The Geo Metro is BACK!

Analog

Lifer
Jan 7, 2002
12,755
3
0
(CNN) -- It's a 12-year-old, oft-mocked clunker of an automobile.
art.brenton.netz.geo.jpg

Brenton Netz has made a side business out of fixing up Geo Metros and selling them locally and on eBay.


But Marci Solomon is hoping she'll be the one laughing -- all the way to the bank -- when her Geo Metro saves her from skyrocketing gas prices.

Solomon, like many others, was taking a huge hit when it came to gas prices. With her 100-mile commute to and from work each day she saw no end in sight. Then she rediscovered the Geo Metro.

"I used to be a car snob, and I used to be too vain to drive anything that doesn't shine," Solomon, an electrician, said. "But now it's about do I want to eat, or do I want to make it to work? I want to do both."

The Metro has been making a huge comeback, especially on eBay where Solomon bought the car, because of its extremely high gas mileage.

The 1996 Metro's average of 40 miles per gallon nears that of the hybrid 2008 Toyota Prius -- priced at $21,000 for the cheapest model -- and bests most current cars by a long shot, according to government ratings. Older models of the Geo Metro, specifically cars from 1991 and the XFi edition have the same average as the hybrid. See how the Geo Metro stacks up with the Toyota Prius »

Solomon also toyed with the idea of purchasing a Prius, but decided that for a price of $7,300, the Metro was the more economical option.

For the most part, Solomon plans on using the car for commuting from her home in Rochester, Washington, to her job. The vehicle she has now, a Honda Element, was getting 28 mpg and she was filling up twice a week, costing her nearly $100. Stations were charging $3.97 a gallon in her area Tuesday, she said. iReport: Tell us how high gas prices are affecting you

The Metro is an investment in the future, Solomon said, even if she did pay more than five times the Blue Book value of the car.

"It was all about saving money," she said. "I don't think gas is ever going to go down and these are going to be the types of solutions we have to turn to. I wanted to beat the rush."
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The rush may have begun.

The 1996, 2-door, 3-cylinder Metro Solomon now owns opened on eBay May 7 with a bid of $200. A week later, Solomon won the car auction with a bid of $7,300. In 1995, a new Metro hatchback sold for about $9,000, according to Auto Mall USA.


In May alone, 43 Metros of various years and models were sold on eBay ranging in price from $221.50 to Solomon's top bid of $7,300. The cars have been hot items, fetching upwards of 49 bids on certain vehicles, with many of the auctions coming down to last-second bidding wars. On Tuesday morning, 34 more Metros were still up for grabs.

Since her eBay purchase, Solomon has acquired another Metro, which she is considering flipping on eBay for profit. She also has her eye on a third at a local car lot.

"To be honest I'm thinking of scarfing up any Geo Metro I can find," she said.

Solomon isn't alone in trying to profit off of a gas-saving craze. Brenton Netz has been selling fixed up Metros and Ford Festivas for two years now.

After buying a Metro on Craigslist in Montana and driving it back to his home in St. Cloud, Minnesota, Netz realized how rarely he was making trips to the pump.

"I thought the gas gauge was broken," Netz said. "I couldn't believe the gas mileage I was getting."

He realized he stumbled upon a possible side business and began buying one-way tickets to states in the West to purchase as many of the cars as he could. Netz said he has sold about a dozen cars so far and has eight more sitting in his backyard.

His cars only go up for sale one at a time because he knows that putting up a couple at a time would drive down the value and cut into his profit.

Netz says consumers don't seem to mind paying more than the retail value, and if they do, they generally stop feeling that way after they pick up the cars. He's gotten phone calls and e-mails from customers saying how thrilled they are with the mileage.

It seems, Netz said, people are beginning to realize their car choices need to be focused more on practicality than status and appearance.

"Gas prices are definitely driving increased popularity in the Metro, which at times wasn't cool," he said. "Now the coolness factor is stemming from the fact that you're getting 50 miles per gallon and never having to fill up."http://www.cnn.com/2008/LIVING....html?iref=mpstoryview
 

vi edit

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Oct 28, 1999
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$7300 for a 12 year old metro.

That woman is an idiot.
 

Demon-Xanth

Lifer
Feb 15, 2000
20,551
2
81
Surprisingly, Autotrader has one Geo Metro for sale within 100 miles of me, a '96 4 cylinder for $2k with 219k miles.
 

