Seven Unicorn Sedans – Sub $29,998! (each, not total)

This started as a blog post for a single sedan, a legitimate unicorn, and then I got carried away. Saw another and another. Either driving enthusiast cars or more luxurious cars. “Driving rich,” as one of my favorite blog readers described it. To narrow them down I ran a search for similar cars; sedans with V-8 motors, less than 60,000 miles, and less than $30,000. I didn’t even add all the gee-whiz stuff I normally want, like seat massagers and auto cruise control. Ended up with 20 cars around the country, and narrowed it down to these top seven, in my humble opinion. Going from lowest price to highest, although it did work out that leaves the best for last.

I’m starting with a 2015 Hyundai Equus Signature. Whenever I see one on the road, I think if I wanted a really good car at a really low price and I was less vain, I would debadge an Equus and confuse everyone. These cars always make me doubletake. This was the last year of the second-generation Equus. In 2016 it became the Genesis G90. A legitimate extinct unicorn.

The Equus is fairly loaded with auto cruise control, air-conditioned and heated seats, a heated steering wheel, and contemporary for 2015 safety features like cross-traffic alert, lane departure warning, and blind-spot monitors. The Equus has 45″ of front seat legroom, more than any other car in this class. I’ve owned a Mercedes S55 and a Mercedes S600, and in both, I never needed to put my seat all the way back for my 6’4″ body (and legs). The Equus has almost four inches more legroom than the Mercedes S-class!

The Equus has a gigantic trunk. It would make a really nice cross-country cruiser. Below, we have a 429-horsepower 5.0 liter naturally aspirated V-8 mated to an eight-speed transmission and rear-wheel drive. It does an old-school 5.6-second 0-60 mph run—decent but not great.

Remember this engine bay when you see the Lexus later.

The 2015 Hyundai Equus sold new for about $63,000. It’s had two owners in New England and one accident. Last summer, it was for sale in Maryland near me and is now here in Bloomington, Illinois. It has low mileage and a low price, and I wouldn’t bother with MaxCare. It’s a fairly reliable car and not terribly expensive to fix.

Stock No: 25465422 VIN: KMHGH4JH7FU095219

For the record, the next car is the unicorn that fits the bill for my original definition of such and was what I wanted to write about today. And maybe the second best bargain here. This is a 2014 Audi S6 from back when they came with V-8 motors. A more performance-oriented car by far than the Hyundai.

There was a time when CarMax sold the awesome Audi S6 with the Lamborghini-derived V-10 motor. Here’s a blog post from 2018 when you could get one for about the same price as this one. I test-drove one and loved it, but I knew I’d get tired of hearing myself tell everyone everywhere, “No, really, it has a Lamborghini motor!” Car people probably already know, and non-car people probably think either I’m full of crap or I swapped in a V-10. Either way, it was not a good match for me. Audi moved from a V-10 to a more efficient and equally powerful V-8 for the 2013 model year. Alas, in 2019, Audi again migrated to a six-cylinder in the S6, and again equally powerful and more fuel efficient. Not nearly as exciting, I suspect.

The 2014 Audi S6 is a Prestige model and loaded with features: auto cruise control, heated and cooled seats, heated steering wheel, heads-up display, cross-traffic alert, Bose audio, and even a WiFi hotspot. Unfortunately, there are no seat massagers. I love the quilted seats. With the adaptive air ride suspension, it has to be a comfortable, well-handling ride.

As noted, the 2014 Audi S6 has a 4.0-liter twin-turbo V-8, making 420 horsepower. It has a dual-clutch automatic with AWD and can hit 60 mph in 4.6 seconds, which is very respectable. I doubt it sounds as naughty as the V-10.

The 2014 Audi S6 was sold new for perhaps $80,000 a decade ago. It’s a three-owner, accident-free car that has spent its time in Delaware and Pennsylvania. It’s coming soon to Lancaster, Pennsylvania. Here’s the link.

Stock No: 25599046 VIN: WAUF2AFC5EN163360

Maybe you like the Audi V-8 motor lots but have matured or been promoted to the executive level and don’t really want a performance car. I have the perfect “driving rich” car for you.

Here’s a totally loaded 2014 Audi A8L sedan in a beautiful blue over tan for only $4,000 more than the S6 and with half the mileage. This is a grown-up’s Audi. An executive car at a Honda Accord price. This was once an $84,000 car.

