Quote:
Originally Posted by red6spd
Your right, the car is not gonna rust away. Thats not why I dont like drive my car during the winter. But you got to think of everything else that the salt is getting to. Interior, Rubber around the car, Wheels, Plastics. Its also hard to rinse your car down if its been below freezing for several days. Its not gonna wreck your car but, the car that has never been subjected to winter driving is going to be in better shape below the car and on the body of the car. Thats just me. I know it sounds weird but my Altima that I owned for 3 years also never saw snow and she did not have a spec of rust under her.
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understandable, you should do with your car what you feel comfortable with.
Quote:
Originally Posted by red6spd
I know it sounds weird but my Altima that I owned for 3 years also never saw snow and she did not have a spec of rust under her.
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^ this is the point i'm making. you sold the car, never drove it in snow, got whatever price you got for it, and i'm sure that wasn't contingent on whether you drove it in the snow. I'm sure the next owner drove it in the snow, so for all intents in purposes, it didnt really matter whether the car saw snow or not.
i just find it hard to believe that the salt could cause enough corrosion to a new car that it would be a problem within any reasonable amount of time. if i planned on keeping a car forever, i wouldn't drive it in the snow or let any salt touch it, but i don't plan to. i remember you saying you have gone through a lot of cars in the past few years, and my point is just that if a car isn't going to be kept for like 10+ years, the winter salt shouldn't really be a huge factor in whether or not it gets driven.
in a few years, if and when you sell your z, the would be buyer probably won't pay much of a premium for the fact that it wasn't ever subjected to winter salt and it wont matter to you anymore that the car wasn't exposed to salt b/c you wont own it anymore.
i see a lot of people who have never driven there cars in the rain or snow or if there is folioage on the ground, and they go to sell it i wonder why it mattered that the car stay perfect. they have taken every step to ensure the car will last FOREVER, except after 3 years they sell it, so why does it matter? i want my car to last me as long as i want to keep it, and i want it to be in good working order when i sell it, and no road salt is going to really get in the way of that.
not attacking or anything jjust making conversation and putting in my :2cents:
obviously, there are some reasons i dont seefor why certain people feel the need to not get their cars wet, cold, or dirty, but in my mind, washing my car fixes all of that. i guess maybe not for other people.