I live in NC....
I had no idea where Lincolnton was. Did 5 minutes of google-ing and found where Lincolnton is and found these.....
http://hickory.craigslist.org/ctd/3421451677.html
It's got a tan interior and an 8-ball shifter, but other than that it looks pretty sweet to me. Sh*t there's more BMW's around hickory than in G'boro(where I'm at) for relatively good prices.
I also found this....
http://hickory.craigslist.org/cto/3421429087.html
Both are pretty sweet models, both sub 5K, 2 door models, both have manual trans, and both are close to you. Also both were within the first 5-6 posts here...
http://www.searchtempest.com/results...min&maxAsk=max
If you want one more opinion. This is what I'd do.
Keep the Cavalier clean, and well maintained, and do minor mods that are easily reversible for the future when you sell it(keep the old stock parts unless thy're totally shot). And try to get as much out of it as you can when you sell it to go towards something you really want to mod and keep. Or bite the bullet and trade it in somewhere. Surprisingly Carmax might give you a descent amount for it if its in descent shape. My wife traded in a beat to sh*t 98 CRV with over 200K, F'd AC, something wrong in the steering rack, and hail damage on every panel. With all that they still gave her 2K and that was just a few years ago. She didn't even clean the thing out before she took it up there(I'm talking trash and random shit from college in there when she took it up there).You already sound like you're on the fence about going forward with the Cavalier. Unless you really like the Cavalier, then just keep it and don't worry what other people like.
When you start modifying a car you're basically guaranteed to devalue the car to 90% of people down the road when you want to sell it. Even if you find some kid like you who wants a modded car. You still won't get your money from the mods back and you'll probably also lose value on the car itself as well. So don't start modding unless you're totally happy with the car itself first.
You've already got a classic to work on and you're tight on $$$. I suggest picking one project at a time if you're tight on $$$. Maintain the Cav, drive it daily because its cheap on gas and work on the calssic and run that on pretty Fridays and weekends. Once you're happy with the classic then move back to the Cav or trade it in for something you're ready to keep for a while.
My point is. You're tight on money and already have a classic to work on. Work on that for now and then mod a car you really like. Don't just mod something because that's what you've got. Because if you dump money into wheels and suspension on the Cav and then realize you'd rather have something else. Then you're going to lose money on any non-maintenance work done.
I had no idea where Lincolnton was. Did 5 minutes of google-ing and found where Lincolnton is and found these.....
http://hickory.craigslist.org/ctd/3421451677.html
It's got a tan interior and an 8-ball shifter, but other than that it looks pretty sweet to me. Sh*t there's more BMW's around hickory than in G'boro(where I'm at) for relatively good prices.
I also found this....
http://hickory.craigslist.org/cto/3421429087.html
Both are pretty sweet models, both sub 5K, 2 door models, both have manual trans, and both are close to you. Also both were within the first 5-6 posts here...
http://www.searchtempest.com/results...min&maxAsk=max
If you want one more opinion. This is what I'd do.
Keep the Cavalier clean, and well maintained, and do minor mods that are easily reversible for the future when you sell it(keep the old stock parts unless thy're totally shot). And try to get as much out of it as you can when you sell it to go towards something you really want to mod and keep. Or bite the bullet and trade it in somewhere. Surprisingly Carmax might give you a descent amount for it if its in descent shape. My wife traded in a beat to sh*t 98 CRV with over 200K, F'd AC, something wrong in the steering rack, and hail damage on every panel. With all that they still gave her 2K and that was just a few years ago. She didn't even clean the thing out before she took it up there(I'm talking trash and random shit from college in there when she took it up there).You already sound like you're on the fence about going forward with the Cavalier. Unless you really like the Cavalier, then just keep it and don't worry what other people like.
When you start modifying a car you're basically guaranteed to devalue the car to 90% of people down the road when you want to sell it. Even if you find some kid like you who wants a modded car. You still won't get your money from the mods back and you'll probably also lose value on the car itself as well. So don't start modding unless you're totally happy with the car itself first.
You've already got a classic to work on and you're tight on $$$. I suggest picking one project at a time if you're tight on $$$. Maintain the Cav, drive it daily because its cheap on gas and work on the calssic and run that on pretty Fridays and weekends. Once you're happy with the classic then move back to the Cav or trade it in for something you're ready to keep for a while.
My point is. You're tight on money and already have a classic to work on. Work on that for now and then mod a car you really like. Don't just mod something because that's what you've got. Because if you dump money into wheels and suspension on the Cav and then realize you'd rather have something else. Then you're going to lose money on any non-maintenance work done.
Comment