Interior noise 2013 ES 350
I test drove a 2013 ES 350 today and in "Park" with the radio off, it was extremely noisy. It had to be the engine as nothing else adds up. Has anyone experienced this? What could it be as most people say the ES 350 is quiet? The CPO dealer is offering $35,500 for this 15,000 mileage car. Good deal?
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Test drive a new one to compare.
As far as price, check out sites like Truecar.com to see if that is a fair price in your area since prices can vary by region. |
This car will be 2 years old in 3 months. IMO the price is no bargain. You should go onto the internet and check KBB.com and other car sites to verify if this is a fair price. Also, do what Bootman said: sit in a new car and compare. I own a 2013 350 and sometimes cannot tell if the engine is running while I'm in the car.
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Originally Posted by bc6152
(Post 8590865)
I own a 2013 350 and sometimes cannot tell if the engine is running while I'm in the car.
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Originally Posted by Keppie
(Post 8590805)
I test drove a 2013 ES 350 today and in "Park" with the radio off, it was extremely noisy. It had to be the engine as nothing else adds up. Has anyone experienced this? What could it be as most people say the ES 350 is quiet? The CPO dealer is offering $35,500 for this 15,000 mileage car. Good deal?
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Don't get CPO. Once a loaner car reached 15,000 miles they sell it as CPO. Have you ever wonder why they use a brand new vehicle as loaner car? Because they are defective vehicles that can't be sold as brand new (lemon).
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Originally Posted by ALIGN
(Post 8597516)
Don't get CPO. Once a loaner car reached 15,000 miles they sell it as CPO. Have you ever wonder why they use a brand new vehicle as loaner car? Because they are defective vehicles that can't be sold as brand new (lemon).
However I disagree that lemons are bought new to be used as loaners. Dealers buy new vehicles for their loaner fleets and then sell them as CPO's. How would they even go about buying known lemons from the factory? |
We shouldn't be assuming that this CPO vehicle is a former loaner. It could just as easily be a leased car off of a 2 year rental. I purchased my 2010 RX350 in Oct. 2012. It was off a 3 year lease where an older lady drove it on weekends only. It had 3,400 miles on it and was brand new. I've had it for more than 1.5 years and it has been perfect.
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Originally Posted by ALIGN
(Post 8597516)
Have you ever wonder why they use a brand new vehicle as loaner car? Because they are defective vehicles that can't be sold as brand new (lemon).
Every carmaker uses brand new cars as loaners. They buy them wholesale, then sell them CPO. If Lexus made enough lemons to fill every dealer's loaner fleet we should all be buying a different brand lol |
Originally Posted by ALIGN
(Post 8597516)
Don't get CPO. Once a loaner car reached 15,000 miles they sell it as CPO. Have you ever wonder why they use a brand new vehicle as loaner car? Because they are defective vehicles that can't be sold as brand new (lemon).
They are not lemons.. They are the models that don't sell because of equipment or color. The dealer actually makes a lot of money on their loaners because the manufacturer pays the dealer to use them as loaners. Also the dealer must disclose it was a loaner when you buy it. Do you really think a CPO could be a lemon? Once a car is declared a lemon it goes on the title.. |
Our dealer always uses latest fully equipped black on black models. IMO, i think they do this on purpose to entice current owners to get new models... Also, our dealer don't sell loaners as CPO's. They sell it as a new car. Loaner cars don't get registered so even if it has 10,000 miles, you'll be the first owner, thus new car. They would usually tell you its "a dealer's car" or "the manager use to drive it" or something along those lines...
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