Analog

Lifer
Jan 7, 2002
12,755
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0
Originally posted by: Demon-Xanth
Surprisingly, Autotrader has one Geo Metro for sale within 100 miles of me, a '96 4 cylinder for $2k with 219k miles.

Go for it!
 

Demon-Xanth

Lifer
Feb 15, 2000
20,551
2
81
Originally posted by: Analog
Originally posted by: Demon-Xanth
Surprisingly, Autotrader has one Geo Metro for sale within 100 miles of me, a '96 4 cylinder for $2k with 219k miles.

Go for it!

I mean, what surprised me was that there was only one. Not 50.
 

daveymark

Lifer
Sep 15, 2003
10,573
1
0
Originally posted by: Demon-Xanth
Originally posted by: Analog
Originally posted by: Demon-Xanth
Surprisingly, Autotrader has one Geo Metro for sale within 100 miles of me, a '96 4 cylinder for $2k with 219k miles.

Go for it!

I mean, what surprised me was that there was only one. Not 50.

they sell quick. unlike SUV's, which sit in the lot like beached whales
 

alm99

Diamond Member
Apr 16, 2000
4,560
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Funny, my 2000 Saturn SL1 gets 38 miles to the gallon with combined city/highway driving and I paid 3k for it.
 

miri

Diamond Member
Jun 16, 2003
3,679
0
76
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geo_Metro

In the United States a single engine was available from 1989 through 1994: a 1.0 L I3 engine. Rated at 55 hp (39 kW), the small Suzuki-designed engine was the most fuel efficient production engine used in a GM car to date, boasting over 49 mpg in models with manual transmissions, and up to 39 mpg with the 3 speed automatic. Manual transaxle cars were able to achieve a 0-60 time of just over ten seconds.

Wow, not bad for a car that was available 19 years ago. You would think we could have a car now with even better MPG and performance and remain inexpensive 20 years later.
 

jpeyton

Moderator in SFF, Notebooks, Pre-Built/Barebones
Moderator
Aug 23, 2003
25,375
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Glad to see some Americans finally changing their habits.

Still crossing my fingers for some $6/gallon gas so we can make even bigger changes. More carpooling, more mass transit, less SUVs/trucks.
 

Steve

Lifer
May 2, 2004
15,945
11
81
Originally posted by: vi edit
$7300 for a 12 year old metro.

That woman is an idiot.

With modern gas prices, I wonder how long it would take to pay for itself.
 

vi edit

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Oct 28, 1999
62,484
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Originally posted by: miri
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geo_Metro

In the United States a single engine was available from 1989 through 1994: a 1.0 L I3 engine. Rated at 55 hp (39 kW), the small Suzuki-designed engine was the most fuel efficient production engine used in a GM car to date, boasting over 49 mpg in models with manual transmissions, and up to 39 mpg with the 3 speed automatic. Manual transaxle cars were able to achieve a 0-60 time of just over ten seconds.

Wow, not bad for a car that was available 19 years ago. You would think we could have a car now with even better MPG and performance and remain inexpensive 20 years later.

You don't want to be riding in that metro when even something like a Camry slams into you.

That $500-$1000 a year in gas savings comes at a serious tradeoff in safety.
 

BoomerD

No Lifer
Feb 26, 2006
66,317
14,723
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Around here, with all the Bay area commuters, when you see a Metro for sale, it's got 150 to 200K on it
 
Feb 6, 2007
16,432
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81
Originally posted by: nonameo
Originally posted by: vi edit
$7300 for a 12 year old metro.

That woman is an idiot.

QFT. Motorcycle license and a motorbike = less money.

She paid 5 times Blue Book for it... That woman is dumber than a bucket of spackle.
 

FeuerFrei

Diamond Member
Mar 30, 2005
9,144
929
126
Those vintage '90s models aren't that safe. You sacrifice a lot for the lovely mileage. I've driven a '93 or '94 Metro back in '96, and the thing would start shaking when you hit 70mph. Definitely bottom-of-the-barrel transportation.

Here's hoping the politicos will approve drilling in our domestic oilfields and restore the US to self-sufficiency.
 

OdiN

Banned
Mar 1, 2000
16,430
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So she spent $7300 on a car....to be more economical?

Okay so with gas at $3.97/gallon, that amount of money could get her 51,464 miles in the Element.

Let's just round that to 51,500.

Now...how much will 51,500 miles cost in the Metro?

