Flying Cars and a Car Coach Roundup


When I was little I used to dream about showing up for school in a flying car. Now I think I’d crap my pants before we got off the ground. It’ll cost you about $194,000 to buy a Terrafugia (pictures above). Or, use my car buying tips to make multiple flying car dealers compete and you can probably get that down to a great deal at around $180,000 or so.
Here are this week’s notable posts:
- Family Car Guide asks, are kids worse than drunks drivers? (I guess it depends on whose kids we’re talking about!)
- Find out the 10 cheapest cars to insure at Ridelust.
- Back seat airbags inside the seatbelt? Yup, that and a few other cool innovations at Ask Patty.
- June car price trends were released by TrueCar.
- Sweating the Big Stuff has a cool new logo and tips for saving money on car insurance.
- And I’ve been mentioned in carnivals and posts at Personal Finance by the Book, the Wealth Artisan, ConsumerBoomer, BarbaraFriedbergPersonalFinance, Frugal Confessions, and Wealth Informatics.
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Why is it free? Because buying a car is something almost everyone has to do and I strongly believe the process is designed to confuse and take advantage of consumers. I'd like to level the playing field and give everyone a chance at a fair deal.

Finding a good deal is all about competition. Prices go down when multiple companies sell the same thing. Whether it’s 




If I ever decide to buy a flying car, I will definitely use your negotiation strategy to get various flying car dealers bidding against each other. Of course that is a big IF.
The same negotiating technique works with space shuttles as well.