Appreciate the feedback! Wife is sure to pee a little when she laughs reading some of these
My wife said the same thing before we bought our first one. We went through two Suburbans and a Yukon XL raising our four kidsMalcolm52 said:
- Main problem is my wife says they are too big and doesn't want to drive one around town.
Never heard a woman say anything was too big but I'm not judging.ghollow said:My wife said the same thing before we bought our first one. We went through two Suburbans and a Yukon XL raising our four kidsMalcolm52 said:
- Main problem is my wife says they are too big and doesn't want to drive one around town.
But minivan is easier with car seats!1agswitchin4lanes said:
We drive expedition max. Four kids. A minivan is super practical but neither of us wants to drive one as a daily.
dubi said:But minivan is easier with car seats!1agswitchin4lanes said:
We drive expedition max. Four kids. A minivan is super practical but neither of us wants to drive one as a daily.
and 2/3rd the gas price, 2/3rds insurance, 2/3rd maintenance.....actually gas will be about 1/2 the price.SteveA said:
If you aren't pulling anything, get a minivan. Especially since it will be at 2/3 the price
We bought our 2000 Odyssey in October 1999. I've only met ONE person in 25 years who made a comment about driving a mini-van. It was in a group setting and the other guys present just laughed at him b/c it was such an idiotic comment. NO ONE CARES if you drive a mini-van.aTm2004 said:
We road trip each July to the family farm in Iowa, have road tripped to Louisiana, Alabama, and Florida in it for vacations and softball tournaments, and there is zero obstructions of the rear window with all of our luggage, beach gear, softball gear, and cooler. I chuckle when I see Tahoes/Suburbans/Expeditions/etc on these same road trips loaded to the brim and having a luggage box on the top of the vehicle or a luggage rack on the tow hitch.
All of that and 30mpg on a road trip.
You can get a fully loaded Odyssey or Sienna for ~$50k. You're not touching a similarly equipped Suburban or Expedition for that. My pride gets me in a lot of trouble, but $15-20k+ will make me swallow it quite quickly. Honestly, the hardest part of buying a minivan is overcoming the stigma of a minivan. If you're fine with wearing clothes from Target and not giving a f*** about what others think, a minivan would be wonderful. If you need to wear name brand anything so you can impress others, may I suggest the a Suburban/Yukon XL. Outside of needing to tow something while hauling the whole family, most anti-minivan people can't give you a good reason outside of being too insecure to drive one.
As far as your wife's pride...after 4 kids, she probably pees a bit if she laughs too hard or sneezes. Pride left her after that first push.
This is my wife. Her entire childhood was spent in a minivan. When she got her license, she had to drive the minivan. When she went off to college she got an economy car, but then she was back into the minivan when our second kid arrived. We are about to have 4 kids under the age of 6, but she still loathes/resents the practical minivan and would ditch it tomorrow if it was only up to her. I think a lot of it is envy of other moms in her social circle that have a full size SUV. But for whatever reason, she is able to overlook the hassle those parents deal with daily.CanyonAg77 said:
My opinion: These are people who grew up in an era when their mom drove a minivan. Therefore, they will drive Fred Flintstone's car before they drive a minivan. Sort of a teenage rebellion thing.
You're right that nobody cares, but the stigma is real with people. The stigma isn't what others are saying but their (those not wanting one for <insert reason here>) inability to admit that others don't care. They can't let go of that fear. They're probably the same people who post things on social media for affirmation.Quote:
We bought our 2000 Odyssey in October 1999. I've only met ONE person in 25 years who made a comment about driving a mini-van. It was in a group setting and the other guys present just laughed at him b/c it was such an idiotic comment. NO ONE CARES if you drive a mini-van.
The minivan "sigma" has got to be one of the most overblow talking points in automotive history.
AustinCountyAg said:
Just here to say it also depends where you live and what kind of roads you're driving. If you live in the city/suburbs minivans could work great, but for us they wouldn't last for the amount of driving my wife and I do down dirt roads.
I wouldn't drive a minivan. We raised two kids and somehow survived without one.AggieDruggist89 said:
Serious question.
Do people really think driving a big SUV makes you "cool?"
If you have to pull, sure, truck based vehicle is fine.Tumble Weed said:I wouldn't drive a minivan. We raised two kids and somehow survived without one.AggieDruggist89 said:
Serious question.
Do people really think driving a big SUV makes you "cool?"
My wife's quote was "If you bring home a minivan, you can drive it".
We had many cars and SUVs over the years. A suburban is great for pulling a skiboat, and the Lexus GX is much more capable than one would think at pulling trailers as well.
I am still not very cool though. Pretty sure that my mode of transportation will not solve the issue at this point.
Sorry your wife stopped putting out after the 2nd.Tumble Weed said:I wouldn't drive a minivan. We raised two kids and somehow survived without one.AggieDruggist89 said:
Serious question.
Do people really think driving a big SUV makes you "cool?"
My wife's quote was "If you bring home a minivan, you can drive it".
We had many cars and SUVs over the years. A suburban is great for pulling a skiboat, and the Lexus GX is much more capable than one would think at pulling trailers as well.
I am still not very cool though. Pretty sure that my mode of transportation will not solve the issue at this point.
Once or twice a year is one thing. Daily down a dirt road is different.CanyonAg77 said:AustinCountyAg said:
Just here to say it also depends where you live and what kind of roads you're driving. If you live in the city/suburbs minivans could work great, but for us they wouldn't last for the amount of driving my wife and I do down dirt roads.
Talk to my kids about that. I was famous (infamous?) for taking our Oddy across mountain and dirt roads.
Came down the east road off Spanish Peaks in Colorado, passed a jacked up 4WD pickup headed up the mountain, they just stared at us in amazement
I have to be able to pull a horse trailer and a boat trailer. Occasionally a utility trailer.AggieDruggist89 said:If you have to pull, sure, truck based vehicle is fine.Tumble Weed said:I wouldn't drive a minivan. We raised two kids and somehow survived without one.AggieDruggist89 said:
Serious question.
Do people really think driving a big SUV makes you "cool?"
My wife's quote was "If you bring home a minivan, you can drive it".
We had many cars and SUVs over the years. A suburban is great for pulling a skiboat, and the Lexus GX is much more capable than one would think at pulling trailers as well.
I am still not very cool though. Pretty sure that my mode of transportation will not solve the issue at this point.
But what is wrong with driving a minivan for you and your wife?
coolerguy12 said:
Drive like crap
Sit low to the ground
Seats are too close to the floor
Can't tow anything
Front wheel drive sucks
Look like crap
Can't tow anything
Only redeeming quality about our minivan is my wife loves it. But she also understands why I hate it and it was her idea to get the excursion when we had our 4th kid. I was going to replace my Tundra with an F250 with a front bench seat for when we camped and she told me if I got the excursion I would never have to ride in the minivan. And I haven't been in the minivan since. It's fantastic.
Plus I got to keep my Tundra to daily drive. No car seats and no mess. For the first time in 8 years I have a vehicle that stays clean.