Which Cars Have The Highest Maintenance Costs?
In this case, sticker prices don't represent maintenance costs. Knowing the relative maintenance costs of brands can be informative, but it鈥檚 also important to consider how car costs change with age. This chart looks at the median annual cost of maintenance across all brands. Maintenance costs are always increasing. 150 per year in costs exists for years 1 through 10. After that, there is a distinct jump between 11 and 12 years of age. 2,000 per year. This is likely because people disown their cars if maintenance costs are higher than their cars鈥?worth. Even within brands, not all cars are created equal. How do specific models compare directly to one another? We drilled down by splitting up all cars by model to look at 10 year maintenance costs. 11,000 to maintain over 10 years. These estimates include expensive one-off costs, like a transmission rebuild, that skew the mean higher. Now we know which cars are money pits.
The British firm was owned by BMW but the Germans departed in an acrimonious split that left new owners Ford with a magnificent vehicle with which to do battle with - you guessed it - BMW鈥檚 X5. What鈥檚 more, the Ford organisation learned lessons from the construction of the BMW designed Range Rover that would later produce another X5-basher, the Volvo XC90. Like I said, you couldn鈥檛 make it up. Despite its troubled existence, there鈥檚 not a great deal wrong with the third generation Range Rover. The previous model鈥檚 Metrocab styling and low rent interior was resolutely fixed and the BMW-sourced engines were superb units. Reliability has proved good and the addition of a Td6 diesel version has opened Range Rover ownership up to those who baulked at the V8 model鈥檚 thirst. A V8 Autobiography special edition was launched in late 2003 but other than that, buyers chose between either the Td6 diesel or the 4.4 V8 in SE, HSE or Vogue trims. The original Range Rover was billed as the first luxury 4x4, but the term is relative.
Owing to the slightly domed shape of the roof and the positioning of the spoiler, the roof makes the Cooper Coupe appear to be wearing a backwards baseball cap; marking it as the 鈥渂ad boy鈥?in the MINI lineup. So pronounced is MINI鈥檚 design language, even with these radical departures from tradition, the Cooper Coupe is still readily identifiable as a MINI product. The tautly drawn parallel lines, athletic stance, and harmonious curvatures defining the body of the car all say MINI loudly and quite clearly. Up front, the bulldog facial expression is maintained with the slightly oversized headlamp clusters juxtaposed against the r hexagonally contoured grille and the rounded front end. Viewed in profile, the shoulder line rises as it progresses toward the rear of the car, lending it a slight wedge shape. This gives the side view of the Cooper Coupe a more dynamic appearance, owing to the inherent forward thrust of such an arrangement. The length, width, and wheelbase of the Coupe are almost identical to the Hardtop; the only real difference being the overall height is a full inch less. And yet, it looks smaller than the Cooper Hardtop.
They appear to be Hollanders. While the buffaloes are congregating I notice a fellow moving off into the bush wielding an axe. It isn鈥檛 long before his efforts start echoing around us, and the buffaloes aren鈥檛 the only one鈥檚 getting irritated by this. Finally I get up and approach the guy, and point out that his chopping is chasing away the wildlife. We offer him some of our wood which he accepts gracefully. When I return I find Hennie is setting camera traps for the night. After a braai under the moonlight and some discussion over gin and tonic and the odd whiskey, we sit with our backs to the Land Rover and the fire, listening to the haunting calls of hyenas. People often sit around a fire with their backs exposed. Fire is no protection from hyenas, worth noting since two people have recently been grabbed from behind by hyenas in Moremi.