The Audi A8L has the Cold Weather Package, Driver Assistance Package, and Luxury Package. It also has auto cruise control and seat massagers, front and rear sunroofs, and heated and cooled front and back seats. CarMax says it has rear-seat entertainment, and I normally think of the DVD system, but I don’t see it below. Still pretty loaded.

The Audi A8 also has the 4.0-liter twin-turbo V-8 with 420 horsepower, the same as the S6, although it somehow makes 444 ft-lbs of torque over the 406 in the S6. That pushes the larger A8 to 60 mph in 4.7 seconds to the S6’s 4.6. Still good. I like this car, yet it reminds me I haven’t seen an S8 or A8 W12 on CarMax in a long time. Those would be more special.

This 2014 Audi A8L is currently here in Escondido, California, after spending much of its time in Florida. It’s a two-owner, accident-free luxury cruiser.

Stock No: 25976902 VIN: WAUR2AFD2EN009100

The one criticism I saw in the Audi A8 reviews is that it lacks the panache of a Mercedes S-class, so I had to include one. I really miss mine. A base model S-class still looks expensive and luxurious on the road.

This 2014 Mercedes S550 has the highest mileage of my picks at 56,000, and yet it’s affordable at $27,998 after CarMax just indicated the price was reduced by $1,000. This is the sixth generation S-class, the W222, and 2014 was the first year for this new model.

This S550 is fairly well equipped with the Comfort Package, Driver Assistance Package, and Premium Package. It’s got seat massagers, heated and cooled seats, Burmester audio, a panoramic sunroof, and a power rear sunshade. It doesn’t say it has auto cruise control, and I cannot see the stalk adequately to doubt. That would be disappointing. It does have an air suspension and rides so smoothly.

The 2014 S550 is powered by a 4.7-liter, 455 horsepower twin-turbo V-8 coupled to a seven-speed automatic transmission. It hits 60 mph in the same amount of time as the Audi A8 – 4.7 seconds—which is still excellent for a 4,400-lb sedan.

This 2014 Mercedes S550 is here in Kearny Mesa, California. It’s a one-owner accident-free car, once $99,000 or so, and for now, decently priced at $28k. If you’ve always wanted a Mercedes S-class this might be right for you.

Stock No: 26186334 VIN: WDDUG8CB3EA045708

A young Chuck wistfully wondering if I’d ever own such a fine car. I once did.

A couple of Audi’s and a Mercedes, and next thing you know, I’m accused of being a Euro-car snob….and for the most part, you’d be right. I Fell in love with German cars in 1981 when the US Army sent me to live in Germany, and I went to the Frankfurt and Geneva auto shows. Changed my life. But I still like two-ton Yankee sedans and am happy to share one that might be a hoot.

The Chrysler 300S debuted in 2005 (not the 1950’s version) and hasn’t changed a whole lot since then. The second generation spawned in 2011 and got a facelift in 2015. For better or worse, this 2019 Chrysler 300S is almost a straight-line descendent of the original. It was 2019 when sales started to plummet, and the model was discontinued in 2023. Chrysler ended the line with a limited run of 2,000 final edition 300C models with a 485 hp 6.4 liter 300C, and those sold like hotcakes. This is not one of them. Not even a 300 SRT. But it’s all we got for less than $30,000 with a V-8, and it’s really not that bad.

The 300S has auto cruise control, cross-traffic alert, air-conditioned and heated seats, Apple CarPlay, and an Alpine audio. It’s a very comfortable highway cruiser. Back in January 2016, we had a blizzard in Northern Virginia on a Sunday morning, and I needed to be in North Carolina to work by Monday morning. My neighborhood was impassable. Airports and Amtrak were shut down, but the National Car Rental at Reagan National had a few cars for rent. I answered an ad on Craigslist offering 4×4 rides for $100, not much more than a regular taxi! I asked my daughter to take down the license plate of the Jeep when it came in case I got murdered. I did not. I rented a very nice Chrysler 300S and raced in the night down the single-plowed lane of I-95. It was a remarkable ride, and I had no complaints about the Chrysler.

Check out CarMax’s latest graphics on trunk space.
I have a hunch this is an AI dog. But if so, why use one that looks a little jittery about riding with dummies?

