00:00
Hey folks, Lenny Lawson here, the CarGuru, I'm sorry, I'll just apologize up front because
00:09
I am in the process of creating more things for you to do, but that's a regular occurrence
00:17
I get things created for me to do all the time, and they need to be done, but I've got
00:23
this built-in, this girl that lives in my house and she just reminds me of stuff that
00:29
I just don't even think about.
00:30
I went to the dermatologist the other day, he had some reminding to do.
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He said, Lenny, do you ever use sunscreen or anything like that, use lotions or anything?
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I said, well, sometimes I do.
00:47
He said, yeah, yeah, makes sense then.
00:51
I was complaining about these white spots on my arm.
00:54
They don't tan anymore.
00:55
They just, I don't know.
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It's just the Scotch Irish skin is what he keeps saying, but yeah, you're supposed to
01:02
use sunscreen, things like that, protect your skin.
01:06
It's better when you do it when you're young and then you don't have problems and you're
01:12
not going to the dermatologist every six months to check you for whatever.
01:19
Your car is the same thing.
01:22
Just think about it.
01:27
It's 95 degrees outside, but the temperature on the hood is about 140.
01:33
Maybe more than that.
01:34
You could fry an egg on it and it's got bird poop on it.
01:40
It's got sap that's been there for months and months.
01:45
You haven't washed it in a long time.
01:47
You've never waxed it.
01:49
And then a couple of months down the road, you say, honey, let's trade.
01:53
Let's go get a new car.
01:54
You drive it into the dealership and they look at it and they're not real excited about it
01:58
because it's obviously not been taken care of like my skin.
02:04
And so you don't understand why they won't give you what, you know, you've done some
02:08
research and you don't understand why they not giving you what the book says your vehicle
02:15
It's because the paint is bad.
02:17
I mean, it's going to require a lot of work.
02:19
I had a gentleman drive down from Johnson City and he wanted me to do a detail on his vehicle
02:24
where we only had about three hours and more or less about all you can do is really wash
02:28
it good and clean the interior and clean the windows and stuff like that.
02:31
And when he came out, he looked at it and he wasn't real pleased with it.
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And I said, well, you know, to really, it's a black car and to really get rid
02:41
of all that stuff, those years and years of no suntan lotion, you know, just an analogy
02:50
Yeah, it's going to take some work.
02:52
We're going to have to grind on it a little bit.
02:54
So we'll have to use compound.
02:57
Compound is kind of like it does what wax does except it takes off more of the surface
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Yes, you're actually removing some of the clear coat to get down to where it's
03:10
nice and shiny because the top surface of it has become pitted and full of junk, microscopic
03:16
junk and sap and sludge and dirt.
03:21
And all of that has to be taken off.
03:22
It's why your paint isn't shiny anymore.
03:25
You know how you might have a dark colored vehicle and when you clean it, it just looks
03:30
like you look at it from a distance with the sun on it and it has swirly looking
03:34
It's just microscopic when you get up close to it.
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You can't see it, but when you get away from it and the sun's reflecting on it,
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And those aren't really supposed to be there.
03:44
That's probably because the way you've washed your car, either by hand, not using a really
03:49
clean mitt, or you go to car washes all the time and you've got those rotating, almost
03:56
like a torture chamber for a car, beaten on your car and it's got the car in front
04:00
of its dirt ground into those fibers and it's beaten your car with that.
04:04
Now, some of your car washes will say, well, it doesn't work like that at all.
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Well, I think it does because I've seen too many cars that come out of regular car
04:13
washings and they've got micro scratches all over them.
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So what's your responsibility?
04:20
Well, I think when you're coming out of winter, it's spring.
04:24
That's time to get your car detailed.
04:26
Get the paint really, really clean.
04:30
Let them use chemicals on it to get some of that grime off and then let them put
04:34
a real good, high quality wax coat on the vehicle.
04:38
Some type of a paint treatment that will, again, take off that surface layer, make it
04:45
shiny and then protect it as well.
04:48
It's even got UV protection, some of them do.
04:51
So you can do that and then when you're going into winter, maybe put an extra
04:57
You know, they make that little spray type, you can just like Windex or something.
05:01
It's what it's like.
05:02
You just spray bottle and you just spray and wipe it, spray and wipe it.
05:05
It doesn't last very long, but it will last for a couple months and it will keep your
05:09
paint looking good.
05:10
Well, I don't have time to do that.
05:12
Well, then pay somebody else to do it.
