Moving to the desert
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- Posts: 14
- Joined: Tue Feb 24, 2015 9:16 pm
Thanks for the replies, greatly appreciated. Will probably just wait to see how it is over there for a few months and then decide. Don't want to rush into anything right away. Once I get a feel for the place and feel I could stay for a extended period then I will ship it over. Been to the middle east before but as a military deployment. So living there as an expat would be a totally different experience.
I like that approach. Storing it for a few months would be easy-peasy.
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- Posts: 14
- Joined: Tue Feb 24, 2015 9:16 pm
Just an update. I was given a Nissan Sunny. Sort of like a Nissan Sentra. It has take off lag worst than the Kizashi. So far so good. Shipping estimate is in the range of 2500 to 3500 depending on options and fees. Probably won't do it.
One issue is I was unable to remove the nuts that hold the cables down on to the battery. Could not get them off. Will this be an issue? Will try to get back at some point to rectify it. Most likely will my battery be dead? I added fuel stabilizer as well. My car is in a temperature controlled storage place.
One issue is I was unable to remove the nuts that hold the cables down on to the battery. Could not get them off. Will this be an issue? Will try to get back at some point to rectify it. Most likely will my battery be dead? I added fuel stabilizer as well. My car is in a temperature controlled storage place.
If you've got access to a wall outlet in storage, a 'battery tender' brand battery tender works wonders. Just set it and forget it. I've got a lot of these and they've kept me from killing batteries.
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- Posts: 14
- Joined: Tue Feb 24, 2015 9:16 pm
Unfortunately the outlet has a 30 minute timer on it. I will actually ship my car out here. Will do it next year though. Received quotes under $2000 which is reasonable. There are several Suzuki service and dealerships here. So it will actually be better to have it out here than in the states.SamirD wrote:If you've got access to a wall outlet in storage, a 'battery tender' brand battery tender works wonders. Just set it and forget it. I've got a lot of these and they've kept me from killing batteries.
Nice! Great that you'll be able to still enjoy it.MrCliveNYC wrote:Unfortunately the outlet has a 30 minute timer on it. I will actually ship my car out here. Will do it next year though. Received quotes under $2000 which is reasonable. There are several Suzuki service and dealerships here. So it will actually be better to have it out here than in the states.SamirD wrote:If you've got access to a wall outlet in storage, a 'battery tender' brand battery tender works wonders. Just set it and forget it. I've got a lot of these and they've kept me from killing batteries.
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- Posts: 14
- Joined: Tue Feb 24, 2015 9:16 pm
Definitely not shipping it now. Will will move it down to my mother in law's home in NC to watch it. Driving it here wouldn't be worth the cost. I head back late November. Will see if it fires up.
Well, at least you can use the battery tender now. I'm sure it will be just fine. If he's willing to start it up and get it to operating temperatures once every 6 months, even better.
Be sure to keep insurance on it and let your registration dmv know what's up. Some of them have discounts for non-used cars and will still keep them legally registered so you don't have to go through the whole process again.
Be sure to keep insurance on it and let your registration dmv know what's up. Some of them have discounts for non-used cars and will still keep them legally registered so you don't have to go through the whole process again.
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- Posts: 14
- Joined: Tue Feb 24, 2015 9:16 pm
Came back home for thanksgiving. Battery was dead. The amount of trouble it was to get it back working and then changing the battery, to driving my Uhaul truck with the Kizashi attached to it with a hitch was exhausting. 9 hour drive and around 400 miles later, it was all over. Never had to drive a truck with a car loaded on a hitch before so it was quite an experience.