Motor Trend reviewed the car in 2019 and said, “Despite its age (like 1 million years old now), the basic car here is still remarkably entertaining. It does all the right stuff—brakes and turns in adeptly, corners with not too much understeer, and accelerates in a nice, powerful RWD manner.”  It’s a good enough large RWD sedan. The V-8 is a 5.7 liter Hemi making 363 horsepower. With an eight-speed automatic it will dash to 60 mph in 5.6 seconds. Up there with the Equus and American made, if that’s important to you.

I could drive this car all day long if it was an SRT model. That said, it’s a bit pricey for a 300S. You can find it here in Norwood, Massachusetts.

Stock No: 26568198 VIN: 2C3CCABT8KH743851

For the same price as the Chrysler, you could have an older Lexus that could scratch the itch for luxury and probably greater reliability. Lexus spun off from Toyota in 1989 with the introduction of the LS400 in the US, a blatant clone of the Mercedes S-class. It was offensive and bad form until it outsold Mercedes and became the benchmark for quality. Thirty-five years later, the flagship sedan is still manufactured in Japan and, after five generations, now hosts a six-cylinder. Sales peaked in 2007 and are now down to less than 5,000 units in the US. A third of the Chrysler 300S!

What we have here is a low-mileage 2013 Lexus LS460 that was not a new generation but was completely remade inside and out that year, although riding on the fourth-generation chassis.

The Lexus LS460 is still nicely appointed for its time, with air-conditioned and heated seats and a heated steering wheel. It’s a nice ride and probably quite comfortable, albeit dated. I suspect this car is for a driver who appreciates a luxurious ride and isn’t as fixated on technology or high-performance driving. When I joined the private sector in 2013, this car was new, and it seemed every realtor or small company executive had one of these, and they seemed to be the top of the line. (The cars, not the executives so much.) This was a $67,000 new car – $20,000 more than the 300S, but the Chrysler has more features. The Lexus has more class.

I’m always amused by the engine bay cover in the Lexus LS models. I don’t know any other manufacturer that 100% hides the hard-working parts so thoroughly. Would it be insulting if I said I suspect most, but not all, Lexus LS460 owners have never opened their own hood? (Honestly, I only open mine to add windshield washer fluid.) Under there, I am told, is a 4.6 liter engine making 386 horsepower. Zero to sixty in the same time as the Equus and the Chrysler.

This is a two-owner, accident-free sedan that’s lived in Florida and Colorado all its life. It probably doesn’t even need MaxCare. It’s coming soon to Parker (Denver), Colorado. Here’s the link.

Stock No: 26537867 VIN: JTHBL5EF5D5123987

FINALLY THE BEST SEDAN OF ALL FOR LESS THAN $30,000!

For $6,000 more than the Audi S6, you can buy this high-performance and fully loaded BMW: a 2013 M5. It’s fast. It’s comfortable. Like the S6, it once came with a V-10 from 2004 to 2010. In 2011, this “F10” generation became the first with a turbocharged engine. Like the Audi, I’ve driven both an M5 and an M6 with the V-10, and at 8,000 rpm they howl. Unfortunately, the ride dynamics beat the hell out of me, and my favorite CarMax service tech, Ryan, had not yet taught me how to configure the settings to be more livable as he did for my M3. Things might have gone differently.

Before we get to the drive train, be impressed with the features. Every single thing I had in my S600. Everything I have in the GLE63 except self-driving. And it’s a third of the price of the GLE! Auto cruise control. Heated, cooling, and massaging seats. Heated steering wheel. Heads up display. Power rear sunshade. Bang & Olufsen audio. Driver Assistance Package. Executive Package. Self-closing doors. AND NIGHT VISION!

Under the hood is the 4.4 liter twin-turbo V-8, which produces 560 horsepower, the most of today’s sedans. With a 7-speed twin-clutch automatic, it rockets to 60 mph in 3.7 seconds. I don’t want to brag (yes, I do). That’s the same as my GLE (but did I mention at a third of the cost?) This is an exceptional car. It’s .4 seconds faster than the V-10 was to 60.

This 2013 BMW M5 sold for close to $100,000 eleven years ago. It’s deeply depreciated, loaded with luxury, and fast. Everything you could want in a unicorn. I suspect MaxCare isn’t cheap, but it’s mandatory. Drive this car until it explodes. Get it fixed for free. Then drive it some more! Find it here in King of Prussia, Pennsylvania, just outside Philadelphia.

Stock No: 25827769 VIN: WBSFV9C5XDC773174

Hope you hung in there for all seven cars. Now back to writing about running. After a nap.

