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Value Rating
Above Average
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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Review From Motor Trend Magazine
Comparison: 2006 Chevrolet Malibu SS vs. 2007 Mitsubishi Galant Ralliart vs. 2006 Nissan Altima SE-R vs. 2007 Toyota Camry SE
Sport sedans for the common man: Seeking the cure for the four-door ho-hums
By Matt Stone
Photography by Brian Vance
You've traded your Audi TT for one wife, two kids, and three carpool buddies. And now you need four doors and four seats. Your heart screams, "550i or E550 Sport, baby!" Your budget, in a tone resembling your mother-in-law's, reminds you about "practical family transportation." It'll be okay. Several carmakers have realized average family dudes and dudettes with normal incomes may want a spoonful of driving fun and a sprinkle of pizzazz with their daily commuter cereal and have come up with sportified versions of their mainstream midsize four-doors. You won't mistake any of them for that rockin' BMW, Benz, or Audi, but they prove that you don't have to settle for a vanilla sled resembling the ones you rent on business trips.  We've assembled a quartet of them here, all sportier than average V-6-powered front-drivers that live in the $25,000-$30,000 price range. As with SRT or AMG, Mitsubishi's Ralliart sub-brand is intended to symbolize a zestier version of a mainstream product. The Galant sedan gets the Ralliart treatment this time out, new as a 2007 model. It's most easily identified by the projector-style, four-bulb ellipsoid headlamp clusters, mesh grille, side air dams, and 18-inch rolling stock. Power comes from the same 3.8-liter V-6 engine that's employed in the Eclipse GT; variable valve timing helps it crank out 258 horsepower (standard V-6 models run with 230). All Galants get a five-speed automatic trans for 2007, including Sportronic sequential control. Springs/dampers get higher rates, and the anti-roll bar is a stiffer 21mm unit. The Galant Ralliart comes one way: loaded. Perforated leather-trimmed seating (heated in front), automatic climate control, power moonroof, and a Rockford Acoustic Design premium audio system are standard. Final pricing is still TBD but figure about $27,624 to $29,474, with the only likely option being a nav system.  Chevrolet has worked diligently to revive the SS (Super Sport) nameplate. This storied badge had years ago degraded to little more than a tape-stripe package, but GM has been less promiscuous with it of late, applying SS badges only to vehicles that have increased performance and handling capability. Out goes the standard Malibu's 200-horse, 3.5-liter OHV V-6 in favor of a 3.9-liter overhead-valver good for 240. It's still saddled with a four-speed automatic transaxle fresh out of the 1980s, albeit now with manumatic shift action via a toggle-switch on the left side of the shifter stalk, instead of a separate manual gate like the others.
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