I believe it appeared as I recall reading it. Randy
On 08/08/2012 3:05 PM, relng...@aol.com wrote:
When my father passed in 1991, my mom stated that she was not going to be stuck at home. Since she had never had a driver's license she would have to learn. So after seven driving test failures (she was 80), the State of Washington issued her a license. The next thing was to find a suitable car since I had sold dad's Lincoln Town Car when he could no longer drive, I thought a Camry would be the right car. After looking at them and talking to a sales drone, we drove up the road to the Lexus store. After looking in the window of an ES300, she said she wanted one. After calling the dealer and telling them what we wanted and required a 10% discount, the deal was made and the car was delivered to the house. It was one of those metallic beige cars with tan leather, etc. During the period she owned it, she drove it four times. The first time was when I offered to buy her lunch in Vancouver BC and she would be driving. Which she did as far as the Canadian border, one way. All Interstate, of course and aside from the first merge onto I-5 things went well. There came a time when driving was no longer an option for her and eventually the car was sold to a neighbor down the street, showing 6000 miles, completely unmarked. It was to be the second car and the lady of the house drove it. During all that time there were zero problems with the car and the dealer service when required was impeccable. Their only answer was, no matter the question, was "Yes sir, we'll take care of that." Sadly, about a year ago the car was totaled when the driver attempted to knock down a three story brick apartment house with little success except bricks all over the car. At that time the car had 51000 miles showing. And now to the point, finally. At 50K miles, it was time to replace the cam drive belt and in the transverse Toyota V-6, it's expensive. Didn't get done, needless to say. The ES is a nice car, quiet with a decent ride but not quite as good as MBs of the period. Braking was very good with 4-wheel disc. Steering feel would never be confused with a German car. Around town fuel economy was poor but hiway mileage was around 28mpg. HVAC was very good but the liquid crystal readouts on the center stack were invisible if polarized sunglasses were worn. The interior looks bigger than it is because the seats have short cushions with less thigh support. The truck was vast with a ski-sack but the rear seats did not fold. As to why a new Lexus vs. a Camry, since the shared the same drive train, a Camry equipped nearly the same as the ES was only $2500 cheaper but when sale time came around, the ES was worth about $5500 more and is a much nicer car and certainly not as common as the average Camry. So, aside from the 50K mile service items (belts, ets.) this should be a painless car to own with no black clouds on the horizon. One last thing, previously mentioned, is the possible negative impression made on a client who may be a "Buy American" type and would disapprove of something shiny and German , no matter how old. RLE _______________________________________ http://www.okiebenz.com For new and used parts go to www.okiebenz.com To search list archives http://www.okiebenz.com/archive/ To Unsubscribe or change delivery options go to: http://mail.okiebenz.com/mailman/listinfo/mercedes_okiebenz.com
_______________________________________ http://www.okiebenz.com For new and used parts go to www.okiebenz.com To search list archives http://www.okiebenz.com/archive/ To Unsubscribe or change delivery options go to: http://mail.okiebenz.com/mailman/listinfo/mercedes_okiebenz.com