Quick Hit – “The Most Polarizing Vehicle Ever at CarMax”

Regular blog readers know I’m not current on EVs and probably never will be. So I was surprised to get an email from a reader and car guru named Cannon giving me a heads-up on this Tesla Cybertruck unicorn – a $100,000 2024 pickup EV.

Cannon knows I have neither the time nor inclination to get smart on Cybertrucks, so he okayed me sharing what he wrote in his email. Pretty much, he said,

“This is the first Cybertruck I have seen them offer. It looks like the step down dual motor. It will be interesting to see how long they have it. Tesla just a few days ago dropped the Foundation series $20k premium to buy one. So the replacement cost from Tesla dropped to $80k. Can’t imagine a lot of folks will line up to buy this at $100k. I guess all it takes is one person though. The stainless doesn’t seem to age well. For a truck with 6k miles it looks dirty.”

Over the years, Cannon’s observations have been spot on. And the Cybertruck does look dirty. Here in Northern Virginia, Cybertrucks are not uncommon yet striking when spotted on our streets. I’m not a fan of the concept, but I have to applaud the boldness of the design. Visually, there is nothing like it on the road. I never noticed the giant single wiper until I clipped the photo above. The headlights are bizarre and severe.

The dash seems sparse and dull. I’d better be able to pull up Netflix on that tablet. I’m sure the dashboard is a work of art from a design point of view. The rest of the interior below looks more conventional.

I had no idea (duh) there was a storage bin under the hood, like a Boxster.

And the pickup bed is 6′. Looks conventional, too, under the cover.

By the way, Cannon also mentioned that CarMax has started selling Rivian’s, which I did not know. Started last spring. I’m a bit embarrassed to not have known that. Did I mention I’m not much of an EV guy?

You can track this 2024 Tesla Cybertruck here in Los Angeles, California. It’s a one-owner vehicle and is very much under Tesla’s warranty until 2028, at 50,000 miles. I have no position on whether MaxCare is right for EV’s, but it would only extend coverage by a year anyway. You have to wonder how much of a beating the owner took selling this car to CarMax, or whether it was a repossession? Enjoy.

Stock No: 26559418 VIN: 7G2CEHED1RA006343

I couldn’t help myself. My wife sent me the meme below long ago. If you’re a Cybertruck owner, forgive me.

I’m really not mocking the Cybertruck. I just needed the material.

But if I were spending $100,000 on an EV pickup, I think I’d go with the Rivian below now that I know they sell them. It’s freakish in a cool way and more traditional if you will.

And with the money left over from the Cybertruck, of course, I’d buy a Raptor!

Finally, I sing this song at every music gig I play. It seemed right here. Thanks again, Cannon, for the Cybertruck idea!

Quick Hit – Zoom Zoom. Last Year Mazdaspeed3

“Mazdaspeed” started in 1967 as an independent racing team (per Wiki) and later ran a pair of Group C Junior cars in the 1983 24 Hours of Le Mans, finishing 12th and 18th overall. Surprisingly, I was there in 1983, and these photos of the 717C’s are mine. The Mazdas ran with the 13B Wankel rotary engine that was also in the first-generation RX-7. Another coincidence….my first grown-up car was a 1985 Mazda RX-7! It’s below, albeit with a 12A carbureted motor, not the 13B. A little-known fact is that when you’re young and buy your first two-seater sports car, your wife will become pregnant in months, and the car will be jettisoned for a sedan. Anyway, in 1991, Mazda won Le Mans overall. Wasn’t there for that.

What’s the point? Mazdaspeed was to Mazda what AMG is to Mercedes, and Alpina is to BMW, I guess. In 2003, the first retail Mazdaspeed Protege was offered, followed by the Mazdaspeed MX-5 Miata in 2004, the Mazdaspeed6 in 2006, and finally, the Mazdaspeed3 in 2007. The Mazdaspeed3 continued in production until 2013. And that brings us to the unicorn below.

The first generation Mazda3 was introduced to the USA in 2004 as the successor to the Protege. The Mazdaspeed3 was imported from 2007 to 2013 with a 2.3-liter four-cylinder motor, turbocharged and intercooled. The second generation, launched in 2010, had bigger brakes and stabilizer bars and a number of engineering upgrades to the motor. And the hood scoop was legit, dissipating heat from the too-hot engine.

