please talk me down (2 Viewers)

Absolutely not for a car, and never for a Tesla. Tesla implies want, not need, and as someone else said it will immediately lose value. Your chips may not. Lots of electric vehicles coming on the market in the next 12-24 months.
 
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Somehow I thought "if I sold all my chips, I could buy a Tesla". Now I can't get the thought out of my head.
I've been lurking there site as well, what model u looking at ? I may go for the Y
 
Ummmm....dibs?

Seriously though, keep the chips. They are an investment. If you were interested in a classic vehicle that wouldn’t lose value and maybe even gain value, sure, have fun. But for a current production vehicle, nope. Chips don’t require you to spend money to maintain them (unless adding more).
 
I have a Tesla and love it for what it is. A car that that is full of technology which will be used and will depreciate in value. The family prefers to travel in that car and I enjoy driving it.

I never considered mixing my chip funds and my car fund though. The Tesla puts a smile on my face when I drive it, but it's a completely different smile than when I have a nice set of chips in my hands. :wow:
 
I never spend a lot on cars. Something safe, reliable, and enough tech to make it enjoyable enough. I’d rather spend the extra money on another vacation, or savings, or upgrading our home. Cars are disposable for the most part, rarely something kept for 5 years, let alone 20+.

I know I will have sets of poker chips for my kids that they will have played with and used for years themselves and will hopefully have fond memories of time spent with their dad after I’m gone.

The car I drive won’t still be around.
 
I was thinking the same thing, but just thinning the herd from 13 sets to 3-4.



And buying a Cayman S.

As someone who owns an older Cayman S and because of that has zero nice chips, I can confirm this does have some merit. Caymans are not nearly so much fun as chips during the winter, but carrying a birdcage down the back straight of Watkins Glen is even worse.o_O

On the other hand, if you want a car that is pure fun, zero heartache and only requires unloading 1-3 sets of chips, you can do no better than a 1990-2005 Miata. Frankly, on the street it is more fun than a Cayman, will depreciate just like your chips (i.e. not at all) and has the lowest running costs of any car you’ve ever owned.

I’ve seen race car drivers let out an involuntary giggle taking a Miata around a fast curve for the first time- it really is that joyful. :D
 
As someone who owns an older Cayman S and because of that has zero nice chips, I can confirm this does have some merit. Caymans are not nearly so much fun as chips during the winter, but carrying a birdcage down the back straight of Watkins Glen is even worse.o_O

On the other hand, if you want a car that is pure fun, zero heartache and only requires unloading 1-3 sets of chips, you can do no better than a 1990-2005 Miata. Frankly, on the street it is more fun than a Cayman, will depreciate just like your chips (i.e. not at all) and has the lowest running costs of any car you’ve ever owned.

I’ve seen race car drivers let out an involuntary giggle taking a Miata around a fast curve for the first time- it really is that joyful. :D
+1

The answer is always Miata.
 

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