Depending on mileage and condition(of course, I would need to personally look at it and bring it to a trusted mechanic), but in most cases yes. You don't get hit by the first big depreciation of a new car, when it rolls out of the dealer parking lot :p
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Feb 9th, 2009 06:09 PM #1
Purchasing a demo car
Would you or wouldn't you?
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Feb 9th, 2009 06:42 PM #3
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Feb 9th, 2009 06:56 PM #4
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Feb 9th, 2009 06:59 PM #5
Yes if I'm leasing, no if I'm keeping it for long.
Honestly, I beat the car when I take it on a demo. I'm sure other would've done the same thing. Ie. gun the car and hit the brake hard and turn in fast. So yea, if you are leasing it, do it, if you are keeping it, not really a good idea.
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Feb 9th, 2009 07:04 PM #6
IMHO, I wouldn't because whenever I demo cars at dealerships I pretty much beat them up and push their limits. So if everyone else did that...... but yeah your choice.
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Feb 9th, 2009 07:04 PM #7
Not on your life. After working at a Nissan dealership, I know exactly how demos are treated. The motors don't even get broken in properly or anything. It's high reving, beat down style driving from the very first day usually. Even if the employee who the demo has been given to is gentle on it, the customers who test drive it and the employees who drive it for errands throughout the day are not nice to the car at all.
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Feb 9th, 2009 07:10 PM #8
I bought a car after a 1 year lease with 2 accidents (minor, ~$200 each). Never had a single issue with it except some cosmetic stuff....sold it a couple months back. However, it was a family oriented SUV under warranty the whole time, so YMMV.
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Feb 9th, 2009 08:57 PM #9Permanently Banned



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Very good points made. My parents once bought a demo and never will again. It had 16k on it (salesman's company car used as a demo) and a number of interior blemishes. They saved a couple thousand but those first 16k were the best 16k of the car's life.
You have to ask yourself if it is worth it. Sure you save a little but it has that much more wear and tear on every part of it (which you will evetually pay for in repairs/maintenance sooner than on a new car) and it was most likely driven with the usual "not my car" attitude by many different drivers, before it had a chance to be properly broken in.
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