05:14
I mean, that's all you got to do or do it, you know, get your car washed.
05:18
Wash it yourself in your driveway.
05:20
Don't take it to the car wash.
05:22
You know, buy some of that car wash, that specialized car soap that you can
05:25
buy at O'Reilly's or AutoZone or someplace.
05:28
They have McGuire's.
05:29
I like McGuire's stuff and you can buy their waxes and their car soaps and get a
05:35
nice mitt that you can put on your hand to actually wash the car with and get a
05:41
You know, a chamois is, you know, back when I was first started working
05:45
in the cleanup shop at Lawson Chevrolet in 1971, I was 14, and they would use
05:52
these, it was deerskin and you use it to dry the cars off and the guy
05:57
threw me one of them and it was as hard as a brick.
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I said, I'm not going to dry the car off with this.
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He said, you got to get wet first.
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Wait a minute, I thought you wanted me to dry off the car.
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Why don't I get it wet first?
06:09
You get it wet and then you wring it out and then you dry off the car.
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Then you wring it out, dry off the car.
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But anyway, you can't buy real deerskin.
06:16
Well, maybe you can.
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Deerskin chamois anymore.
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But they sell a synthetic version of it and that's what you need
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to dry your car off.
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You know, the worst thing you can do is wash your car and leave it out
06:26
in the sun and not dry it off.
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It develops water spots, which can actually somehow, I don't know how,
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but it will etch your paint.
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And there's so many environmental factors, not as bad as it used to be.
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I remember back in the 70s and 80s, we would get cars in from the factory
06:44
and we would wash them and they would have looked like little amoeba
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marks all over the paint.
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And that's where the environmental fallout had settled on the on the
06:53
surface of the paint and just eaten right through the clear coat,
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or at least into the clear coat.
06:59
In many cases, we couldn't buff it out.
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And so I don't know if you notice or not, but most cars today come
07:05
with white plastic on the hood and on the top and on the door handles,
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any of the flat surfaces.
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Guess why they did that?
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Environmental fallout.
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OK, I'll take my first break.
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I'll be back in just a second.
07:27
So the gentleman who brought his car down is not satisfied with his paint.
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Told him we have to make other arrangements and it's going to cost more.
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I told him it's about $400 to do a really extensive job on his paint.
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You know, one of the worst things about his paint is the color.
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It's also metallic and it's going to be a challenge.
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It's going to we're going to grind on it.
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Not literally, but we're going to have to use different grades.
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You know how you use how you have different grades of sandpaper, you know,
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the higher the number, the less the grit.
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Well, compounds are that way as well.
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So we're going to have to hit it with some pretty strong compound first.
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And then we're going to use a lighter level of compound and then wax
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and then final polishing and it'll be done.
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So it's it's all day is what it's going to take to do this.
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And somebody's going to get real sweaty if it's hot outside.
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You don't do this out in the sun, by the way.
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You don't wax cars out in the sun.
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You don't wax a hot car.
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You don't wash a hot car.
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You know, well, it's outside.
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Well, I don't know.
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Wait till the sun goes down.
08:37
But all of this, you know, causes the soap dries on the paint,
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the water dries on the paint before you have a chance to wipe it off
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with your deer skin.
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OK, it's not really deer skin.
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You know, what is a shami and how do you spell it?
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It's C-H-A-M-O-I-S.
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Some people would say chimoise.
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But it is a true leather.
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It originally did come from a small European mountain
09:03
dwelling antelope or goat.
09:05
So it's related to a deer.
09:08
Well, maybe the goat isn't, but the antelope is.
09:10
But over time, though, the term shami or chimoise
09:16
So a traditional shami, that's what I'm going to call it,
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because that's what I've called it my entire adult life,
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is a soft, porous leather made from the skin of the shami animal.
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Modern shami cloths are usually made from sheepskin,
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especially the split skin oiled tanned,
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to get that buttery, soft feel.
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And then, but it's really not deer skin,
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although some people confuse the two,
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because deer skin can be soft like that
09:45
if it's tanned properly.
09:48
So that's the truth about shami, chimoise,
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or you could just get a beech towel out of the closet.
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But you know, the problem with them
09:56
is that they scratch the paint.
09:59
It's kind of like using a,
10:02
I made a mistake many years ago,
10:03
I used paper towels to clean my glasses.
10:06
My wife saw me doing it.
10:07
She said, you know you're not supposed to do that,
10:11
It gets it clean, well, you'll see.
