Not a Dave Ramsey follower... just my own un-common sense 
First, I'd try to get by with one car as long as possible. You might be surprised how far you can go with a little creativity.
Beyond that, I'd get a reliable newer car. Pay a bit more, but forgo the bells and whistles.
Can you swing the payments on a 60mo loan? If so, I'd get the 60 month loan but pay it down as quick as possible. No one says you can't treat a 60 month loan like a 36 month loan.
We do this... ease of a low payment whe we need it, but pay off early. We pay $500/mo on a $300/mo loan. The extra goes toward principal. Not only that, but the payments extend out... currently we are 6 months ahead, so in a bad situation we'd have 6months before we needed to make a car payment.
I don't fear credit. I try to use it wisely. But I DO fear losing $4000 in liquid savings. Cash is king in emergencies. If I had to choose between $4000 of debt (reasonable intrest rate) that I could pay in smaller installments or $4000 in the savings account (emergency fund) I'd choose the emergency fund.
And $4000 for a new motor won't be the end of the repairs on a 140,000 mi car. A/C, tires, brakes the list goes on on the things that have parts in their end stages of use.

First, I'd try to get by with one car as long as possible. You might be surprised how far you can go with a little creativity.
Beyond that, I'd get a reliable newer car. Pay a bit more, but forgo the bells and whistles.
Can you swing the payments on a 60mo loan? If so, I'd get the 60 month loan but pay it down as quick as possible. No one says you can't treat a 60 month loan like a 36 month loan.
We do this... ease of a low payment whe we need it, but pay off early. We pay $500/mo on a $300/mo loan. The extra goes toward principal. Not only that, but the payments extend out... currently we are 6 months ahead, so in a bad situation we'd have 6months before we needed to make a car payment.
I don't fear credit. I try to use it wisely. But I DO fear losing $4000 in liquid savings. Cash is king in emergencies. If I had to choose between $4000 of debt (reasonable intrest rate) that I could pay in smaller installments or $4000 in the savings account (emergency fund) I'd choose the emergency fund.
And $4000 for a new motor won't be the end of the repairs on a 140,000 mi car. A/C, tires, brakes the list goes on on the things that have parts in their end stages of use.
Dad says those guys usually come to work with a new Ford vehicle within a month. Thankfully, my Dad doesn't get involved with such things, he doesn't care what the guys drive, so long as they show up to work.
