Joke Collection Website - Cold jokes - I just got my driver's license and want to buy a used car to practice. Is it safe?

I just got my driver's license and want to buy a used car to practice. Is it safe?

However, when buying a car, some novice partners always struggle whether to buy a new car or buy a used car to practice for two years before changing to a new car. After all, it hurts when a novice hits the road and accidentally scratches a new car. Of course, some small partners may consider used cars in pursuit of cost performance. The used car is too deep. A better car must be more than 50 thousand and less than 50 thousand. Assemble it? Overflow? Dare you hit the road? Can I get insurance? Can you pass the annual inspection? What is the most important vehicle safety qualification? You're not driving a used car. That's a time bomb.

Cheap. Now you can get a Jetta around 2006 for more than 10 thousand. Don't buy insurance just because the car is cheap. Of course, car damage insurance is not necessary. Three must buy one million! This cannot be ignored. Generally, second-hand cars are much cheaper than new cars (except for some models with extremely high preservation rate, such as Honda Fit), and they can also save a purchase tax. For example,11Suzuki Swift, which was licensed at +0, has more than 90,000 new cars, but now it only needs more than 30,000. This car is very cheap to maintain.

As a novice, driving on the actual road will inevitably bump into each other! If you want to be a senior driver, these are all things you must experience and you can't avoid! However, if you buy a new car directly to practice, scratch or rub, the first thing that novices encounter is bumps. You can't feel completely comfortable in the traffic on the road or street, because you are a novice. Fortunately, the insurance company paid for you after the crash.

The first kind of people don't buy a licensed car, but they are afraid of jokes and have no face to buy a new car. I have to buy a second-hand car to drive, and I have a good reputation for practicing my hands with old cars first. It is actually a rhetoric to say that a new car will scratch when it is bought back. It's just that no one exposed him, so let him go. I don't know what happened when I bought it, and I can't find anyone to ask about the novice old car. If there is something wrong with the new car, just buy a cheap domestic car after the sale or 4S, and then change it to a used car of about 200 thousand in three to five years. That's nothing to say! That's what I did anyway.