10:15
It made scratches all over the glass,
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so you're supposed to use some type of special microfiber.
10:24
And this is true for your car in certain areas.
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You know, a lot of people,
10:30
I guess they're cleaning the inside of their car.
10:32
And they're doing their dash panel.
10:34
And you know, the things that cover your gauges,
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that's all plastic, it's not glass.
10:38
The thing that covers your,
10:40
or the surface of your infotainment system
10:44
and the screen there, that's all plastic.
10:47
And if you wipe that off with a paper towel
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or with the wrong type of cloth,
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you're scratching it.
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And then over time, it's gonna look like crap.
10:57
Well, most manufacturers provide a microfiber cloth
11:02
to clean that, just like when you get a new pair of glasses.
11:04
They'll give you one of those little cloths
11:06
to clean your glasses.
11:08
There's a reason for that, because you're gonna scratch them.
11:11
And you're gonna scratch that infotainment screen.
11:14
So don't be careless with what you use
11:17
to clean the interior of your car.
11:20
And be careful of chemicals.
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Don't spray Windex on your plastic panel.
11:24
You're supposed to use just light soap and water
11:30
with a microfiber towel.
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And then you will be able to see how fast you're going
11:34
and read all your gauges and it will look decent.
11:38
You know, many years from now,
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I was looking at another vehicle,
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I was appraising a vehicle the other day
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that had a customer wanting to trade cars.
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And it wasn't that old, it was like a six year old car.
11:48
And the instrumentation looked awful.
11:51
The car was very clean,
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but the instrumentation was all yellow.
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You know, the screen over top of it
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and all scratchy looking.
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I mean, that's, they're trying to keep the car clean.
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They're just using the wrong stuff.
12:03
Okay, enough of that.
12:06
because I have to go to Las Vegas twice
12:08
in the next, what, six months?
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Or no, less than that.
12:12
I've got to go in September,
12:15
October, November, December, January,
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and again in February, so five months.
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And so why am I going,
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well, the first meeting is for Ford
12:23
and they just pretty much require it.
12:26
And it's going to be interesting this year
12:28
to see what their strategy is.
12:30
So we go to the Wynn Hotel or Casino in Las Vegas,
12:34
been there many times.
12:35
Nice place, I mean, it's just amazing.
12:37
I just don't like Las Vegas.
12:39
So we go to a bunch of meetings and they tell,
12:42
I mean, it's really two really big meetings
12:44
and they have all these fancy screens set up.
12:47
I mean, it's an impressive thing
12:48
and they drive cars up onto the stage
12:51
and you get to see what the new models are going to be
12:53
and what their new direction is
12:55
and what their plans are.
12:57
I'd say that we'll probably see the new EV
13:00
that's going to be built.
13:03
Where is that thing going to be built?
13:04
As if we cared about EVs,
13:06
but this one's supposed to be a real game changer
13:07
because it's only going to cost,
13:10
I don't believe this,
13:11
but they say it's going to be $30,000.
13:15
I'm guessing about a mid-sized truck,
13:18
it's going to have a frunk.
13:19
You know what that is, right?
13:20
That's where the engine normally goes in a car
13:23
or a truck, it's just a trunk.
13:26
So a storage area, they call it a frunk
13:28
because it's in the front.
13:30
And then it's going to be a much lesser expensive,
13:35
much lesser, a lesser expensive battery
13:38
that is faster to charge and has longer range.
13:43
And so why are they putting it in a truck?
13:46
You know, a lot of people will be asking that question,
13:50
but you know, Ford sells more trucks
13:52
than anybody else does and they know how to build them.
13:56
And it's a very good niche for them to be in,
14:01
but there's just too much competition in the SUVs
14:05
and passenger cars and stuff like that.
14:07
So they decided to do another truck.
14:09
So now we'll have the Maverick,
14:11
whatever this thing's called,
14:13
the Lightning, which is the F-150 electric truck,
14:18
and then the F-150, 250, 350 and on up.
14:22
So we're gonna be completely trucked up,
14:25
ready for this surging demand in electric vehicles.
14:30
I mean, Ford is convinced.
14:32
I mean, the CEO of Ford, not Chris Farley, Jim Farley.
14:38
Remember Chris Farley from Saturday Night Live,
14:40
real crazy guy, just loved him.
14:42
Yeah, his cousin is the CEO of Ford.
14:47
And he is completely sold on the EV Future.
14:53
I'm not, but they say it's coming
14:56
and I'm gonna be a Ford dealer
14:57
and then when they send me these things,
14:58
I'm gonna have to find homes for them.
