I8's down at mid- £30k. Seriously tempted

I8's down at mid- £30k. Seriously tempted

Author
Discussion

Bubbas Grill

Original Poster:

173 posts

30 months

Tuesday 13th February
quotequote all
Hi Folks,

Currently running a 2010 E63 (n/a) and I do love it's hilarious character. I test-drove an I8 just before I bought the Merc 7 years ago and really loved it but the money was too much back then. £85K vs £23K....no brainer!

For those of you that have or had an I8, I'd appreciate your thoughts.... wink

Ta!

Court_S

12,997 posts

178 months

Tuesday 13th February
quotequote all
I’ve not had one, but those who have actually bought them seem to love them going on the comments on here.

I think they’re fab looking things that are still really striking.

Mr Squarekins

1,047 posts

63 months

Tuesday 13th February
quotequote all
I've had two, a coupe and a roadster. Did over 70k in the coupe. Loved both, but warranty needed. Nothing serious, but odd niggles that might have been pricey.

In fairness they were small niggles. They eat through rear tyres. They are great mile munchers though, and people seem to react very positively to them.

Quicker than a 3l twin turbo BMW I owned.

Bubbas Grill

Original Poster:

173 posts

30 months

Tuesday 13th February
quotequote all
Thanks guys.

MD warranty?

Thoughts on battery-life from anyone that has had one for a long time?

Edited by Bubbas Grill on Tuesday 13th February 19:52

Mr Squarekins

1,047 posts

63 months

Tuesday 13th February
quotequote all
PH loves pics:
[url]

|https://thumbsnap.com/k3uCj6ZJ[/url]

Mr Squarekins

1,047 posts

63 months

Tuesday 13th February
quotequote all
Yes, md warranty. It's about £975 a year to extend.

Battery has 8 year warranty.

My first one was 6 years old when sold. No Battery issue at all.

Bubbas Grill

Original Poster:

173 posts

30 months

Tuesday 13th February
quotequote all
Mr Squarekins said:
Yes, md warranty. It's about £975 a year to extend.

Battery has 8 year warranty.

My first one was 6 years old when sold. No Battery issue at all.
Thankyou Sir. Lovely cars!

Does the extended W cover the battery after the initial 8 years??

LuckyThirteen

460 posts

20 months

Tuesday 13th February
quotequote all
I regret not having had one of these.

The values now seem to be all over the shop. And I'd be wary of buying very much 1st gen tech, ten years old in the mid-thirties.

Also seems like they've halved in value 2019 model year to 2015. That's thirty grand. Which does suggest they're plummeting.

Somebody convincingly argue with me though as I'd love to see them as viable.

They're pretty much gone from the used approved network from what I can see.

Mr Squarekins

1,047 posts

63 months

Tuesday 13th February
quotequote all
Good question. I think upto 100k, then not. But you need to check.

Seriously, battery not something I worried about. Fav pic of my first one. Personally, lighter interior work best on them. Buy on condition, interior on these are a real indicator of good ownership.

g3org3y

20,639 posts

192 months

Wednesday 14th February
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Do they have Isofix in the rear?

Mr Squarekins

1,047 posts

63 months

Wednesday 14th February
quotequote all
g3org3y said:
Do they have Isofix in the rear?
Yes. Coupe only of course. Roadsters is 2 seater.

rix

2,787 posts

191 months

Wednesday 14th February
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Saw one today, and despite not being that exotic (price at least) and being 10 years old they still make me smile and look every time I see one. Only thing that puts me off is getting in the thing, being somewhat powerfully built! - there is a fabulously entertaining video of a somewhat chunkier male attempting it out there in YouTube world...

The cannot get any lower on price, surely. Dead cert future classic if the leccy bits become serviceable...

Still tempted.

Panamax

4,070 posts

35 months

Wednesday 14th February
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I have a friend who owns one and he was kind enough to let me have a drive. Interesting car. Mind you, he's dead jumpy now the battery warranty is expiring.

My knowledge of EVs is minimal but presumably an old battery, as opposed to a failed battery, simply loses range. And since these cars are hybrid it's not clear to me how big a deal that might be.

If you're a buyer I've no idea how you would tell the difference between a car with a pretty good battery and a car with a very tired battery. It'd be a rude shock to part with your £30k and find you haven't bought much of a car at all. In the used market I would think any car that the current owner has only had a for a couple of months should be treated with deep suspicion.

Caddyshack

10,846 posts

207 months

Wednesday 14th February
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There are battery specialists cropping up and you can get batteries rebuilt for some ev using Tesla or jag cells from crashed cars right up to formula e batteries. In theory you can get better range or same range and lighter batteries.

A Twizy battery is about 2000 euros abroad for a double range and same weight battery.

You should be able to get each individual cell checked for health or each bank, I can on my Twizy using a simple plug in. I wonder if bmw can do state of health checks?

interstellar

3,327 posts

147 months

Wednesday 14th February
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I’ve tried to buy one twice but the fact they removed the adjustable lumbar in the drivers seat to save weight meant it didn’t work for me.

I need the lumbar dialled out and the bolster just gave me back ache.

I spoke to a trimmer who said they could take it out but warned me against it as they said once I did it it probably would never feel right.

So I bought an F90 M5 instead.

They are cool though the i8!!

darreni

3,803 posts

271 months

Wednesday 14th February
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The i8 is looking better and better as it ages I think.

Mirinjawbro

691 posts

65 months

Thursday 15th February
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any owners know the "real" mpg on these?

most websites seem to say around 45 or so overall.

what about 70 mph motorway?

thanks

Wicker Man

805 posts

244 months

Thursday 15th February
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With 'normal' driving, I get an indicated 52mpg in the summer and 48mpg at this time of year, with the lights, heater and wipers running.
I've not yet figured out how it calculates the hybrid driving mpg, or how they managed to arrive at the official ~130mpg figures.

Wicker Man

805 posts

244 months

Thursday 15th February
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Mirinjawbro said:
what about 70 mph motorway?
I guess if you were to set the cruise control to 70mph and drive 100 miles then something like 100mpg is possible, given the low profile and slippery body work. But where's the fun in that?

Edited by Wicker Man on Thursday 15th February 15:10

Mirinjawbro

691 posts

65 months

Thursday 15th February
quotequote all
seems very good

my 640d long term average is 38mpg now. thats 95% normal driving and 75% motorway

nothing like claimed