Welcome to the Abant's podcast. I'm Dan. I'm Nick. It's fall. It is fall. I'm liking it. The heat is on. Yeah, it was it was a quick
transition. The fact that it was like 70 or 80 degrees, like two days ago. And now it's like 50. And yeah, that that mini split works.
They're underrated. Like, I think so many people kind of think, Oh, I don't want that on my wall. But it really is nice.
Yeah, that's a big one 24,000 BTU, which is probably like, it's big, but it's small for a shop of this size. But it
still does a really good job. Yeah, heat up to your office. If you just leave the door open. Oh, yeah. Yeah, that's nice.
Although when I'm working in the office all day, I typically only heat the office, of course. That's also an inverter. Oh, that's
right. You don't want up there. I have an AC dedicated just for the office because it's a tone enclosed space and it uses
just uses less energy to heat that. Not much, though. Like, the technologies come a long way. They're really energy
efficient. Well, especially after you've sealed up all these walls to I mean, you little right. Yeah, one tenth of a
wall that's exposed just that needs but you're not losing a ton of heat there. No, it's really not that bad. It's a I was
worried about my heating bill or my excuse me, not my heating but my electricity bill. When I installed that
because I've been running, I've been working out here so much basically the AC was on all the time. And my bill, even
when it was on basically sun up to sundown, it only went up about $20. Wow, which was so worth it. Yeah, to make a
space that is completely unlivable when it's, you know, a sweltering because if it's 80 degrees outside in here,
outside in here, it was like 100 plus. And now it's, you know, 70 on a hot day. And you know, today, it's like you
said, it's like 50 degrees out. It's a nice 72 in here. Yeah, perfect. Very comfortable. The only time I like it to be
72. So yeah, yeah, it's way more efficient to heat and cool the shop than it is the house by a big
margin. Yeah, I got you. Yeah. Well, it's Yeah, I double insulated the walls in here. They're foam
backed plus fiberglass. So there's the R rating probably 30 plus the cold, which is nice. Yeah. Yeah. Again, I've
got to do the ceiling. But so far, I'll that can wait. So it's holding though. I mean, it's, you know, yeah, it's
not very comfortable. Yeah. Yeah. We got for a tip for us this week.
Boy, which one did I have this week? I have I have all these saved. So I feel like we just talked
about it two seconds before we play button. But yeah, no, I was thinking, I was like, Yeah, I'll do that
one. So I want to talk a little bit more about wheel spacers. We've talked about it on the show. I always say
the best, the best wheel spacers the correct is the correct offset wheel. Yeah, that's the ideal solution that
may not always be possible. Sometimes a lot of people want to run specialized rims. Sometimes they
weren't want to run hub adapters. This has been popular since probably the, I think the 90s is when
I mean, it's before that. But I think that really got popular in the 90s when people started
putting like Porsche wheels on Volkswagen's. And of course, that's a different offset. And you can
do that with different hub spacers. Our friends up at HR and Bellingham actually were pretty early on
this game. And there's a lot of horror stories around spacers. A lot of tire shops still won't touch
them.
It's an extra link that can fail. Right. Exactly. Yeah. But a properly installed wheel
spacer, especially some of the newer stuff, Bora, I think they think it's Bora is the
there's a couple of repeatable brands out there that have been doing this a long time and
you really don't have anything to worry about as far as the space are failing. As long as
it's operator air in my mind, like that it's the people that put it on. Yes, it is. If all the
directions torque them properly, use the right lock tight. If they ask for it, that kind of stuff,
they're fine. But they do do, however, and there's no way around it. And you can do I mean, using a
different offset wheel has actually the same impact as it does add a little more stress on
your wheel bearings. And the sign of a wheel bearing is pretty easy to identify. You can
lift your vehicle up and turn that wheel up and down and, you know, shake it physically with
your hands and it'll move a little bit or you can hear it grinding. If you're just go to find a
quiet road, one that doesn't have cement on the sides, but one that is ideally banked on both sides
with vegetation, is that trees absorb sound really well. Yeah. And in the fall is a bad time
to us. And the spring is a great time to do this because everything's coming in. It's all
green. It's thick. It's easy for us to listen to your vehicle by way. It's a great way to
hear the sounds of your vehicles and not everything around you. Luckily, Washington, a lot
opportunity. A lot of opportune places to do that. A lot of great wheel bearing listening
roads. Yeah, CV shafts, things like that. You can start listening to sounds that you wouldn't
normally hear on quiet spaces like that. You don't want to hear. Yeah, you don't want to
hear. But yeah, they're good for it. They're oddly good for diagnosing things. But yeah,
that's really the only thing is just to check your wheel bearings more frequently. And
even then, if you've looked at a wheel bearing repair on most vehicles, it's really
not that difficult. It may look difficult because you're pulling apart your hub. It's messy. Yeah,
that's the big thing. Yeah, packing those bearings can be really messy. You need to buy a proper
bearing press, which is like, if you're going to do this one time, Harbor Freight's fine,
like $7 to $10 probably for a wheel bearing press and the grease press, not a hydraulic
press. I mean, pressing the grease through the bearing, there's a special tool for
that. It's just like it looks like a cone. You just press it and it pushes forces
grease through the bearing. And some come pre looped. If you have a lot of there's sealed
wheel bearings out there, so you may not even need to do that depends on your vehicle. But I
don't know for the look you want for the right offset in our case off road, it can be very
functional to push those tires out farther because when you slide into something, they
protect the body. Downside, of course, is you fling more rocks up to the side of your
vehicle. You don't say. Yeah. So contact our friends over at s tech for proper ppf
on your quarter panels and listen to them when they say you should put stuff there
and you go, no, no, no, no, I'll be fine. Or you can get, I mean, you may not like to
look depending on your vehicle, but mud guards do help a lot with stone chips. I've
got weather tech in the front of the Bronco and Husky on the F 150. And they make a
huge difference. And we ran those through Moab. No problem. Like they flex like
crazy. So there's a lot of guys like, Oh, you don't want those on the reducers
clearance. They're pretty tough. And you can just grab in if you are
dedicated off road or you can run those really, really flexible rubber ones. Those
do serve a good purpose. Our friend that we have some people have been in row
Duraflap, they make custom ones even. So if you need custom mudflaps, no matter
what it is, you can go up there and talk to those guys, their offices right
in Monroe, and they can make them for you. But just to know, you know,
those spacers, if you buy reputable brand and you install them correctly,
they're probably fine. A little more wheel bearing, where a lot more aware
on the side of your vehicle makes, like I said, as text the proper answer,
but mudflaps do a good job in a pinch. And there you go.
