The pleasure is in finding a decent car and making it truly yours
Respectfully disagree. To me, at least, pleasure is derived from getting a good deal & saving money, not spending it. I would get a lot more pleasure in doing exhaustive homework & research and finding the car that comes from the factory as near as I would want my 'perfect' car to be. Granted, that is never going to be 100% applicable, but I really don't 'get' ppl who buy a car for x and right away spend 50% MORE to make it 'theirs.'
As i posted earlier, if we have a car like the MS3 that goes for ~$24k and you 'invest' $13k in it, to me it is not an investment, or $ well spent, because there are many, many cars that retail for $37k that are far superior to the MS3...which is exactly the way it should be.
In other words, you're always going to get more of your $'s worth from the factory as opposed to you buying mods. For 1 thing, a manufacturer's superior buying power affords them the opportunity to buy parts at near-cost, whereas if you're the single individual, you're buying at retail, and we all know aftermarket parts cos. that love to charge exhorbitant prices in the futile hope that you'll gain a 1/2 sec at the track.
Yet another reason to buy your 'perfect' car from the factory is that it came engineered that way by some pretty smart folks, instead of you playing shade-tree mechanic and erroneously thinking your engineering skills are far superior to university-and-factory trained ppl who do this for a living, and better be good at it or they would be eliminated.
When I was in the market for a new car, I spent nearly 6 mos. after the introduction of the MS3 to read reviews and real-life stories of the car in action. I realized I could gain ~20 hp w/ a CAI and that a ss+bushings would be mandatory to improve the feel and action of the gearbox...but that was IT. The car isn't 100% perfect, but throwing $500 into it is not the end of the world. I would NEVER have bought if i thought i'd have to spend 1/2 as much as the MSRP to make it 'mine.' That's just not economically intelligent.
But, as the saying goes: 'whatever flips your switch' or in our case 'whatever turns your wrench'...
