nathandimond
Hasn't posted much yet...
- Joined
- Dec 2, 2014
- Messages
- 4
- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 0
Hi there,
I'm new to this site and I will openly admit that I am a badge snob. I have owned BMW's, Audi's, Saab's, Volvo's, and a Lexus. I loved the engineering and build quality put in to those cars and each played a roll in making me a firm believer that you have to buy a premium brand in order to get a premium experience. Well, today I drove a Genesis 3.8 and all my premium brand loyalty was washed away.
So to the point, I have a budget and I want to buy a Genesis 3.8 with the Premium and possibly the Tech package if I can find one at a good price. My cap is $17,000 and I want the car to have less than 90k miles. My guess is that limits me to the 2009 or maybe a 2010 model year. Experience with European makes has taught me the expensive lesson of never owning the first year of a new car design. Does this same rule apply to the Genesis? What inherent problems does the 2009 have that later models do not?
I'm new to this site and I will openly admit that I am a badge snob. I have owned BMW's, Audi's, Saab's, Volvo's, and a Lexus. I loved the engineering and build quality put in to those cars and each played a roll in making me a firm believer that you have to buy a premium brand in order to get a premium experience. Well, today I drove a Genesis 3.8 and all my premium brand loyalty was washed away.
So to the point, I have a budget and I want to buy a Genesis 3.8 with the Premium and possibly the Tech package if I can find one at a good price. My cap is $17,000 and I want the car to have less than 90k miles. My guess is that limits me to the 2009 or maybe a 2010 model year. Experience with European makes has taught me the expensive lesson of never owning the first year of a new car design. Does this same rule apply to the Genesis? What inherent problems does the 2009 have that later models do not?