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So, and I can, if it makes sense,
15:05
you know, if it's a good size vehicle,
15:09
you know, I just worry about all this technology stuff,
15:11
but you know, it's just where we are.
15:13
If it has really good range and it's cheap enough
15:17
where people can afford to buy it
15:19
and not have to pay for it for 84 months,
15:22
and if the resell it will hold up, you know,
15:24
that's the big problem I have with EVs right now
15:26
is you buy an EV and you lose half your value
15:28
when you drive it off the lot.
15:31
And that's why I recommend that you never buy one,
15:33
you lease it, you know, let somebody else take that risk.
15:37
And the manufacturers, all of them,
15:39
are subsidizing the leases.
15:42
You know, how you had that $7,500 tax credit
15:45
if you bought an EV, well, that's gone away.
15:48
So, in order for these automakers
15:52
to be able to sell vehicles in the most populous states,
15:57
which would include California and New York,
16:01
and then the surrounding, you know,
16:02
almost all of New England is this way,
16:04
and then the whole West Coast,
16:06
you know, Washington State and Oregon,
16:10
they all have very similar laws in guidelines
16:12
as far as EV mandates.
16:15
And that's where the market is.
16:17
And so, General Motors and Ford and Chrysler
16:19
and everybody else has to build EVs for those markets.
16:23
They don't care about Tennessee.
16:25
They're not worried about Oklahoma.
16:27
They know those people don't like EVs,
16:29
but there's enough people to do to make it important.
16:33
And you've got the uncertainty
16:37
from the political standpoint.
16:39
I mean, don't you know that if the Democrats
16:42
get back in power, that they're just gonna
16:46
They're gonna slap back on the EV mandates.
16:48
They're gonna start incentivizing people to buy EVs.
16:51
They're more worried about climate change
16:54
and us pumping oil out of the ground
16:56
that, you know, they just gotta stop all that nonsense.
17:00
Get us back on the other track.
17:02
That's not how I feel.
17:04
But it won't be a problem, I guess,
17:05
if Trump wins the third and fourth
17:07
and maybe the fifth term.
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This is not a politically based show.
17:13
This is a show about cars.
17:16
And I'll get back on that here in just a minute.
17:24
Okay, folks, I am back.
17:25
Let's talk just a second about what I am seeing happen
17:29
to folks, especially the elderly,
17:32
when they go to some of these,
17:35
let's call them questionable car dealers
17:37
who really play a lot of games, had one yesterday.
17:40
They had been to one of my competitors,
17:42
I'm not gonna say whom, who it was,
17:46
but he was wanting me to meet,
17:51
or at least, or maybe beat,
17:53
which probably I would want him to beat him.
17:55
Wanted me to beat this deal that he had been presenting.
17:57
I said, well, send it to me.
17:58
Do you mind sending me a copy of the buyer's order?
18:02
So he took a picture of it and sent it to me.
18:05
And I looked it over and the first thing I saw was
18:07
that I knew what the MSRP was of the vehicle
18:11
he was trying to buy from me
18:12
and it was really the same as the MSRP from them.
18:17
But their starting price was $2,500 more than mine.
18:25
And I just wanted to make sure he understood that
18:29
because if he didn't read that contract closely,
18:32
he was just looking at the trade difference.
18:34
Now, I talk until I'm blue in the face
18:36
about the four targets that you have to hit
18:40
when you're buying a car.
18:42
You have to nail down each one of them separately.
18:45
If you do them simultaneously together,
18:50
then you're gonna get taken advantage of
18:51
because they're gonna switch you over to monthly payment
18:53
and you won't know what you're paying for the car.
18:56
I've talked about that a lot.
18:57
I hope that point has gotten through,
19:00
but you gotta negotiate the price,
19:01
you gotta negotiate the trade separately.
19:04
Then you look at the financing,
19:07
what the terms are of the loan,
19:08
the interest rate, the term and the amount financed.
19:12
Just all of that stuff,
19:13
you have to make sure it's the same
19:15
as what it is on your contract.
19:16
And then the aftermarket products, warranties,
19:21
paint sealant, fabric guard,
19:24
all those other little add-ons,
19:28
But in this case, he was a cash buyer
19:32
and he is only looking at the bottom line.
19:36
He was paying, I can't remember,
19:37
$20,000 down, I believe,
19:39
and then he had the trade difference.
19:40
And that's what he was looking at.