Makes sense. Yeah, it totally makes sense. I mean, and I think, you know,
especially when I was when I always thought of wheel spacers and things
like that, I was obviously the 90s and 2000s. And we were in our sports
cars and things like that. And you had to be careful because you pushed
it out too much with the flex. You could, you'd have to roll fenders
and there's all kinds of stuff that you that math has always sort of
negative and positive offset camber. I remember when we were trying to,
when I was trying to put wheels on one of the Subaru's and Blake was helping
me and he, you know, he knows all the math is for it because he's in the
wheel business. But that's just insane to me that, you know,
because you got to think about so many factors. So yeah,
speaking of, I wanted to follow up on something from the last show.
Somebody asked me about it just in a DM there. What was that alignment
tool? It's called gyro line. Gyro line is a new company that
a new company that they're not, I shouldn't say they're not that new,
but they're relatively new because they, they use your phone to do
alignment in your car. And it's basically like a 3d printed pad
that you hook onto the wheel. And then you can set the alignment
spec in the app. And then as you make adjustments to your
suspension, it will show. And if you think about it, your
phone has an incredible accelerometer, it has a gyroscope,
it has every sensor under the sun in your phone. And it's
extremely accurate. It's not, this is not cheap junk. This is
the, the, the measure, the way your phone handles measurements
is really, really precise.
Well, look at the measuring app. I've never understood how
that works.
Yeah, it's pretty amazing. But you can it'll, you know, toe
camber caster, you basically just set your phone on this.
And then it's not just as simple as a high quality 3d
print. Like this is really exact stuff. And from
everything I've read online, I did my own research. I
haven't used this tool personally, watching videos of
it from people who weren't paid to use it. And it seems to
work great. It's 200 bucks, no subscriptions, no fees. We've
got a money back guarantee. It's only 30 days. I wish it was
longer than that. But I mean, it's really long enough to do
a few long enough to just put your phone in a basically a
flat box and then put them in and watch the measurements
as you change. So like they have tons reviews, these
guys seem to, I think they have a patent, they're
kind of like, which doesn't stop China from doing
anything ever. But I would support the guys that
make it because they've done the research and the app
support. I always do this. If there's anything
that relies on an app, I go to the app store. It's a
great product with one and a half stars in the app
store because it only works on, you know, one iOS
version and then nobody's updated it in 20 years.
These guys have five stars. The app seems to work
well. So if you need to do your own alignment or
you're just curious about it, 200 bucks is a pretty
low investment as far as a tool. And if it
works, that's pretty sweet. Yeah, like, because
it's really, like I said, once you get under
there and look at your suspension, it starts to
make sense. But you kind of, at least for me, I'm
not, other people can think better than I can.
So with that, I can't see something and visualize
it until I'm kind of doing it. I got to get in
there and get my hands on it, do it myself.
And then like, oh, okay, now this all makes
together, all this makes sense, jives together,
you know. So anyway, Gyroline was the company
and yeah, they seem to be pretty reputable.
And a lot of people seem to like that tool.
So interesting. Yeah. So I got a couple of
conundrums in my mind as I think about today.
I was looking at the news and ironically, because
of where Avance is in Washington and
California and things like that, I mean, gas prices
are an issue. I mean, Washington has taken over
as the highest gas prices. Insurance has gone
through the roof. And I started to think
back at like, when we were kids and young
adults, and you know, when we wanted to get
into a car, you wanted a good car, you
know. And I think in 2000, you could buy
a base base model Kia for about $10,000.
Yep. I remember the commercials.
Yeah. And I mean, and you got $100,000 on warranty.
Hyundai was the same way.
Yeah.
The reason I bring this up is we were driving
and we were driving behind some electric Kia.
You're looking car.
And Kate goes, that's a Kia. Like that looks so high
end. Like I thought Kia's were, you know, built
to be basic. And I said, well, a lot of them
used to be. And it made me thinking like,
made me start thinking like, what is that
car today? Like if you have to go out and buy
just a car to get you from point A to point B
and you're not buying a used car, like if
you want to buy a new car with a warranty.
In my mind, it was always a Kia. It was always
a Hyundai. They gave you a great product,
good warranty, they had good service.
The cars were reliable because they had to
be because a lot of people that were,
that don't have higher income needed that.
And I started to look around and there
wasn't like, again, the new to baseline
Kia now I think I went on the website.
I don't remember what model it was. I should have.
And I expected and it was $21,000, which is
double, obviously. And I understand everybody
sitting there screaming at the radio, there's
inflation and things like that. Yeah, I get that.
Yeah. And then just for reference, I'd look
this up as you were talking about it, $10,000
in 2010 in today's money is about just shy
of 15,000. So there's significant inflation,
but it's still not 21,000. And extra $6,000
when you're buying a cheap commuter or you
don't have a lot of money is a lot of money.
I don't care what anybody says, $6,000 is just
still a lot of money. It can be pretty
life changing to people and that's a huge
impact. That's to be able to get into an
entry level car at plus 20,000 is a problem.
Well, it is. And you know, I've had several
people through us doing this have come to us
and asked us about car recommendations and
people say, you know, and I understand
if you're buying your kid a car, you
mean buying new is not a bad idea if you
can find a great car or finding a used car.
