Nothing, or nearly nothing, was the answer. We had one parking light on the front of the car that needed replacing. The tires have about eight thousand kilometers of life ahead of them. The brakes and brake pads are fine and won't need replacing for another few years. Anyway, it was all good news. I took a short test drive with Tasha in the driving rain. Walt went to the supermarket in the other car.
Sunset yesterday afternoon — the house is a résidence secondaire owned by a woman who inherited it a few years when her husband passed away.The bill for the oil change and general inspection came to 145 euros. I'll probably take the Citroën in for a similar inspection and oil change in January. Then both cars will have their official inspection by a government-licensed inspector sometime toward the end of 2026. I'd rather keep these two cars in good running order rather than have to go looking for another one to buy.
We have two cars, my little VW convertible is 17 years old and has 56,000 miles on it, the Benz is ten years old with 36,000 miles on it, at our age, and with the 3-4000 miles a year that we drive between the two cars, they will outlive us if we take care of them.
ReplyDeleteNew cars cost as much as we paid for our first house now. Used cars are also quite expensive.
ReplyDeleteFantastic!
ReplyDeleteGood news on the Peugeot! Yes, cars are a depreciating asset, so no use buying one until you have to.
ReplyDelete