Welcome to this week’s casual kōrero thread!
This post will be pinned in this community so you can always find it, and will stay for about a week until replaced by the next one.
It’s for talking about anything that might not justify a full post. For example:
- Something interesting that happened to you
- Something humourous that happened to you
- Something frustrating that happened to you
- A quick question
- A request for recommendations
- Pictures of your pet
- A picture of a cloud that kind of looks like an elephant
- Anything else, there are no rules (except the rule)
So how’s it going?
How high is too high mileage before you guys would rule out a car?
We’re looking for an occasional 7 seater, but every one I see in our area and budget is either either in between 100-200k KM’s or just really old. Don’t particularly want an SUV, but none of the vans or people movers are looking great either.
@eagleeyedtiger @Dave, some vehicles have totally sound motors into the high 200k kms.
(service history and check up is good, also shows what’s been changed/new and how long ago)
Check rubber mounts and suspension, they add to a quiet, comfortable drive and a more secure one, they often show wear at around 100 to 120k km, check replacement.
I’d go for a model that sold plenty so there are spare parts if necessary and an economic one (saves money on petrol and better for environment).Thanks, I think that’s what’s worrying me is that some of them are near 200k and are more than my initial budget, which means there’s also potentially maintenance work that would be needed as an additional cost. Not to mention also fitting the other criteria I’m looking for. Definitely want something that’s cheaper on maintenance and parts.
Depends on the budget probably…
Over or near to 200k KMs would probably worry me a bit, but personally I wouldn’t think twice about one in the 100-150k KM range so long as it’s otherwise good.
I personally would prioritise getting newer safety features over worrying about the KMs, so long as the car is generally in good shape.
Maybe I need to revise my stance then, I’m so used to always looking for smaller cars with lower KM’s, but the asking prices for some of these high mileage SUVs is crazy to me, some are close to new car non 7 seater prices.
The other frustration is trying to figure out what models and engines are good and which are duds, so much conflicting information on basically every model I look up.
Maybe I need to revise my stance then, I’m so used to always looking for smaller cars with lower KM’s, but the asking prices for some of these high mileage SUVs is crazy to me, some are close to new car non 7 seater prices.
Yeah the cost of a 7 seater SUVs can be a killer.
I never owned a car with less than 100k KMs on the clock until recently. And really that was just about getting a safer car when we had kids. So I guess I see 100K-200K as a “normal” range. Under 100K is for fancy people 😋
The other frustration is trying to figure out what models and engines are good and which are duds, so much conflicting information on basically every model I look up.
Haha yes, all cars are going to have some failures and so it’s hard to use anecdotal evidence to decide if it’s a bad model or random chance. If you buy from a dealer you at least have some level of protection from the CGA, but you’ll also pay more for that.
Is it feasible to not buy a giant 7 seater SUV, and instead just hire one when needed? That’s going to depend on how close you are to a place that has them for hire and how often you expect to need it, but I think you’ll find it’s cheaper financially. Not just because big SUVs are super expensive, but also because they suck fuel like crazy. Unless it’s a hybrid then the fuel costs are much higher than a smaller car., and you’ll be paying that regardless of whether you are using seats 6 and 7.
Haha guess I’m fancy, almost every car I’ve bought has been under 100K km’s, but the never were very expensive. Benefit of the cheap imported cars here.
Oh yes, we’ll be buying from a dealer as I want to trade in our older Prius. I know I can potentially get more buying and selling privately, but I really cannot be bothered with private sales with cars, unless I already know the person.
The wife doesn’t really mind not having a 7 seater, but the reason I’m considering it, is it makes it so much easier when family visits a couple times a year. No need to drive two cars every time we go out. Also if we visit family, we take a lot of stuff with us. With a second child now the Prius is getting too small for that. I actually had my mind set on finding a people mover with a proper fold flat third row so we can have a huge boot space for 90% of the time. But for some reason here, they’re all either already pretty old or too new and expensive. I’m guessing that they’re not as popular as they once were.
I have to give some thought to the renting thing, it might be a good idea.
Haha guess I’m fancy, almost every car I’ve bought has been under 100K km’s, but the never were very expensive. Benefit of the cheap imported cars here.
I think what I consider “cheap” has changed a lot over my life. I never spent more than a couple of grand on a car until we had kids.
The wife doesn’t really mind not having a 7 seater, but the reason I’m considering it, is it makes it so much easier when family visits a couple times a year.
A quick look online, you’re talking about $200 to hire an 8 seater van/car thing like that for a day. Unless you’re picking up from Auckland Airport then the exact same thing is double the price 🤷
If you need it twice a year, that’s $400 a year. Just having a big 7 seater will probably cost you that much extra fuel before you even talk about the price of the car.
