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IntelliChoice Value Rating
The chart above shows the purchase price versus ownership cost for each car from a specific vehicle class. The cars with better than average ownership cost/purchase price correlations are the best values, and these best value cars are represented by the dots below the curve. (i.e. the cars that have a lower ownership cost compared to its purchase price.) Those cars, which are worse than average or poor values, appear above the curve.
One way to view the graph is to draw a vertical line through any purchase price. You may see several dots that fall on this line - each of which is a car with a similar purchase price. However, notice the difference in ownership costs of each car represented by the vertical position of the dot. Two cars with the same purchase price can have thousands of dollars difference in ownership costs. This is what separates "good value" cars from "poor value" cars.
What is a good car value?
A "good car value" is one whose cost to own and operate is less than expected. The lower the cost to own and operate a car compared to what is expected, the better the value of that car.
But how do we know a car's "expected cost"?
For each car in the class, IntelliChoice plots the car's purchase price against the total five-year cost to own and operate it as determined by IntelliChoice research. Each dot on the above chart represents a specific car. Generally, we find that as the purchase price of the car increases, the cost to own and operate that car increases. This is why the dots on the graph tend to rise upward and to the right. This phenomenon also makes intuitive sense - as the purchase price rises, financing costs tend to rise, as do insurance, depreciation, taxes, and most other car ownership costs.
This is an important concept. It's normal for car ownership costs to rise as purchase price rises. Therefore, we can't just establish one "average" ownership cost number for each class, since cars in the class have different purchase prices. (This is why the "Relative" shown on each chart is different for cars in the same car class.)
Using statistical techniques, IntelliChoice "connects the dots" to form a curve that defines, for this car class, the relationship between the car's purchase price and car's ownership costs. This curve is our "expected cost" curve. The curve defines, for any car in the class, the five-year ownership cost that we would expect to see at each possible purchase price. If every car in the class were an average value, then all the dots would fall exactly on the curve. However, it's rare that any dot is exactly on the curve. Some dots are a little higher or lower, and some are a lot higher or lower. The dots that are a little lower are better than average car values, while the dots that are a lot lower are excellent car values (A dot that is a lot lower than the curve has ownership costs much lower than expected for a car of its purchase price). Conversely, a dot a little higher than the curve is a poorer than average car value, while a dot that is much higher than the curve is a poor car value.
Value is a relative term, not an absolute term. It is performing better than the logical expectation.
So is a Mercedes-Benz E320 expensive to own and operate? Certainly in an absolute sense. Most other cars cost less. But, when its cost to own and operate is plotted against cars with comparable invoice prices, the E320 costs less. So the E320 is not expensive to own and operate - it is a good car value. The Mercedes does not have low ownership costs, but it has low ownership costs for its invoice price.
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Article From Motor Trend Magazine
Road Test: 2004 Ford Racing Focus RS8 vs. 2004 Lamborghini GallardoA monumental mismatch of two automotive monsters / By Frank Markus / Photography by John Kiewicz, Brian Vance /
Article provided by: Motor Trend Magazine
We interrupt our usual carefully considered journalism to bring you this special report. For the next few pages, we shall depart from our regular format of informing car-savvy readers on how various vehicles rank against similarly priced and configured competition using meticulous scientific performance data backed by reasoned subjective impressions gleaned from 250-plus staff-years of sampling all things automotive. Frankly, after 250 years, we were ready for a vacation.
So what we have here is a daydream brought to life. It's everyone's happy-hour hallucination: What if you had a pile of money to blow on a go-fast four-wheeled toy? Damn the practical considerations, full dream ahead! Is it smarter to buy off the rack and write a single check for a ready-made supercar--the kind that swivels heads and gets parked right in front of the toniest trattorias? Or could it be more satisfying to express oneself and concoct a custom-tailored built-to-order monster capable of performing like a supercar without drawing as much attention and prompting passersby to whisper epithets about phallic compensation, gold-chain accessorizing, and Hair-Club-for-Men membership? There's only one sure way to answer these deep philosophical questions: Drive like hell in one of each to see which makes you smile more. We reckoned that if we were buying ready-to-wear, we'd pass by the obvious racks for something a bit wilder. Why not a Lamborghini, in this case the raging bull's newest 5.0-liter V-10-powered Gallardo? It's boutique-rare, raffish and striking from every angle, compact and maneuverable, and fortified with all-wheel drive, enormous brakes, wheels, tires, and all the right stuff for comfy cruising and angry hot lapping. Cost being no object here in Fantasyland, we popped for the paddle-shifted E-gear six-speed ($10,000), $2990 for the dude-check-me-out! pearl-yellow paint, and $1150 for a swanky custom two-tone interior. The tab: a mere $187,959. ... >>next page
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