I like the one comment on that other source:
On average, a person pays about $400 a year in maintenance on a Toyota Prius. An average car costs about $1,000 a month to maintain—with fuel and other maintenance—so you can save money on maintenance and at the pump with a Prius.
$1000 a month on a normal gasoline car? What the fuck are you people doing? Running alcohol-fuel dragsters?
jews playing fast and loose with data again.
They count only the gasoline, not electricity because it's free.
Even with gasoline, you'd need to drive a lot with a low-mileage vehicle to get that kind of cash.
I'm more concerned they think maintenance is $1000 a month.
My Chevy Cruze's factory maintenance schedule is an oil change every 7500 miles including a tire rotation. That's once or twice a year. The last expensive maintenance was when I did shocks and struts, but that's every 90,000 miles. In a normal year, I might spend $1000 in maintenance items, maybe $2000 in fuel.
If I had a car that cost me $1000 a month in maintenance, I wouldn't be driving it. That's jet engine and alcohol dragster levels of maintenance.
You mean you're not getting a new set of tires every month?
I used to get a new set every year when I lived on a rural dirt road, but not any more. I love that my ties last 5-7 years.
You're clearly not doing enough burnouts!
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