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 If you're interested in figuring out which  no to low-tech car is best to purchase?

Go for a drive and observe the older cars  on the road. They're not hard to spot. Take note of the make and model of these common cars that are STILL running to this day.

Do your research from there.  
 Toyota, Honda, some Subaru. 
That's about it.  
 The usual 🙂‍↕️ 
 Yes. 

Did you expect me to say Fiat, Citroen, and Audi?  
 Toyota tundra errrwhere 
 Yea! Tacomas too! 
 Catch me riding in my 13 year old Prius 😎 
 You go girl! 
 92 mazda Mx-3 runs like a champ.
Well needs some cosmetic work…. 
But car is solid and still looks good.
And is pre electronic ignition.

In the background is the 2003 Camry a close runner up

BUT TO TAKE THE CAKE:
I once and a 1976 240 diesel Benz 450,000 miles and the car only needed an engine overhaul. With a Mechanical fuel pump and no electronics needed I once drove from Los Alamos NM to St. Louis MO with no battery and no working alternator, confidently across a desert.

Another great one is any pre 2008 ML 350 is the best engine ever made.  Just a solid car and 4-matic.


https://m.primal.net/KvuM.jpg 
 The Japanese still dominate. 
The reliability of the 240D is unbelievable. Rust will kill that car first before the engine dies. 
 Great advice.  
As few electronics as you can deal with. 
The more mechanical your car is, the easier it is to fix.
Boy its Getting harder to do. 
A decent 20 yo car is an oxymoron at this point. 
 1999 F-250 with the 7.3 turbo diesel is my old rig of choice these days. 
 A beast workhorse!! 
Make it last. 🙏 
 nostr:naddr1qvzqqqy9hvpzqqm9x092su3hd9rdfe8aafxp5pzpak3cegkem9qhhvmqqm96406cqythwumn8ghj7un9d3shjtnwdaehgu3wvfskuep0qywhwumn8ghj7mn0wd68ytnzd96xxmmfdejhytnnda3kjctv9uqqwve4wcmhy3pn0vlzqq 
 Yep! She's a noisy girl, whistling along on the highway. 
 From experience: 

The issue with all vehicles as they age is parts availability. There is so little money in selling parts any more there is little incentive to make them in small shops. Starting around 2021 OEMs started dropping support new part for most vehicles older than about 8 years, or when extended warranty expires. We were returning like 35-40% of the OEM parts in our shop sourced from well known wholesale OEM resellers (we were one of the few with good connections in Canada where most of our parts are manufactured these days) because they're so poorly manufactured now. Remanned parts have a huge return rate too. Resellers can make money on them so there will be fewer places to purchase parts also and thin margins for companies like RockAuto and CarId means they'll cut support just as easily.  For precision powertrain parts, most are mfg by Bosch, they raised their minimum purchase quantity such that warehouses have to purchase like $10,000,000 of product at a time which caused us massive order hold times. The OEM parts scene is a huge mess.

Anything older than 2000 I suggest hiding away least 1 parts vehicle on your property you can scavenge parts from as your vehicle ages. 

Something to consider, in 2023 SEMA released their docs for something like $150m in revenue for the entire aftermarket parts industry THAT'S IT. I'd be willing to bet Holley accounts for 100+ of it.  
 None of these warehouses have good data, they handle most things via email (no kidding so little money involved) so we (and many other shops) get HOSED because parts are on back-order when customers paid, need a refund, overhead costs, shipping prices because of warehouse availability. It's a data nightmare 
 I understand. The email thing is very real and true. Even harder when ordering from overseas. I have a 66 Mustang in the shop that’s been sitting here for two months going on 3 for parts. Such is the nature of this business.. we don’t have to wait long if they sort those issues. 
 In resale that was the killer. Shipping to customers outside the US was such a pain we eventually just stopped. Felt bad, but many European customers were very demanding and unforgiving to a highly complex system that's mostly out of our control. Which is a huge bummer to those who needed to get parts from the US and we were the only ones that could get it.

In the shop we had many customers just buy new trucks and scrap the 5 year old ones because it cost them more money sitting in the shop than on the road.  
 Haha yea. It takes a certain kind of madness to own an old American car here in Europe. I've partnered with other shops there for parts procurement. We pay a premium of course and the customer is made aware.  
 Dedication. That's pretty cool and I really hope you can continue to make that work for you and your customers! I'm happy I got out of auto for now, but I do miss all of the problems that need to be solved and no one to solve it. Just no really money investment, and it's super dangerous running up against so many law enforcement agencies and regulations. 
 Agree. All very true. We hoard parts at the shop as we do restorations for much much older vehicles. We tend to buy junked cars  as donors and harvest for usable parts to refurb. 
 No need for research for me. My car is old. From the era that there were no air conditions in the car. No electronic shits. I love it 🕺 
 Yes! 
 just ask older car guys 
 Speaking about cars that last... Škoda Octavia 1.9 TDI 

VW motor build to last.  
 Ah that's second gen Octavia from the late 90s. Impressive!  
 2002 chev silverado
Just got certified and officially on the road. 
Only 210,00 km’s on it. 
Bought for 3g’s 
3g’s of work and repairs for a safety

I expect it to last at least another 100k hopefully 200. For me thats about 10 years left of life. 

No payments and cheap insurance. 

https://m.primal.net/KvyV.jpg 
 Tech free. Make it last!  
 👌 
 🙌🏽🌅