Originally Posted by juddz
Let me name one or two affordable American two seaters that are stylish and fun to drive. Saturn Sky and Pontiac Solstice. Let me name a few more that might have more than two seats, but offer a thrilling drive at a reasonable price: Mustang GT and (Australian made, American-branded) Pontiac GTO.
Then again, the Crossfire is really not an American car. It is built by a German-owned company, in Germany.
Slightly used Corvettes, Audi TT, Porsche Boxters, and many others also creep into the same price bracket as the Crossfire. Basically, the point I am trying to make is that the Crossfire coupe is very far from being the "only game in town" for $29 - 34K (list).
If you want a solid investment, you wouldn't go wrong dumping the same kind of cash into mutual funds.
Juddz - Sorry but it could be built on the moon, it is a Chrysler and people still think of it as a Chrysler, they care less if it has MB parts, only word they hear is Chrysler.
Saturn Sky and Pontiac Solstice, so what?, this is a concept car.
Mustang GT and Pontiac GTO are not concept or two seaters. Old Mustang and GTO is worth more today then they were back in the 60's and early 70's... price one.
Corvettes, Audi TT, Porsche Boxters - Out of those three only the Vette is an American brand name automobile brother, and I done see a concept car listed under either one of the three...
mutual funds - can you drive it???
An as far as the SRT6, let me tell you something brother, it's still a six cylinder just like the one I got. Big deal it has a turbo, does it sound like a V8, can it thunder, can it pen you to the front seat like a 426 hemi, 427 six pack chevy, 429 Boss ford? I bet not, when people look at cars for performance they look for engine size. So you see this little coupe will be worth as much as any other Crossfire in the next ten years.
Let me say it again - Chrysler needs to stop making the Crossfire within the next two years for me to come out on this car... if they don't then all bets are off.
hooah