19:42
He didn't look at the starting number,
19:44
didn't negotiate it,
19:46
didn't notice that it was $2,500 more than MSRP.
19:56
And so I told him that.
19:57
And he's a MyCard guru listener
20:00
and is just a regular customer of mine,
20:04
but yeah, I mean he has bought vehicles from us,
20:05
but he's no, he is a regular customer of MyCard guru,
20:08
which that doesn't cost anything,
20:12
And in many cases, it's time well spent
20:16
because there are plenty of tips in here
20:18
that will save you a lot of money.
20:20
And as I say, I mean, when you make a,
20:23
I don't know, you spend too much on something
20:25
at Walmart, $5 too much, $10 too much, whatever,
20:30
you compare that to an automotive purchase mistake
20:34
that could cost you thousands of dollars.
20:38
I mean, I have seen people pay
20:40
or be charged $5,000 for an extended warranty product
20:48
I mean, this is the kind of craziness that goes on
20:50
because people stop paying attention.
20:53
Once they've agreed to buy the car,
20:55
they've settled on a monthly payment,
20:56
which they have no clue what they're paying for the car.
20:58
They get into the finance office
20:59
and they absolutely go to sleep.
21:02
Not everybody, but some people do.
21:04
And the finance manager, he's just sitting there
21:06
rubbing his hands together saying,
21:07
oh boy, got me a payment buyer here.
21:11
Because he knows he can stick a lot
21:12
of these extra products in there
21:14
and it just, one might jack up your payment,
21:17
$12 a month, another $20 a month.
21:20
And then his trick is he'll break that down
21:22
to what it's actually costing you per day.
21:26
And it's just pennies a day, folks.
21:28
I mean, for what you would pay for a whopper
21:30
at Burger King, you can protect your family.
21:33
You mean it's the same price as a whopper?
21:36
No, it's less than a whopper.
21:38
Okay, we'll take it.
21:39
Oh, it's a whopper, all right.
21:42
And you just gotta guard yourself.
21:44
If you got somebody that's vulnerable, an older person,
21:47
don't let them go in and buy a car by themselves.
21:49
Go with your mom, your dad, your uncle,
21:52
your next door neighbor, extra set of eyes,
21:55
extra set of ears, read the paperwork.
21:57
You know what we call those people in the car business
21:59
that come along with the car buyer?
22:00
They actually have a name.
22:02
They're called the quarterback
22:05
because most car dealers know that that quarterback
22:07
has a lot of influence over the buyer, the actual buyer.
22:11
And they're sometimes calling the shots.
22:14
So when we see somebody who's a quarterback,
22:17
you know, we talk as much to the quarterback
22:19
as we do to the customer
22:20
because they're the ones that are gonna say,
22:22
yeah, go ahead and do it.
22:24
And we wanna make sure that the quarterback
22:26
feels comfortable with us.
22:28
And that, you know, with what they're seeing.
22:30
But quarterback, you know, when you take somebody with you
22:33
and you introduce them
22:35
as the person that's gonna help you make your decision,
22:38
I would just go ahead and say,
22:39
and Mr. Salesman, he's my quarterback.
22:43
I would just go ahead and tell him that
22:44
because that salesperson knows what that means.
22:47
That means his profit is gonna go down.
22:50
So folks, if you want more tips,
22:52
best thing to do is just send me your email address,
22:54
text it to me at 423-552-2020
22:59
and say send me the Guru guidebook
23:03
because it's got so much stuff.
23:05
I'm getting ready to do an addendum to it,
23:08
an update here in a few days
23:10
because I left out a couple chapters
23:12
that really need to be in there.
23:14
And but you can get it now,
23:15
send it to you in a PDF form
23:17
and then I'll send you the updated or the addendum.
23:20
It's not like a window sticker,
23:21
extra window sticker on a car though.
23:23
I hate to even use the word addendum.
23:25
Let's call it a supplement.
23:27
I like that better.
23:28
So I'll send you the supplement,
23:30
but you gotta send me your information,
23:32
you gotta request it.
23:37
I wanna see a bunch of them in my text box this afternoon.
23:42
Okay, so I can send out a bunch of these
23:44
because they're hot off the presses
23:45
in the PDF electronic form.
23:47
You can also send an email to Lenny Lawson 2020
23:51
Let me know if you want it texted to you.
23:53
It'd be kind of hard to read on the phone,
23:55
but it's better to have an email address, okay?
23:58
Well, thanks for listening
23:59
and I'll see you next time.