What car have you found the most difficult to replace?

What car have you found the most difficult to replace?

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white_goodman

Original Poster:

4,042 posts

193 months

Sunday 26th January 2014
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As above, have you ever found one of your vehicles really difficult to replace? What did you replace it with in the end? Perhaps your looking to replace your current vehicle but don't know what to replace it with.

I have yet to find a car that was as good an all-rounder as my 2004 Subaru Impreza WRX Wagon. However, I had to sell it when we emigrated and the family had started to outgrow it anyway. If we had stayed in England, it would have been replaced by a newer Forester XT or Legacy Spec B manual estate or possibly a Saab 9-5 Aero Estate.

However, I couldn't source any of those vehicles where I moved to and bought a 2001 Jeep Grand Cherokee 4.0 Limited instead. I've never really been a fan of 4x4s but always liked the look of the older Jeeps and moving to a country where it snows a lot, thought a 4x4 might be a good idea. My wife used to drive the Jeep and I had a normal car as well but I became quite fond of the Jeep and when we decided to get my wife a new vehicle, we traded in the car and I kept the Jeep for myself!

What do I like about it? The 4WD capability and the high ground clearance. It's also extremely comfortable, smooth engine and gearbox and it's fully loaded (heated seats, climate, 10-disc CD changer etc).

What do I dislike? Not that quick, handling in corners a bit wallowy and poor fuel consumption.

It would be nice to get some performance and handling back and get better fuel consumption but to make a worthwhile upgrade i.e. at least 5 years newer and lower mileage, I'm looking at a difference of at least $15000. So what to get? These are the kinds of vehicles that I have considered.

1. Volkswagen Golf GTI - when I worked for VW when the mkV GTI came out, I thought these cars were awesome all-rounders but I would be losing the security of 4WD and the 4WD capability that I have now (Fiesta/Focus ST also an option). Definitely quicker, better handling and better on fuel though!

2. Toyota GT86/Subaru BRZ - A RWD coupe seems very appealing but perhaps a foolish choice bearing in mind the climate here and I car pool with two others so having to get out to let people into the back is a bit of a pain (not buying it for them though am I)!

3. A newer Grand Cherokee (I don't like the generation after mine but quite like the latest one with the 3.6 V6 from 2011) or a V8 Range Rover/BMW X5 c. 2006 to fall into my budget (the BMW might do the performance/handling thing quite well but is it any good in the snow?)

4. A proper 4x4

I think these are both really cool and available with a manual gearbox (which I like) and the Wrangler has a removable roof but a bit crude for long distance work i.e. worse than my current vehicle in this respect?





5. A newer Impreza WRX/WRX STI or Evo (but at 34 am I bit too old for one of these now?)

6. A more grown up 4WD car: Chrysler 300, Cadillac, E60 5-Series, A6 quattro, W211 Mercedes E-Class would be nice.

7. Some kind of V8 Ford/GMC/Dodge pickup - V8 power, comfortable, good on gravel roads and snow but expensive to run and no boot!

8. A smaller SUV - something like a RAV4 doesn't really appeal but would be perfect. The smaller Jeeps (Compass/Patriot) look quite need but don't know if they're any good and only 4 cylinders.

9. Lease a new, smallish FWD car (Focus, Civic etc) and spend more money on house rennovations/family holidays instead!

If I came back to England, I would not be buying a pickup or large SUV (running costs too high), so maybe I should go for one of those while I have the opportunity.

Lots of options there! I can normally narrow my choice of next car down to two or three options but this time, I'm really not sure which way to go!

Any advice on which way to go would be most welcome and feel free to help others with their new car dilemmas as well.


Edited by white_goodman on Monday 27th January 15:40