To get the best deal possible, you'll want to do some research on the cars on your list. The first step can be made much more effective if any of your friends or family members own one of the cars you are interested in. This will allow you to get a first-hand account of how the car runs from a trusted mouth. Hopefully your friend or family will let you test drive the car, thus strengthening your belief that this is the car for you or deteriorating it. The next best thing to having friends or family tell you about their car is having a complete stranger you've never met cry about how a certain car is terrible because the oil needed to be changed five years after you bought it. Excuse my sarcasm, but unfortunately this can be the most daunting part of buying a car, so don't let your mood down. This process can be quite infatuating if you don't mind having your hopes and dreams crushed by angry, unthinking customers. After searching a few blogs and a couple of websites detailing what people like and don't like about the cars on your list, it's time to come to a conclusion about your purchase. You need the one that meets your criteria, the one that you can see yourself satisfied with for the next five to ten years, and the one that... Well, let's be honest here, get the nicest, cheapest, one that has the one you
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