But with used cars, you have no warranty,
there's maintenance issues. And I have suggested
many people like go out and look at
Kia's, look at Hyundai's, look at the basic
Corolla's things like that, you know, where
you're not getting a lot of the creature
comforts. And yes, Kia has a lot of the
new comforts, you know, they have a lot of
electronics and things like that. And I'm
sure that's where a lot of the cost comes
from. At the base of it, it's pretty
much the same frame, same suspension,
same engine they've always had.
Obviously, they branched off into the
hybrids and things like that. But I
mean, you look at Hyundai and then
when they spun off Genesis, and
those Genesis cars are more expensive
than Mercedes and they're nice.
They're beautiful. They're absolutely
beautiful. But that base, that I feel
like they've gotten away from that.
And to be honest, I couldn't come up
with a car, like I wasn't able to find
something that was new with a warranty
that was under $20,000.
Yeah, there's virtually nothing out
there, you know. And that's a lot, I
mean, that's a ton of money for
anybody that's a ton of money. So it
was just somewhat, it was a realization
obviously, because I was looking at,
I've been looking around, you know, I
had to, my insurance is due and so,
you know, of course, that's when you
start to look around and, you know, I've
reached out to some of our friends and
fortunately, unfortunately, I have a
great package with who I'm with, with
my insurance and so, but it's still
stupid expensive to ensure all that
stuff. So it's the monkeys that get
you. I mean, I think they're $23
a year a month or so.
Yeah, I think it's $800 a year.
Maybe. So I don't know, I'm putting
the question out there too.
Obviously, you know, if you go to
the used market, you don't know
what is, what has happened to a car
and I'm seeing a lot of people now,
this is a topic on top of a topic that
are getting those OBD2 readers and
they're taking them with them to buy,
to buy new cars, which I think is
really smart, because even the person
selling you the car may not know
what's wrong with the car and you'll
be able to, but so, and those are
really cheap. That's just somewhat of
a side note that, you know, my ADHD
brain went down, but I just can't
seem to find the new entry level
plus the new white girl, Jetta.
There you go. I mean, you know, we've
said it a hundred times, Brian has been
on the show and we talked about it,
like you used to be able to get
Mustangs and Camaros in the 20s.
Like that was a thing, like base
models, V6s, four cylinders, things
like that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, like you said, there's
nothing out there for under $20,000.
The Avantz members marketplace is a
fantastic place to go.
Oh, God, yes. I mean, I would
trust cars from that, but I'm just
saying.
If you're not an Avantz member,
that's enough reason to join Avantz
and the reason is, is because
the community sort of has your back.
People will vouch for other members.
They typically are very upfront
about problems.
And so instead of, like, there's
two sides of this coin.
I would rather buy a car from somebody
who says it has these problems
and they're super upfront about it,
especially stuff you can't see.
Yeah.
Because even if it's a big one,
because at least then I know
what I'm walking into.
I unplugged the battery two minutes
before you get here.
In 10 minutes, the check engine
lights gonna come on.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And then there's a running joke,
like check engine lights are
blown way out of proportion with
people who aren't car enthusiasts
because we're like, yeah, it does
that because of the tune,
the intake, the mid pipe.
It has no cats.
God knows what else, you know.
And the car thinks it's in Serbia.
Yeah.
Exactly.
Yeah.
But I would, I would much rather
buy from a private seller
that I know than even off a dealer
lot.
It's not like the deal.
I mean, the dealer is gonna
maximize their profits.
It's a business.
And I think we're not
blasting anybody for doing that.
But there's a lot of things
they're not gonna fix or want
to fix.
Yeah.
A lot of cars they're not
gonna take it on trade
because they're not worth it.
Or if they do, they're just like,
that goes to auction buy.
Have a nice day.
Yeah.
And they make it up on the other
other end.
But yes, this is a good
topic.
We visited a few times, but
I always tell everybody the
answer in the Pacific Northwest
is the is the cross track.
Still in the mid 20s for that.
Yep.
But for the Pacific Northwest,
I still think
for most people just looking
for a point A to point B car,
a utilitarian vehicle,
it covers a lot of bases
and it's not just a point A
to point B car.
The Corolla is great.
It's a standard, you know,
the Corolla, the Sentra,
the the the Civic,
all that stuff is great.
But you're into the mid 20s,
low 30s.
And for that, I would rather
send people into a cross track.
It's not going to have as much
power.
It's not going to get quite
as good mileage,
but it's going to get you there
in the rain a lot safer
and it's going to get to the
mountains and it's going to
get you off the off to the
trail down that gravel road.
And it's a good car.
And I would add to that.
And again, we know the people,
the listeners know we're
super people, but
Forrester, like I was never
a huge fan of the Forrester.
And then I married a lovely
woman and she came with a
Forrester.
And it's been great mileage
and it's been cheap to keep up.
I was looking at Chevy.
I was trying to see if they
still they don't make the
sparks and stuff like that
anymore.
The little stuff like that.
So I had overlooked that.
So well, as Dave Ramsey would
say, take, you know,
people are all crazy
for the amount of cars
they're financing.
And yeah, which is to
enthusiasts is a little
different because you're
your car is not just
your transportation.
It is your hobby.
It is not just your tool.
It is something you enjoy
driving and something you,
a way to enjoy spending your time.
You can get a Chevy Trax
starting at 20,000.
Okay, a little less should be.
Yeah, yeah.
Again, you know,
this is just something that
came up in conversation.
So I don't know what
the answer is.
Obviously, you know,
the used market is out there,
but as more technologically
advanced cars come on
to the used market,
there's going to be
more and more cost to
owning them.
I mean, this echoes back
to a very good friend of ours
who works for Audi
that was talking to us one time
and said that a new luxury car
there's gotten a hailstorm
and it's totaled
because there's so much electronics
in the roof that they get.
So it's stuff like that
that really affects,
obviously that affects
the cost of the car initially
and it affects repair costs
in the future.
And it's just, you know,
as we come into,
you know,
financially financial times
where, you know,
interest rates are going
to come down,
but you know,
it's ebb and flow,
but right now it's, you know,
we're paying over $5,
$5 a gallon in some places
in the state.
Yeah.
