Should i own a classic muscle and turn it into a daily driver car?

I want one for the reason that i get speed, and a good looking car. I wont feel like i have to buy a new car. The car i own now is Chevy Prizm 2002, and it drives well but needs work done to it. There's rust spots, needs a new muffler, the interior is falling apart, the windshield wiper is broke. The car drives nicely, but it reminds that i can purchase another one or use that money to fix it up. At that point i may not get no money out of it, but lost money into it. I feel like if i sell that car, buy a classic (which if i pour so money into the value can go up) i can still have the speed and good looks, but don't feel the need to want to purchase another car for a long time. I won't mind working on this car, honestly I'm trying to figure out how to make it a daily. Keep in mind i'm only 20 and still figuring it out. 

2021-03-13T21:18:46Z

Damn you all (realistically your all right), fine....any good modern muscle cars because the ones now look like sport cars.

Anonymous2021-03-12T03:21:16Z

If you can't keep up with the maintenance on GM's version of the Toyota Corolla, you have no business owning a classic muscle car. Classic cars are a lot more maintenance intensive, are unreliable by today's standards, guzzle fuel, and performance wise have been surpassed by modern cars. This is why no one uses them as daily drivers.  

arther2021-03-10T03:00:56Z

you'll find that most so called 60's muscle wont beat most new cars off the lights if its in a stock enough form for you to drive it every day. how will it go against an ls3?
What about a chevy SS they take a having the gutts thrashed out of them often?

Anonymous2021-03-09T19:54:40Z

No, not for a daily because you will always be worried about something bad happening to it, and the miles you put on it will decrease it's value. The insurance cost will be high, and the operating costs will be high. Drive a generic late model car that gets great gas milage, is cheap to insure, and that won't break your heart if it gets in an accident. Only buy a classic when you can afford a second car and you can keep it garaged or under cover. Until then, stuff your hormone-driven ego back into your pants and make the logical adult decision. 
 

Anton2021-03-09T15:18:30Z

"Speed" is mostly useless on the road.  Just about any motor vehicle can do freeway speeds, any more is just for bragging about your speed tickets.  On the road, most people are slow -- you can out run most people with a slow vehicle.

Which leave "good looking."  No such thing.  Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.

If you want a classic daily drive, you need two -- one to run and one to fix.

Anonymous2021-03-09T14:08:09Z

Can you tear down a carb and assemble it back?  Can you troubleshoot a carbed engine that cranks but does not start?  Can you replace the valve body of a transmission?  Can you read a car's wiring diagram?  Do you have money to pay $80 an hour mechanics?  Yes to all questions, go ahead.

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