keep it driveable. I haven't gotten rid of it yet because I still have another 18 months of payments to make on it. But, the car already has more problems which I can't afford to fix, and frankly I don't want to sink any more money into the thing so what can I do??
My current thought is that maybe I can get a line of credit to pay off the car, then use the car as a trade in on something new (something with a damn good warranty). Then spend the next few years making small monthly payments against the line of credit, while at the same time making car payments (can't be any worse than what I'm shelling out for repairs).
Has anyone else ever been in this situation, and what would you all do in my situation? (For those wondering it's a 2000 Nissan Maxima - usually a reliable car, but it has 240,000 KM on it).
Thanks in advance!
I bought a used car back in 2008 for about $6000. With the extended engine warranty, interest, and unemployment insurance it cost about twice that. Anyway... my payments are about $320 per month, but the problem is the car is a total piece of garbage. Since buying it I have had to put about $7000 worth of repairs into it just to keep it driveable. I haven't gotten rid of it yet because I still have another 18 months of payments to make on it. But, the car already has more problems which I can't afford to fix, and frankly I don't want to sink any more money into the thing so what can I do??
My current thought is that maybe I can get a line of credit to pay off the car, then use the car as a trade in on something new (something with a damn good warranty). Then spend the next few years making small monthly payments against the line of credit, while at the same time making car payments (can't be any worse than what I'm shelling out for repairs).
Has anyone else ever been in this situation, and what would you all do in my situation? (For those wondering it's a 2000 Nissan Maxima - usually a reliable car, but it has 240,000 KM on it).
Thanks in advance!
