Reading that makes me want to down a good stiff panache or two.The other thing is that even collectable cars are money pits. Think about how much it would cost to buy a car today and keep it for 30 years, hoping it might quadruple in value. You'd have to keep the miles low, so that means not a lot of driving and enjoying it -- you'll need to take on the financial burden of a second vehicle for those entire 30 years.
That also means that the collectable car has to stay clean and rust free, so that requires a garage for 30 years. How's that going to impact the rest of the choices you make in life - where to live, how much house you can afford, should you take a better job if it means moving and giving up your garage?
And your relationships. Is your wife going to feel less committed to you because you're always obsessing about that XLT hybrid in the garage? Are you going to give up weekends with your kids so you can stay home and wax it? Will your 4 year old need a lifetime of therapy because of that time you came home and freaked when you saw his bike leaned up against the door?
Now of course we haven't even talked about 30 years of insurance premiums, maintenance, repairs, etc. And what happens when at year 24 you decide to take it for a rare Sunday drive and get sideswiped by some moron on their cell phone? Goodby all that hard work, money and sacrifice.
So save yourself all the costs, all the heartaches, the possible divorce and everything else and just drive and enjoy your Maverick. If you invested every penny you'd otherwise spend on keeping your potential classic, after 30 years you'd have enough money to go out and buy yourself a vacation home or a Lamborghini. Maybe both.
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