Curse The Sky
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Hi guys.
I've been a Mustang guy for years and years, and with the exception of my '66 project that has been... "progressing" for 10+ years, I haven't owned one until recently.
On Saturday I picked up a Ford Gold-Certified 2020 GT Premium in Magnetic Gray (3rd favorite color) for $34k. She has 41k miles and several small dings. Interior is perfect, it rides and drives well, CarFax is clean... except that I recently found out it was a formal rental car in Florida. The car has no other options, aside form A10 and spare tire. Still, the certified status puts it with a 100k mile powertrain warranty that doesn't expire until 2027, which is quite nice.
Before settling on this car, I had inquired at a different dealership about a 2019 GT Premium. Kona Blue (my favorite color), PP1, 401A, used (not certified), 19k miles, asking $43k. Two owners and one accident reported ("minor" with front/rear damage). PP1 is what initially drew me to it, but it's more than I really wanted to spend and who knows if the accident will come back to bite me later. In addition to the 401A package, and PP1 It also has the Safe and Smart package, for what it's worth.
There's also another 2019 GT Premium that's local. Used/not certified, 14k miles, Kona Blue, 401A, Safe and Smart package (no PP1), $43k. 1 owner and no accidents. The low miles is great, but it is also a model year older than what I have. It's similar to the other Kona Blue car above, except it lacks PP1, one fewer owner (resale value), and no accident reported. If this car had PP1 for the asking price, I'd be all over it.
While I'm thrilled to have a MY2020 even though the mileage is a bit higher, and $34k is a much easier pill to swallow than $43k, I keep second-guessing my decision. I'd like to get some opinions. Would the Ford Gold-Certified status sway you to that vehicle? Would it matter to you at all? Would the extra $9k be worth it to you for 20-25k less miles (although 1 year older), 401A, and other goodies? Would you consider the car with the accident reported at all? Would you consider the former rental car at all, even if it's Gold certified?
Supposedly the Gold certification comes with a 14-day/1000 mile money-back guarantee, so if it actually works the way it sound it does, I still have one more week to return my 2020 and cringe at the extra payments on one of the other two vehicles.
Unfortunately none of the three vehicles mentioned have Magneride or active exhaust - two options that I'd really like to have but can't justify the $ for at this time.
Thanks for your opinions everyone.
I've been a Mustang guy for years and years, and with the exception of my '66 project that has been... "progressing" for 10+ years, I haven't owned one until recently.
On Saturday I picked up a Ford Gold-Certified 2020 GT Premium in Magnetic Gray (3rd favorite color) for $34k. She has 41k miles and several small dings. Interior is perfect, it rides and drives well, CarFax is clean... except that I recently found out it was a formal rental car in Florida. The car has no other options, aside form A10 and spare tire. Still, the certified status puts it with a 100k mile powertrain warranty that doesn't expire until 2027, which is quite nice.
Before settling on this car, I had inquired at a different dealership about a 2019 GT Premium. Kona Blue (my favorite color), PP1, 401A, used (not certified), 19k miles, asking $43k. Two owners and one accident reported ("minor" with front/rear damage). PP1 is what initially drew me to it, but it's more than I really wanted to spend and who knows if the accident will come back to bite me later. In addition to the 401A package, and PP1 It also has the Safe and Smart package, for what it's worth.
There's also another 2019 GT Premium that's local. Used/not certified, 14k miles, Kona Blue, 401A, Safe and Smart package (no PP1), $43k. 1 owner and no accidents. The low miles is great, but it is also a model year older than what I have. It's similar to the other Kona Blue car above, except it lacks PP1, one fewer owner (resale value), and no accident reported. If this car had PP1 for the asking price, I'd be all over it.
While I'm thrilled to have a MY2020 even though the mileage is a bit higher, and $34k is a much easier pill to swallow than $43k, I keep second-guessing my decision. I'd like to get some opinions. Would the Ford Gold-Certified status sway you to that vehicle? Would it matter to you at all? Would the extra $9k be worth it to you for 20-25k less miles (although 1 year older), 401A, and other goodies? Would you consider the car with the accident reported at all? Would you consider the former rental car at all, even if it's Gold certified?
Supposedly the Gold certification comes with a 14-day/1000 mile money-back guarantee, so if it actually works the way it sound it does, I still have one more week to return my 2020 and cringe at the extra payments on one of the other two vehicles.
Unfortunately none of the three vehicles mentioned have Magneride or active exhaust - two options that I'd really like to have but can't justify the $ for at this time.
Thanks for your opinions everyone.
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