The Mazdaspeed3 also had a six-speed manual transmission and limited-slip differential powering the front wheels. It zoom zooms to 60 mph in the low five-second range. The top speed is an impressive 155 mph.

The interior of this 2013 model is sparse, though. Bose sound, CD player, Bluetooth, a USB and aux port, and cruise control. CarMax rated it 2 out of 10 on features. Decent seats and a stick to row your own gears. A driver’s car, I guess.

The Mazdaspeed3 has a big old trunk and can haul some gear as a four-door hatchback.

The fun stuff is below a 2.3-liter, 263-horsepower motor with 280 ft-lbs of torque. Reviews suggest some torque steer, although it’s not horrible. It handles well. It’s a bit of a sleeper.

The 2013 Mazdaspeed3 sold for maybe $28,000 new. It’s only lost a third of its value in 12 years. My Mercedes GLE63 has lost a third of its value in the 16 months I’ve owned it! The 2013 Mazda 3 Mazdaspeed is here at the Dulles, Virginia store. Wait a minute! That’s my store! It looks like the car was sold by the Lancaster, Pennsylvania, CarMax and returned a few weeks and a hundred miles later? Wonder what that was about. I wouldn’t bother with MaxCare, really. Just drive.

Stock No: 25925209 VIN: JM1BL1L34D1824997

(By the way, if you’re into the Mazdaspeed3, take a look at this 2010 model I spotted in 2018. It was $19,998 and had only 10,000 miles on it!)

Care to see how the Mazda 3 Mazdaspeed stacked up against its rivals back in the day? Scroll down a bit.

Continue reading “Quick Hit – Zoom Zoom. Last Year Mazdaspeed3”

Three Reasons (Excuses) I Haven’t Written Much and Three Corvettes That Haven’t Been Driven Much

Snowed In – Colorado Springs.

Reason #1 – I drove the Mercedes GLE63 from Virginia to Seattle and back, with more than a bit of craziness along the way. Most of of it captured on a dashcam. That’s about a hundred hours of video to sort through so I can write a wildly entertaining blog post on that.

Rental BMW 530i in Monument Valley

Reason #2—My friend (we’ll call him “Jerry”) rented this 2024 BMW to drive his son from Virginia to California, and I flew out to drive back with Jerry. I have another blog post to do on that road trip, without violating his privacy, of course.

Virginia Beach Marathon – Back When All My Parts Worked

Reason #3 – I have been inspired to resume writing a book on my marathon running experiences, which has consumed much of my free time. I had set it aside for years, and now I have a November deadline to complete it. For what it’s worth, there are more than a few similarities between cross-country driving and marathon running. Someday, maybe I’ll write a piece on that!

All that rationalizing aside, I’m taking an afternoon coffee break from writing about running to blog about these Corvettes. I also got a notification this morning that a gentleman, who I believe goes by Jim, just signed up to follow the blog, and I thought I owed it to you all to stop whining and actually write a blog post.

These Corvettes really don’t fit my standard model for unicorns because they are way over my new threshold budget of $45,000. They’re unique because they’ve hardly been driven—less than 999 miles each. I’m still amazed that CarMax is able to buy up so many ultra-low-mileage cars. At the moment they have about a half dozen cars, three years old or more, with less than 1,000 miles on them. In fact, bump that up to 10,000 miles and you get about three dozen muscle cars, most less than $40,000. Does anyone know why owners don’t drive them more?

The standout here is the 2016 Corvette Z06 above. Over eight years old and less than a thousand miles on it. And a convertible to boot. The C7 Corvette was manufactured from 2014-2019 and was the last of the front-engined cars. The C7 was developed to offset the research suggesting the C6 Corvette had become an “old man’s toy”. The head of Chevy marketing thought too many people saw it as the car of “the successful plumber.” (thanks to Wiki for that – no offense to plumbers?)

Our next two contestants are newer C8s: a red 2020 Corvette Stingray and a black 2023 Corvette Stingray—both in 3LT trim. The 2020 was the first year for the C8, and the mid-engine was GM’s first since the 1984 Pontiac Fiero. These 2020 and 2023 models have targa tops that can be stored in the boot. Not quite a convertible.