And California is talking
and will likely go through
with their mileage tax,
which means Washington
and Oregon will be shortly
behind because, you know,
why wouldn't we do
something like that?
And that's just basically
where you're going
to report your miles to them
and then...
Well, it's easier to enforce
in California
because they still have
smog check,
like you have to go in
and get your vehicle
inspected.
How they do it here,
big brother.
I mean,
luckily I think
we're far enough out
of the city where
it's an OBD2 thing
or something, probably.
Yeah, I'm not doing that.
I don't want to give them ideas.
Yeah, well,
yeah.
Yeah.
But obviously that,
the problem is is
which I,
it's such simple logic.
I don't know why people
don't understand it.
If you,
the people that travel
the most for work,
do have,
typically have the lowest
amount of money to do that.
Like that's why
they're traveling so much.
Yeah, they're living
in an area they can afford
so they can go work at a
job that will pay them
enough.
And that's just
most people.
That's life.
Like if,
you know,
I lived in Arlington
and commuted to Bellevue
because that was where
the money was
and that's,
so I had to make the commute
and then when I got
more money,
I moved closer to my job.
Like that's how
you do that though.
If you're,
if I was going to rent
an apartment in,
you know,
Bellevue or Kirkland,
like I was,
I was,
you know,
even then
that was going to be
2,000 plus a month.
My mortgage in Arlington
was 1250.
So do the math.
All the good old days.
Yeah,
I can buy a lot of gas
with $750 a month.
Yes.
Especially then.
Especially in a nice little
commuter car
that gets 30 miles a gallon.
Yeah,
I was getting 42
in the Corolla.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
And so,
yeah.
And so that,
but that mileage tax,
like,
it's ridiculous.
Now,
I mean,
if I have to pay
an extra $1,000 a year
because of a mileage tax,
I'm annoyed,
but it doesn't really
impact me that much
over the course of a year.
But if I'm making 20,
you know,
35 to $50,000 a year,
that's a lot more money.
You know,
you can even get a Corolla
for under 23.
No.
All this,
like I said,
it's just,
I don't know.
I mean,
I mean,
we go back to the days
of the hamsters
and,
you know,
in the Kia
and it was,
it was under,
it was sub 20s.
Das Auto, yeah.
Das Autos
and things like that.
So I just,
it's more of a question
out there of people
and I would love to see
some feedback,
you know,
obviously like we do
when we post this stuff
to kind of talk about it
because
I'm curious.
Yeah.
If you're buying new,
okay, here's the question.
If you're buying new,
a lot of,
I want to hear this
from the people with kids,
especially,
because they're the ones
who are really looking at this
stuff.
What are you buying?
If you're buying cheap,
I mean,
if you have the luxury of option
of buying more of a car
for your kid,
something in the 30s,
great,
like more power to you,
good for them,
good for you,
we're happy for it,
but a lot of people don't.
So what are you buying your kid?
And two,
if you're buying used,
what are you looking at?
Now for me,
I went down this rabbit hole
recently and,
and I'm still
looking around a little bit.
I'm waiting,
feeling things out a little bit
before I buy anything,
but I'm really,
really gravitating toward that
2015 plus
mark 7.5
GTI.
How many people sent you that ad?
Three.
Okay.
For the Golf R.
Yeah.
And I,
I love the Golf R,
but that's more than I want to spend.
It's more car than I need.
And I've been,
and like,
there's an R8 right here.
I understand.
And I had the S3.
That's just a large,
you know,
yeah.
It's like,
and the S3 was here.
So it's not like I need,
you know,
I didn't want to go back to,
the Golf R is fantastic.
I love the Golf R,
but it's not what I need.
And so,
the mark 7.5.
And people are like,
well, you can buy a lot of gas for,
for that.
I'm like,
it's not just the gas.
I don't want to put the miles on the truck.
It's comfortable.
I love driving it,
but I also want something fun
and sporty to drive on that.
Yeah.
Like I,
I can get by with less,
but I'm luckily,
luckily I am,
excuse me,
I am fortunate that I have options.
And I like to be,
if I can get it right,
like around that 15,000 range,
I can get a really fun car
with,
with,
you know,
relatively good miles.
I'm not too afraid of miles,
because,
you know,
I can work on a Volkswagen all day.
And if I can't,
I know people who can't.
Yeah.
And I can afford to fix things
as they come up.
But a mark 7.5 GTI
is sort of the,
the pinnacle of Volkswagen to me.
It's not hybrid.
The DSG is really good.
You can get a manual if you want it.
I'm DSG obviously,
because I want a commuter
and I don't want to be,
I will be stuck in traffic
in Redmond multiple times
with commutes.
So I'm going for DSG.
My mileage is good enough.
And it's just plain fun to drive.
It's a car I can do a little bit to,
and it'll be
suspension upgrades on that
car, a bit of a stereo upgrade,
tint the windows,
some s-tech.
If it doesn't have it,
good to go.
Well, I mean,
I literally driving here today
rolled over 14,000 miles on the truck
in 17 months.
Oh, I'm catching up.
Yeah, I got about 11,000 on the truck.
My point is they don't get driven
that much,
because one,
it's,
well,
that is the downfall of that truck
is the fact that I barely get
300 miles out of a tank.
And no matter how I drive it,
if I drive it fast,
if I drive it slow,
but,
you know,
I,
so if given the option,
that truck is my fun car,
you know,
I mean,
and,
and we have the Subaru,
obviously,
so that's our,
our mileage car,
and it gets
three times better gas bunch,
but,
yeah,
it's,
and it's also stupid,
expensive to fill up that truck.
Like that was one of the things,
and I will say this,
and I've admitted it,
that was one of the things I
forgot to factor
when buying that truck.
I factored insurance,
I factored my payments,
I factored my rates,
everything,
because I was just,
in my mind,
I was so used to going to the gas station,
and it costing me
45 to 50 dollars to fill up the car.
And now it's like,
oh,
so that was my mistake.
And so,
yeah,
you do.
Luckily,
I only filled the truck about
twice as well.
You also have a bigger tank.
Oh yeah,
yeah.
