By BrandNewLemon - 15/08/2015 02:09 - United States - Lancaster

Today, I financed my first car. I also made my first call to AAA when it broke down. It barely had any miles on it and I wasn't even home yet. FML
I agree, your life sucks 23 306
You deserved it 1 934

Same thing different taste

Top comments

I think I would be calling the seller back.

I don't have anything witty for this. Contact the seller, and figure out what the issue is, if they are a decent human being they'll help you out at the very least

Comments

That's one of my worst nightmares, considering the fact that I'm currently searching to buy my first car. OP, I have some advice I'll share with you. So far I've learned to stay the hell away from Craigslist because people are liars and thieves and it's much more likely you'll get taken advantage of financially. My (car mechanic) father told me to avoid cars with over 250,000 miles on it because apparently that's the time for most cars when things are shot (timing belt, ignition, starter, engine troubles) and then you're looking at some pretty expensive repairs. Also (in the USA I'm not sure about other countries) you should avoid cars with a salvage title. And for anyone wondering - apparently a salvage title means the car was totaled, usually wrecked but in one way or another it was unusable, and it's best to stay away from cars with bad histories because they can be unreliable. I hope you have better luck in the future (or your car doesn't have anything majorly wrong with it!!)

Or you get a car that has been properly maintained... things like that are suppose to be checked and changed, if needed, at specific mile markers. If it's not properly maintained of course it's gonna break down. I drive a 20 year old Mustang. the transmission went out at 200,000 miles, it hasn't had a fluid/filter change before I bought it and I expected to replace it. It's now running perfectly again and should have another 200,000 miles. My husband's Jeep is on 350,000. And still going strong. Mechanics should know these things. And it's all in your manual.

Thank you for this comment. My brother is also looking for a car, and I don't want him to be suckered into buying a shitty car because the person selling it is a dishonest person.

#24: Something that was apparently not taught in this so-called "Mechanics Book" is that many people don't take very good care of their cars. Things happen, people forget, don't have the money/time etc. so most cars are not maintained as well as they could be. Also, there are people who live on a tight budget and the gas (which is massively watered down) across the street at a mom and pop shop is cheaper than Shell/76/Chevron. All in all, cars are not always well taken care of and most people trying to sell the car are not going to be 100% honest with you so do your research when buying a used vehicle. I assume the OP's vehicle was a used one since they didn't specifically say it was new.

If it's a new car, two words: lemon law.

Explain to me why lemon law right now?? you can't file for lemon law if the damn vehicle broke down ONE TIME!!!!! Plus its under warranty if it is brand new and judging by OP's user name, its brand new.

Dude your an idiot it has only happened once, so please stfu.

@#55, actually no it doesn't idiot. have you ever worked for a dealership? Have you had to fill out said paperwork and file that had to deal with type of issue? No? didn't think So. Talk to me when you have had the experience douche.

Well that's a series of unfortunate events

See if it is still covered under the California state lemon laws. The seller can get into huge trouble if he sold you the car knowing that it was a lemon.

rocker_chick23 27

Is it a brand new car from a dealership? Or did you buy it off some sleezebag from craigslist? Did you have paperwork on it that says it was looked over before being sold? A brand new car or even a used car shouldn't break down before you even got it home. Have someone who knows about cars accompany you when you go to get a car, that way they can tell you if there is something wrong with the car and gives you the go ahead to buy it. Call who ever sold you the car and tell them about it breaking down and see if they can get a mechanic to see why it happened

unless it's brand new, i'd have it checked for tampering of the mileage. a guy in my area got arrested because he was buying 2010-12's and rolling back the mileage selling them as "barely used" vehicles when sometimes they had upwards of 200,000 miles on them.

Was it a jeep? They are all breaking down with less than 5k miles