The 2016 Z06 (below) surprisingly offered Apple CarPlay with the MyLink 8-inch touch screen, a heads-up display, and air-conditioned and heated seats. The interior looks damned near new, as it should with so few miles. The 2016 Z06 had the Performance Data and Video Recorder with Navigation feature. and front curb-view cameras. Nice to have. The GM of old, though, continued to use the same switches and buttons across more pedestrian models like the Impala and Suburban, detracting a bit from this sports car’s panache.

I don’t know why I said panache. I never use that word, and if I did, I should have saved it for the C8 interior below. It’s very…panachy? As modern and high tech as the whole car. I love that whole bank of buttons on the right side of the console. Pretty sure zipping around turns my passenger wife would be gripping that and accidentally turning stuff on and off. I once sat in a C8 and found it way more roomy and comfortable for my 6’4″ 225-pound frame than the C7. The bulkhead behind the C7 driver’s seat prevented me from reclining the seatback to get more hip room. Not so in the C8, even with the big motor behind me. That said, I found it harder to ease through the C8 doorway and into the cockpit than the C7, and pretty sure I’d be banging my door into every car I parked next to. It was not for me as a daily driver.

The 3LT trim upgrades the 2LT interior to leather-trimmed everything, and Napa leather sport seats with carbon fiber accents. The 3LT upgrade was $4,650 on top of the $7,300 for the 2LT features – an additional front HD camera and HD rearview camera, rear cross-traffic alerts, and blind-spot monitoring. The 2LT also provides heated and cooling seats and a heated steering wheel. Read in Top Flight Automotive: “A feature you might choose for your 2LT trim is the automatic front-lift tool. With just the click of a button in the center console, this tool elevates your front bumper about two inches from the ground to keep your Corvette scrape-free. It’s important to note that this option isn’t standard and is only offered for the 2LT and 3LT trims at an additional price.” I can’t tell if these 3LTs have that – CarMax doesn’t have a tab to search for it.

The 2020 Corvette Stingray has a mere 693 miles!

And the 2023 looks like only 724 miles. (Unfortunately, CarMax’s photo of the 2016 Z06’s dash was taken with the display turned off, so no mileage display. The service history shows an inspection in late August at 940 miles. I’d bet that’s close now.)

The 2016 Corvette Z06 is powered by a monster 6.2-liter supercharged V-8 (above), making a whopping 650 horsepower. With an eight-speed automatic, it will knock out 60 mph in just three seconds. The top speed is 186 mph. Supercar performance on the cheap?

The 2020 Corvette Stingray 3LT engine bay.

The 2020 and 2023 3LTs are powered by far less powerful naturally aspirated V-8s, also 6.2 liters, producing “only” 490 horsepower. But with the eight-speed dual-clutch automatic transmission, no manual available anymore, the C8 is still faster to 60 mph, hitting it in 2.7 seconds. Top speed is 194 mph. Highway mpg is 27….obviously not at that speed.

CarMax’s photo of the 2023 engine bay shows the plastic protective cover, which looks dented.

The 2016 Corvette Z06 sold new for maybe $90,000. It hasn’t depreciated very much in eight years. It’s a one-owner, accident-free car that’s been in California from the start. Right now it’s here in Palm Springs. Although the car hasn’t been driven enough to deserve an oil change it has been serviced. I’d still spring for MaxCare for another five years and 150,000 miles. And drive the hell out of it. Quickly.

Stock No: 26422360 VIN: 1G1YU3D62G5601343

The 2020 Chevrolet Corvette Stingray 3LT listed new for perhaps $71,495, although if I recall, nobody was getting the first-year C8 Corvette out the door for under $90,000. I may remember wrong. Of interest is the photo above, which shows a price drop of $2,000. Since I started writing, it has dropped another grand to $69,998. Is CarMax getting itchy to unload this Corvette? It’s a one-owner Florida car currently here in Fort Lauderdale.

Stock No: 26412626 VIN: 1G1Y82D41L5113752

Finally, the 2023 Chevrolet Corvette Stingray 3LT sold new for about $78,000, or at least that was roughly the MSRP. However, I still don’t think they were really available for that. This one has hardly depreciated in a year, although it was in a “moderate” accident in Greenville, South Carolina, which might give me pause. It’s still under manufacturer warranty, but I’d still do MaxCare. It’s not a coveted 70th-anniversary car, but it’s still a world-class sports car. It’s currently reserved for a drive here in Augusta, Georgia.

Stock No: 26128144 VIN: 1G1YC3D44P5105218

Now back to marathons!