35 gallons,
but it's still 150 dollars to fill up.
Yeah,
they make a new 35 gallon tank for my truck.
But does it reduce your ground clearance a lot?
No.
No.
Ooh.
Sucks up.
It takes up every little bit of,
yeah.
That,
that is tempting.
All right,
it's,
it's very tempting,
but it's,
yeah,
I mean,
but then again,
you know,
you're going okay,
I get 35 gallons,
which would,
so I think I barely get 18,
so I'd be almost doubling it.
Wow.
Yeah.
You get so.
Better mileage than I thought.
I'm getting 16 to 17.
That's what I'm getting in my truck though,
which is crazy.
Yeah.
Because my truck's 1000 pounds heavier than yours,
and it's a bigger engine.
So it's,
is it a bigger engine?
Yeah, it is.
3.5 or 2.3.
Yeah,
you're right,
you're right.
That's 0.5,
yeah.
Yeah.
Quick math.
Which is interesting,
because the three liter with the tune,
which the,
for the Bronco gets the same mileage,
well,
did you do the tune on the Bronco?
I have it,
but yeah.
Oh yeah, okay.
Yeah.
It's sitting over there on a shelf.
Yeah.
Um,
I just think man,
no time.
I know,
I get it.
I didn't know.
Yeah.
That's why I said,
did you,
did you get it done?
So, yeah.
No,
I need to take it in.
Yeah.
I'm not doing it myself
because I want the warranty,
but,
but it gets about the same mileage,
which isn't,
doesn't saying a lot for Ford.
No.
Because it should be getting better.
Yeah,
it's not going to.
1000 pounds is a lot,
but I mean,
whatever.
I don't know.
That's the question.
What are you buying?
What, what, what,
give us,
I,
I mean,
what do we overlook?
A lot of times,
and this is one of those topics
where we just sort of
kind of
briefly talked about it
before we came on the show.
I didn't do a ton of research,
but it was like,
I knew enough that like,
I remember you could buy a Kia
for $10,000.
And that seemed like a lot back then.
Well,
but if you don't,
if you're not worried about mileage,
or mileage,
not miles per gallon,
but mileage,
overall mileage,
I'd say leasing a Model 3
is pretty hard to beat.
Yeah.
At 300 bucks,
I think that might be the,
I think today,
oh, unfortunately,
I think today was the last day to do that.
Yesterday was the last day.
So maybe that's 400 now.
Still.
Also,
and there's,
I have to say that,
it's not just 300 bucks.
There's a down payment.
Oh, no,
there's like 6,000.
Yeah.
There's,
there's a substantial down payment.
Oh, every lease,
there's a down payment.
Yeah.
But yeah,
if you wanted to get into an EV,
there's that.
I'm really disappointed the slate
didn't work out.
Now,
it hasn't,
to be fair,
people are like,
what do you mean it didn't work out?
They're just getting started.
I'm like, yeah,
but they were supposed to be 20,000.
Now they're 30,000.
And you're buying a bare bones vehicle for $30,000.
With no EV tax credit.
So quickly.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Maybe there's,
they're talking about these new battery,
new battery technology,
sodium filled versus lithium,
it's supposed to drive prices down
and make batteries more efficient.
It's,
it's too new for us to say what it will do,
or if it'll be revolutionary or not,
but maybe,
but EVs never really lived up to the hype
they were supposed to,
as far as cost.
They did in technology and a lot of other features,
they really pushed things forward
and I'm thankful for that.
But unfortunately,
they sort of have moved themselves
due to costs into that,
more of a niche market
that most people can't afford to buy into.
It made sense when they were at those numbers.
Yeah.
Did you,
did you follow some of those Ford deals that came out?
No.
You can now,
Lisa Raptor.
Really?
Yes.
That's now a thing.
I've seen that from two sources
and Ford came out with something with,
even if you had bad credit,
they were going to get you approved on one of their,
like,
I think they're desperate to get some stuff off the lots,
but yeah, that's,
yeah.
Yeah.
So I'm on the Ford Bronco Raptor owner's group on Facebook
and a lot of people.
That's dangerous.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's actually,
it's an oddly civil place.
Let me say oddly civil,
but a lot of people are talking about the costs
and because I think the new ones
are $10,000 cheaper now,
but they're still 87 or something.
Yeah.
Still stupid.
And you can still find them all day for discounts.
Yep.
And depending on the market,
you go to.
And I said this again,
I'm just going to end with this
before we move on to our next topic.
Look at a state.
If you live in an area like ours,
where there's a lot of money floating around
because people get paid relatively well here
and there's a lot of them,
just go look at a state and a place where they don't.
The Bronco was picked up in urban Illinois
in a town with no stop lights
for 20,000 off MSRP.
Brand new, full warranty,
right off the dealer a lot.
And you can find those deals on basically any car.
Well, those dealerships love to do that
because a lot of times
they're forced to buy those cars
and nobody in the town is going to buy it,
except the one guy that owns the town
and the dealership.
And it's just a fun experience.
And you're like, people are like,
well, you're not really saving that much.
And I said, well, you are if you're financing,
like 99% of the buyers these days,
you're probably financing that.
And over time, that math makes a big difference,
that 20,000.
So you're like, yeah, my payment's the same.
Stop looking at your payment.
Look at the overall cost,
total cost, not just your payment.
And then make it an adventure.
Go buy a vehicle out of state, drive it home.
Go see some national parks,
see some landmarks.
Go find that big ball of twine, whatever.
It's amazing.
Yeah.
Go find the world's biggest paperclip.
It's stuff's out there.
Frying pan.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Go through.
I want to do that sometime.
Yeah.
And the discounted markets are typically
the South and the West Midwest.
I say West Midwest
because it's like right down that center line,
that West side tends to be a little bit cheaper.
You go East and you've got more major cities
because the way people
navigated across the United States.
Weird.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So the smaller the area,
but also Arizona, Texas, New Mexico,
not so much Utah
because there's a decent amount of money in Utah,
that corridor.
So you don't see the big discounts there.