$5,111

So in order to save $2,189 over that mileage, she spent $7,300. With her commute, she probably puts that 51,500 on yearly. So it will take 3 and 1/3 years for her to start having any sort of return on her investment. In the meantime, she has another car payment, or is out the $7300 from somewhere.

How this makes sense I'm not sure.
 

AmpedSilence

Platinum Member
Oct 7, 2005
2,749
1
76
Originally posted by: miri
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geo_Metro

In the United States a single engine was available from 1989 through 1994: a 1.0 L I3 engine. Rated at 55 hp (39 kW), the small Suzuki-designed engine was the most fuel efficient production engine used in a GM car to date, boasting over 49 mpg in models with manual transmissions, and up to 39 mpg with the 3 speed automatic. Manual transaxle cars were able to achieve a 0-60 time of just over ten seconds.

Wow, not bad for a car that was available 19 years ago. You would think we could have a car now with even better MPG and performance and remain inexpensive 20 years later.

agreed, but also from your quote, it had 55 hp! 55!! Unfortunately that doesn't sell anymore. Well, I guess it's making a come back, but it hadn't for long time. That's why we see cars like the mercedes with 400+ hp, that can do the 0-60 in 4 seconds. Power costs gas.

Though, I'm sure if the brought back the I3 engine with today's composites, you can create a crazy efficient car without having to resort to hybrids.
 

K1052

Elite Member
Aug 21, 2003
52,788
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Originally posted by: jpeyton
Glad to see some Americans finally changing their habits.

Still crossing my fingers for some $6/gallon gas so we can make even bigger changes. More carpooling, more mass transit, less SUVs/trucks.

Mass transit systems are already seeing rapidly increasing usage. Commuter rail ridership is up 15% here and CTA ridership has risen 8% over the last 4 months. In established high ridership systems this is a lot of people.

 

vi edit

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Oct 28, 1999
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Originally posted by: Steve
Originally posted by: vi edit
$7300 for a 12 year old metro.

That woman is an idiot.

With modern gas prices, I wonder how long it would take to pay for itself.

Considering that she could have bought a 4 cylinder Camry(30MPG) of a similar year for around $3000 it would take over 4 years for the 40MPG Metro to make up the $4000 difference in purchase price.

And with the Camry she'd actually have some comfort, safety, and available parts if needed.
 

ConstipatedVigilante

Diamond Member
Feb 22, 2006
7,670
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Originally posted by: jpeyton
Glad to see some Americans finally changing their habits.

Still crossing my fingers for some $6/gallon gas so we can make even bigger changes. More carpooling, more mass transit, less SUVs/trucks.

That would suck quite a bit, considering how America is a much more spread-out place than Europe. Many people have to commute 20-50 miles each day to their job, and higher gas prices makes that difficult. Along with making everything else more expensive. We definitely need more fuel sources (c'mon nuclear and wind!), but hoping for higher prices won't help anything.
 

Svnla

Lifer
Nov 10, 2003
17,986
1,388
126
Originally posted by: tw1164
I got a speeding ticket in a metro once :( very embarrassing.

Oh my. I drove a metro as rental once and I can't believe you can drive that thing over the speed limit.....LOL

 

thomsbrain

Lifer
Dec 4, 2001
18,148
1
0
The Civic VX had better mileage and vastly superior performance and quality, but nearly every VX in existence has been riced out and destroyed these days, due to their low weight.
 

OdiN

Banned
Mar 1, 2000
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Originally posted by: jpeyton
Glad to see some Americans finally changing their habits.

Still crossing my fingers for some $6/gallon gas so we can make even bigger changes. More carpooling, more mass transit, less SUVs/trucks.

That's a pretty stupid statement.

Problem is that the vast majority of the US has no mass transit system. People who live in smaller towns and more rural areas would be screwed. Sure it works well in NY, but it's everywhere and there is the population to support it.

There's nothing that I can do - I have to drive to work every day. I honestly would ride my bike as much as I could, but that is impossible as I have to wear slacks and dress shirts every day as I work in a professional business environment and I can't ride a bike in that.

I also own an SUV. What's so bad about SUV's? They are great for going camping. I can fit everything I need in my car...but then there is no room left for anyone to sit but me. Plus the car doesn't do so well getting to some of the camping areas that I go to as they require a higher clearance vehicle, which = SUV/Truck. No I don't HAVE to go, but it keeps me sane. I also go 4 wheeling in it. It's not like I drive it every day here and there. I mostly drive my car and use the SUV for trips requiring more cargo space.