Piston Slap: The Last SAAB = Good Deal?

Sajeev Mehta
by Sajeev Mehta
Bruce writes:

I got my 2007 9-3 serviced at the Falls Church, VA Saab dealership. My question: They had new (2011) 9-5s for $20,000 off the sticker price. Almost half off. Are they a good deal? Would you buy one?

Sajeev answers:

I initially regretted my delay in answering this Piston Slap email, as the queue is long and unfortunate to a time sensitive matter like leftover Saab inventory. But then I found 167 new SAABS still for sale as of yesterday. Who-hoo! I dodged a bullet while these poor dealers still have laggards on their floorplan.

The question isn’t about buying this Saab, but about buying any Saab: are they ever a good deal? NO!

But that’s not the point…if you actually like Saabs, you don’t mind spending far too much money on these repair/maintenance whores. Or you love them enough to make their repair a personal hobby, complete with all the tools of the trade. Either way, yes, this is the BEST time to buy a new Saab. The prices will be good and you’ll never have this opportunity! Ever again!

You wrote to TTAC because you like Saabs. And you get them serviced at the dealer, which implies you have the money to keep them running properly. So if you want to run a 2011 model into the ground, you might have that opportunity. And who knows, the whole GM-SAAB-China thing is still unfolding, perhaps you will have ample supply of spare parts in the future.

Your last question: would I buy one? I already bought one of the last Ford Rangers back in 2011…so no, I’m gonna enjoy that same feeling but without the nightmarish downsides of Turbo Saab ownership. And yes, there are still 98 new Rangers for saletwo are of the 4-cyl, 5MT variety like mine–if you wish to join me on the dark side. Or bright side. Either way.

Send your queries to sajeev@thetruthaboutcars.com. Spare no details and ask for a speedy resolution if you’re in a hurry.

Sajeev Mehta
Sajeev Mehta

More by Sajeev Mehta

Comments
Join the conversation
2 of 105 comments
  • Dave M. Dave M. on Jan 23, 2013

    "In Houston, I imagine you would be well and truly screwed trying to get one fixed." Yes, it is tumble weeds down here, even when SAAB was fully marketed. But there are 5-6 independent shops who know their SAAB stuff, so we'll make it. In 30k on my 2004 9-3 Aero convertible, my repairs have been a headlight and the top's hydraulic mechanism. I wisely bought the extended warranty. My only remaining challenge is one of my wheels has a slow leak - have to air it up every week. Oh and my passenger door lock hasn't worked with the remote from Day 1. Meanwhile, my car is a blast to drive. I have the 6 speed with the sport suspension, and it flies. I love the look of the 9-4X, and I'm in the market for a small crossover, but not sure if I'd pay $45k for one. 25? Maybe....

  • Chicagoland Chicagoland on Jan 24, 2013

    Any car that has sat and sat for 2 years is not a true 'new' car anymore. Dry rot and deterioraed fluids. Also, weren't most of these 'new' SAABs sitting in NJ lot next to ocean, and salty sea air? The excuses people make to have own 'something different' are funny. WHy not just buy a newer Buick Regal? What was the big deal about GM SAAB's, other than Swedish name and the silly key in the console?

  • Varezhka Dunno, I have a feeling the automakers will just have the cars do that without asking and collect that money for themselves. Just include a small print in your purchasing contract.I mean, if Elon Musk thinks he can just use all the Teslas out there for his grid computing projects for free, I wouldn't be too surprised if he's already doing this.
  • Varezhka Any plans yet for Stellantis to wind down some of their dozen plus brands? I mean, most of their European brands (except Fiat and Maserati) are not only 80~90% European sales but also becoming old GM level badge jobs of each other. Lots of almost identical cars fighting within the same small continent. Shouldn't they at least go the Opel/Vauxhall route of one country, one brand to avoid cannibalization? The American brands, at least, have already consolidated with Dodge/Chrysler/Jeep/RAM essentially operating like a single brand. An Auto Union of a sort.
  • Namesakeone I read somewhere that Mazda, before the Volkswagen diesel scandal and despite presumably tearing apart and examining several Golfs and Jettas, couldn't figure out how VW did it and decided then not to offer a diesel. Later, when Dieselgate surfaced, it was hinted that Mazda did discover what Volkswagen was doing and kept quiet about it. Maybe Mazda realizes that they don't have the resources of Toyota and cannot do it as well, so they will concentrate on what they do well. Maybe Mazda will decide that they can do well with the RWD midsized sedan with the inline six they were considering a few years ago
  • IH_Fever A little math: An average, not super high end EV (like a model 3) has 70 kwh of storage assuming perfect fully charged conditions. An average 2-3 person home uses roughly 30 kwh per day. So in theory you have a little over 2 days of juice. Real world, less than that. This could be great if your normal outage is short and you're already spending $50k on a car. I'll stick with my $500 generator and $200 in gas that just got me through a week of no power. A/c, fridge, tv, lights, we were living large. :)
  • EBFlex No. The major apprehension to buying EVs is already well known. The entire premise of the bird cage liner NYT is ridiculous.The better solution to power your house when the power goes out is a generator. Far more reliable as it uses the endless supply of cheap and clean-burning natural gas.
Next