Colorado.
Few deals here and there,
but they don't always meet the same emissions
as Washington and California.
So remember that.
Most vehicles are 50-state compliant now,
but not all, including raptors.
You need to make sure you ask that too
when you're buying a car.
Yeah, you gotta make sure you ask that.
Some people, even people that are selling you
might not know that.
Because they're so used to selling cars
to people in their areas.
Yeah.
And Florida is a great place too.
Use can be sketchy out of Florida.
That's where the Land Cruiser came from, wasn't it?
Yep.
Use can be sketchy out of Florida
if you don't know the history.
Just, are you very aware of that?
Yeah.
Comes with water.
Yeah.
A lot of water.
That's right.
It's humidity and salt water down there.
Well, it's actually,
you don't see much of a rust problem
in Florida because it rains so much.
They get those big rain storms
that come through all the time
so their rust is bad.
The hurricanes.
Yeah, exactly.
But you get flooding
and a lot of flood cars down there,
but buying new, that's really not a concern.
Obviously, you have to worry about that.
And you can, there's a lot of,
it's a big drive.
It doesn't get much further than Florida to here,
but it's a beautiful drive
and you can see so many places.
So, you know, go through New Orleans.
Go through, you know, go through Texas.
Don't stop.
Just drive through.
Get a good lunch in New Orleans.
Oh, God, beignets, yeah.
Yeah.
Absolutely.
Get some good tacos in Texas.
Get some good tacos in New Mexico.
Lots of tacos and then.
Taco-based trip.
Yep.
Go find the best tacos across the U.S.
Hell, go buy a Tacoma.
Tacos on tacos.
There you go.
Yeah.
So, I'm actually, that's another point
I wanted to bring up here before we close.
A lot of people talk about like,
the Raptors are a great example.
Tacomas are a great example.
Buying those high-end trims,
the, what's the trail hunter?
Yeah.
The Raptor, obviously.
They're not as expensive as you might think.
They're expensive in the overall cost
as in when you buy them new,
but the depreciation scales where it's at.
An F-150, regular 4x4, not Raptor,
with basic options like not an FX4
just is going to depreciate
because there's so many of them so fast.
In fact, they're one of the faster
depreciating vehicles in the market.
Most trucks are, but Raptors are not.
Raptors and Tacomas,
especially like those special editions
are some of the slowest depreciating cars
in the market, even with mileage.
When I sold my 2020 famously,
I think I lost maybe $10,000 on it
with 70,000 miles on it.
Like, it cost me nothing to own that truck.
Yes, I paid interest,
but if you look at the depreciation scale,
I lost less money than somebody
buying a standard F-150 of the same year
and selling at the same time.
Like, I actually came out on top of them
and I paid way more for my truck,
but I lost a lot less money.
Well, then that's sort of the point.
Make more by losing less.
Yeah, make more exactly.
Make more by losing less.
Also, I wanted to say caveat.
The lease deal on the Raptors
may have been for September.
I just realized it's October,
but look it up.
But they were definitely doing it.
So that's, which is big.
That's crazy.
Had that been a deal when the Ranger was,
I probably would have just leased an F-150.
Yeah.
Yeah, I might have too,
just for the rate that I like to turn over cars.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I like my next car the best.
My favorite car is the next one.
Probably the one after that.
Yeah.
Okay.
I need to pick your brain on something.
Okay.
Next topic.
My lovely wife,
because my garage is full of all the toys that you have.
The one toy I don't have,
well, there's two toys I don't have right now.
It's an air inflator.
Well, I do, but I don't have my Morph late
because there was a whole thing.
Screw you, Amazon.
And two, I should have gotten a Morph late for it.
And two, I need a new floor jack.
I've always had just cheap floor jacks.
I want something that's a little bit off road.
I want something that if I needed to throw it
in the back of the truck
and strap it down, it'd be good.
Obviously, I've been looking at the bad lands,
you know, through Harbor Freight.
But the question is, you know, do I need a three ton jack?
I mean, the cars I'm going to be jacking up
is the Ranger Raptor,
the Subaru Forester to check for nails,
and then the God forbid, the Triumph,
as long as the frame doesn't blast through it.
But my point is, do you think I can get away
with a one and a half ton jack?
Yep.
Okay.
Remember, well, a couple things to consider
with the jack.
You're not jacking up your entire vehicle at once.
You're not taking a center pivot point
and lifting the entire vehicle off the ground.
You're going to lift.
Challenge accepted.
Okay.
As the saying goes, you give me a lever big enough
and I can lift anything.
Yeah.
And so you can look, yeah, when sizing your jack,
think about that for one.
Off-road jacks, the biggest advantage
is the big wheels.
You're dragging things through dirt and gravel.
Gravel is most the time that you're running through.
And no other jack will do that well.
You got to lift it up, put it over there,
put it under it, place it.
The bad lands I use out here all the time.
Tractor, the trailer, everything.
I just drag it across the property.
It's super easy.
It's big.
It's big and it's heavy.
Yeah.
And it does not have.
70 or 80 pounds.
Yeah.
And it does not have pivoting front wheels
like every other jack out there.
I mean, those super minimal race jacks
that have just the one center wheel,
the long one in the front, there's that.
But those things only weigh like 20 by pounds.
Yeah.
You know, for the cheap ones,
the actual race jacks are thousands of dollars
and they weigh like five pounds.
But yeah.
So if you have a use case for bringing your jack with you
or you have land like I do
with a big massive gravel and dirt everywhere,
it's sort of a must have for working any kind of rural area.
Somebody described to me in the fact is,
obviously, you know, you have Pro Eagle,
which is ungodly expensive.
They're thousands of dollars.
It's a thousand bucks for a three ton jack from them.
Yep.
Harbor Freight obviously copied it like they did.
And somebody said,
if you want the bad lands three ton,
that's your pit jack.
And they said the one and a half ton
is the one that you put in the truck.
And which I kind of like,
because eventually I would like to find something
where I could carry it with me.
So I'd have it, you know.