Of course you could also just put up with taking two cars, which also means twice the boot space. A 7 seater typically doesn’t have much boot space when the 6th and 7th seats are up.
I think our most expensive was around 12-13K until we got the Leaf a couple of years ago. We usually keep them for around 10 years so far. In fairness, I come from a country where before you can even buy a car you need to bid for a Certificate of Entitlement (COE) to own a particular class of car. The COE frequently costs more than the car you’re buying. And it also has to be renewed every 10 years. But they have an amazing public transport system. So I guess cheap is relative.
We actually don’t use the second car all that often outside of longer trips or when family visit, which is why I’m not so concerned about it being less economical. The Leaf is what we usually use around town. However, the kids are getting bigger and I’ve noticed we have a lot less space when trying to pack the car full, or impossible if we want to include their friends in the car.
A 7 seater typically doesn’t have much boot space when the 6th and 7th seats are up.
I’m aware of this, but it would only really matter for maybe 10% of trips. It’s lame, but my actual dream right now would be a late model Kia Carnival. Way too expensive and they really are huge cars to drive around.
In fairness, I come from a country where before you can even buy a car you need to bid for a Certificate of Entitlement (COE) to own a particular class of car. The COE frequently costs more than the car you’re buying. And it also has to be renewed every 10 years. But they have an amazing public transport system. So I guess cheap is relative.
Interesting! Cheap is definitely relative.
I’m aware of this, but it would only really matter for maybe 10% of trips. It’s lame, but my actual dream right now would be a late model Kia Carnival. Way too expensive and they really are huge cars to drive around.
You could save up for it! It’s what we make the kids do when they want something, but it works for adults too!
As someone who borrowed a Toyota Highlander for a few months, my dream is for a car that fits in carparks 😆
Hey Dave, how much storage space is this lemmy instance using out of interest?
The main VPS drive is currently using 330GiB of storage. Onsite and offsite backups are extra.
This is largely the image storage (266GB) and that’s partly historical (Lemmy used to keep full size images indefinitely as “thumbnails” and currently has no way to delete them). The database itself is around 25GB.
Thats less than I thought, considering how much content goes through this server each year.
A couple of versions back there were some changes to images. The current set up we have is to proxy all images and save none. Previously thumbnails were stored forever and other images were loaded direct from source (e.g. if someone on Lemmy.world uploaded a meme, everyone one looking at it on every instance would always load the image from lemmy.world). Proxying is optional in Lemmy but I’ve enabled it. There is still some tweaking to do because certain sites don’t work well (from memory I think Imgur and Youtube are two big ones).
The proxy is currently configued to store images for 3 days after they were last accessed. So if no one on lemmy.nz looks at a particular meme for three days then the cached image is deleted. The image is re-loaded on demand, so if you go to look at something from a month ago and no one else has looked at it recently, then the lemmy.nz server will re-download it and then proxy it to you. If you browse All with order set to New you’ll see this in action, as the brand new posts take a little while for the images to be downloaded and provided to you.
Posts from before we turned on proxying don’t use the proxying, they just have the thumbnails stored in full resolution and kept indefinitely. I did previously use a tool for deleting old thumbnails which also helped.
Long story short, it’s been a struggle to keep the hard drive use that small 😆
OK so I think I’ve got black coffee going alright with my espresso machine. The grind, tamping, extraction time and volume of espresso seem right.
But I am seriously struggling with a milky coffee. I can froth up the milk with the steam wand fine, and heat it until the jug feels quite hot, but when I put it into the mug the coffee just isn’t that warm. I have tried heating it like crazy and it doesn’t seem to keep the heat. I always end up having to microwave it for 20 seconds.
Anyone got any tips on how to make a hot milky coffee? Should I be heating the mug?
My mum always insisted on a warm cup and us kids would make fun of her. But now I’m drinking coffee I appreciate how it makes the coffee stay hot that little bit longer!
Are you fully submerging the steam wand into the milk to heat it through or just keeping it near the surface for bubbles. That would make a difference in the overall milk temp. And because metal conducts heat really well, it’s probably getting hot before the milk. I think for properly warm milk it’s supposed to be almost to hot to touch (although my old memories from working in a cafe may be lying to me)?
I’m heating the milk by fully submerging the steam wand after creating the foam.
I have tried heating the jug until it’s so hot I can’t touch the bottom, and the end result is still a not-hot-enough coffee. My theory is the cup absorbs the heat. Did you pre-heat the cup when you were working in a cafe?
Heat the cup first.
How would I do that. The steam wand?
At home I typically just warm it with (our very) hot water from the tap. Fill it and leave it for a minute.
At work I do the same with the fancy boiling water tap thing.
Your machine probably has a hot water thing, for long black/Americano, you can use that.
Ok thanks, I’ll give that a go 🙂