It's better to have it not need it
than need it not have it kind of thing.
But I need one.
And I think that I think Harbor Freight's the best option
because everywhere else I've looked, you know,
I mean, I think I had one from Sears.
It was crass and it was great.
I should have never gotten rid of it.
But I think it started to rust.
And it was just that was a care issue for me.
I wasn't caring for it like I needed to.
Yeah. Well, luckily now,
even with Harbor Freight jacks,
you can rebuild them pretty easily.
They have grease.
With Harbor Freight parts.
Yeah. Yeah.
You can order parts from Harbor Freight.
You can get new cylinders,
hydraulic cylinders to put in them,
everything you'd need.
They have parts diagrams.
They're oddly more serviceable than people think.
You don't want,
even if you rust your jack out,
take it apart, paint it.
Unless you've like rusted through,
it's really not a big issue.
I think one and a half will work.
Yeah. The only thing I would say
that is worth looking at with the jack
and if for your specific use case,
make sure you can find a mount for it.
That's a big, heavy piece
that needs to be really well secured
because that thing turns into a flying weapon
when you're using a raptor as a raptor.
So yeah, I would find a good mount
or what I would do is those guys that,
the SVC or the guys that I got the collars from.
Yeah.
And this would be,
this is an extreme,
but I'd end up getting that tire mount in the back.
Oh yeah.
That puts it,
and then there's a jack mount built in the middle.
Yep.
It is a nice piece.
So that's probably where I would go with that
if I had to.
I'd lose some obviously,
unusual bed space,
but I feel,
I think a monkey would still fit back there,
so it wouldn't be a big deal.
People would stop asking me to help them move,
but other than that,
you know, I'm kidding.
No, that's,
you're right.
That's a missile that would gladly go
through the end of the tailgate,
but I also have that,
I also have that basket that flips down,
and I think,
but I could put some molly panels,
and I think there's,
there's a couple of places that you could,
you can mount it to the floor,
and then,
and tie it into the molly panels too.
Yeah, I'm just saying,
a lot of jacks have specific mounts for them.
I agree.
There's a,
I was,
I was thinking,
I thought you meant one for the wall,
because like,
Pro Eagle has one that,
where it hangs on the wall,
which is really neat.
Yeah.
You can buy generic jack mounts
for a shop that are really nice to have,
and there you want to,
you either want a stainless one
or an aluminum one,
because that thing's,
you're putting in and out a pretty heavy object.
Yes.
You're banging the crap out of it.
But yeah,
like I ordered one for the trailer,
and now I think about it,
I don't know where it's at,
but I have a trailer mount jack,
so I can bolt it to the wall.
Yeah.
And so when I,
because of,
you know,
traveling the car around,
I obviously don't want a jack
that's going to roll around,
and I like to free up all the bed space in the truck.
That would be bad.
Yeah, I do really bad.
Yeah.
So there's that,
look for the jack mount,
is like,
I'm with you,
like what,
like we talked about in the last show,
is Brian,
I was talking to Brian Dallas,
light,
as lightweight as possible,
all that weight adds up so quick,
and the more you wait,
you can take off your vehicle,
or the minimal amount you can add,
it's worth it,
in my opinion.
Well, that 1.5 ton
still comes with that extension
you can put up,
so you can still,
if I had to jack up something
that was higher than my truck,
or an ATV that was on,
you know,
something like that.
Yeah.
This is the stuff we think about,
like when we're,
I'm like,
well,
I understand how I would use it,
but what if I was out
and somebody else needed to use it?
So.
Yeah,
you're not going to find a lot
of 3.25 ton trucks off-roading
in the places you go.
No.
They're,
I mean,
there are,
I did,
but I'm the 1%
of the 3.25 ton owners,
you know,
and,
you know,
if you're out with somebody
with a big vehicle,
like if I was taking the F-150
out with you guys,
I was gonna,
I would bring my own jack.
Yeah.
Because,
I wouldn't expect you guys
to have one.
Fair enough.
Yeah.
I still don't like,
I mean,
I always laugh at the scissor
jack that comes in that truck,
and I'm like,
and I'm on,
I'm,
okay, so,
technically,
okay, I've got an extra two inches
in the front,
but still, like,
I look at that,
I go,
there's no way that,
that would take forever
to get to the frame,
and it's like,
it's not gonna jack the wheel up,
so, yeah.
Yeah.
I don't know,
for off-road though,
yes,
the 1.5 ton will do it.
I still think the Badlands jack,
even as heavy as it is,
is actually a better buy,
because
of how man,
how maneuverable it is,
and the conditions you would use it.
I agree.
Like if you need to change a tire
because you've debeded one,
Brian,
then it's really nice to have
that other jack.
Yes, you can do with it,
the factory jack,
but it's so much easier
with the proper jack.
Jack it up and do it, yeah.
Yeah, and you can drag it
through the dirt,
and,
you know,
good to go.
Yeah.
I think,
like I said,
I wanted to kind of put it to you,
because obviously,
this is the,
makes a great conversation
for the show,
but I was also like,
and I mean,
there's price difference
between that too,
like that's not,
that even,
that Badlands three ton
is still $400 with.
So, yeah.
One, Black Friday's coming.
I know your birthday's
around the corner,
but if you want to save
some money,
Black Friday item,
that's a big,
and you know,
couple times a year
that Jack goes on sale,
I got mine for $320.
Yeah.
On a,
so it was $40 off.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And then,
it's $365 plus tax
so you're over $400.
Yeah.
The one and a half is $265.
It's $100 difference.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So, yeah.
Something about there.
Yeah.
Speaking of Jacks,
I keep,
obviously we took the lift out
because the way it was set up,
it just,
the plans changed,
and I'm glad they did,
because I like the way
the shop is set up now,
but I still want to be able to lift
vehicles.
And so I'm still thinking
I might go back to Quick Jacks,
but at that same price point,
once you get,
Quick Jacks aren't cheap.
They're made by BendPak.
It's the store too.
Exactly.
Bitch to store,
they're not cheap.
They work really well,
but,
and for how infrequent I use them,
they're still not a bad option
because I can wall mount them.
I have,
they're very heavy,
but you can basically pivot them up,
put them on the wall at mounts.
You have the wall mounts.
Yeah.
We mounted them
on,
and down in snow some,
some amish.
Yeah.
And so I could do the same thing
here.
All the walls are reinforced
for mounting.
It's the tubes that always
bothered me,
like because the hydraulic lines
have always dripped.
You always drip a little fluid
coming out.
Yeah.
So,
and the other option I've been
looking at is a movable full
scissor lift.
And 8,000 pound ones,
they're not that popular.
You still have the hydraulic unit.
It's all just on wheels
and it moves around, but
I'm going back and forth.
And obviously the scissor lift
is a much better system
because it's a full,
it's a true mid-rise.
So it'll give you about 40 inches
of lift,
which is a comfortable space
to do tire changes,
oil changes.
Like that's really
totally manageable.
That's okay.
I can't stand up under the vehicle,
but that's not a big deal.
I'm not doing transmission changes.
I don't want to do that level
of work anymore.
So I choose not to.
Yeah.
I just don't want to.
I don't want to get into that
much of a project.
Maybe sometime when I retire,
I'll do a project car,
but it won't be here.
It's like you're going to retire, right?
You're going to work with your
brain till the end of the days.
But yeah.
Okay.
So, but I've been going back
and forth on that.
I have talked to our friends
with hydraulic solutions,
of course, who treated me great
and I would probably work
with them again.
A plus lifts.
So I had last time,
yes, they're a Chinese made lift.
Mine was fantastic.
The quality is great.
My reviews are great on them.
As long as you don't know
what you're doing in setup.
Like most things,
prep is everything
and they send to work fund.
I'm going to need to see photos of it
because it's a storage thing.
How do you store that?
Scissor lift like that.
I would literally just put it
on that side of the shop
and leave it there.
Okay, okay.
So it's somewhat of a permanent
mount,
but it's not,
you're not drilling it
into the concrete.
Yeah, exactly.
And so here's the nice thing
about this.
And this is one thing
I wish I could do more often
is that I can move it
to the driveway
and when I need it.
Ah, that's good.
I wouldn't store it out there.
No, but I get what you're
saying, like being able to
jack it up in there,
gives you more space
around the vehicle,
things like that.
Exactly.
And like,
I don't have to move both cars out.
Like I can just
literally move it out there
if I need to.
And so,
and you know me,
if it needs to move a lot,
I'll make something
to make it easier to move.
I'll upgrade the wheels,
whatever.
I'll find some way
to keep it all
nice and compact.
So I'm looking for
a simple solution like that.
And it's not a high priority,
probably a next year thing,
but it's one of the things
that
as much as I love
how the shop is turning out,
it still is not complete
because I don't have
some good lifts.
Impact makes those four post
lifts that are on wheels
that when it comes down,
it takes its own weight
and puts itself up on wheels.
Oh, I know.
I mean,
that would be a lot in here,
but
It's also like
$2,500 versus
$10,500.
I'm a waitress,
but what's the fun
of spending somebody else's
money
if you can't spend
all of it?
Yeah.
That's true.
And then I can put
more cars in here.
Yeah.
Turned my little
two car shop.
I mean,
I could fit three
if I had to,
but four car shop
would be nice.
Oh, we could get.
I could,
yeah,
I could fit one,
two, three, four.
I could probably fit
six if I really had to,
because I could fit.
I could move the R8
all the way forward,
put another car back there.
Four, five, six.
I could get eight in here.
We'd have to have,
it'd be really low.
A lift here.
Oh, yeah.
We could do two back there,
and then two in each.
You couldn't walk in here,
but yeah.
No.
Yeah.
The world's biggest
fire hazard,
but you know.
Yeah, well,
it depends on the car.
I mean,
only put new
nice cars in here.
So there you go.
Got a lot of vintage
Volkswagen Beatles in here.
You really,
I mean,
with being said that,
we could just
jack them up to the roof.
That'd be your insulation.
Volkswagen's there.
I know.
I've been looking at that.
You ready to get out of there?
Yeah.
So I've told Theo to sit
and he's been so good.
He's staged.
So he has a place command.
I placed him on a mat
and he's very,
I'm very proud of him
because as the entire time
we've been recording,
he has been placed on the mat
just looking at me.
And now he's giving me
those quite literal
puppy dog eyes of,
please let me go.
Let me go.
So we can wrap it up.
All right, guys.
Well, again,
we want to know
what cars you're looking
at and the cheap.
What would you buy?
And two,
if you have some ideas
with jacks,
let us know.
So yeah,
tell us all about your
jacking.
Yep.
Okay.
For this episode
of the Vans podcast
is always I'm Nick
and I'm Dan
and don't just get there.
Enjoy the drive.
About this episode
Dan and Nick dive into practical automotive topics like the benefits and risks of wheel spacers, efficient heating and cooling solutions for garages, and the challenges of finding affordable new cars under $20,000 in today's market. They discuss modern tools like the Gyroline phone-based alignment system and share insights on jack selection for off-road use, weighing the pros and cons of 1.5 vs 3-ton jacks. The hosts also reflect on rising insurance and fuel costs, vehicle depreciation, and the evolving landscape of entry-level vehicles, encouraging listeners to share their own buying experiences and jack preferences.
The cheapest car you can buy in 2025 is the Nissan Versa with a manual transmission. The days of the $10,000 dollar, 100k mile warranty Kia are gone. Kia even had a buy one, get one free promo at one point! There's a lot of factors in the rising cost of a car, but if you're going to buy new today and you want something good on a budget, what are you buying? We'd love to hear from you and why you chose what you did when it comes to your BUDGET buying experiences. We then talk all about jacking! Harbor Freight seems to have cornered the consumer market, with a few rare exceptions from Costco and Walmart. And when it comes to offroad, you've got Pro-Eagle, Badlands, and then the specialized bottle and high-lift jacks, but what are you using and why? We need to find a solution for Nick!