What 20 year old car would you choose as your daily drive?
Discussion
I watched the first ever episode of Midsomer Murders with my wife on Netflix the other night and couldn't believe it was 20 years ago and that the show was still going! Questionable plot line aside, one of the things I enjoy most about watching old shows is seeing what cars the characters were driving back then. Barnaby and Troy were tooling around from murder scene to murder scene in a mk1 Mondeo, a once hugely popular car, although one that I haven't seen on the road for ages. This got me thinking. 1997 was a fairly interesting time on the roads with half of the newer designs being recognisably modern i.e. airbags, ABS, thicker doors due to crash protection structures etc and half older cars without any of these features, carburettors and cardboard-thin doors etc and yet not that many cars of this vintage survive. Are there any cars on sale new in 1997 that you would happily use as your daily driver today?
There are the obvious modern classics: Ferrari F355/550 Maranello, Porsche 993 Carrera, R129 Mercedes SL etc but these are all appreciating classics, so I'm not sure whether you would want to be piling commuter miles on them.
Peugeot had some pretty decent hot hatches around at the time: 106 GTi/Rallye/306 GTi-6 but having run a 205 GTi as my daily at 12 years old, I'm not sure whether a 20 year old Peugeot is the best choice. Quite a few 4-seat coupes and 2-seat roadsters available at the time but nothing really jumps out at me.
Which brings me on to luxury cars. I can kind of see people's obsession today with German cars if I look back 20 years, as there are some fairly modern, comfortable and handsome options and the perceived difference in build quality between a mass-market Ford/Vauxhall/Rover/Peugeot/Citroen/Peugeot really did exist back then. I'm thinking the then all-new C5 Audi A6 quattro, D2 Audi A8, E38 7-Series etc. The Jaguar XJ6/XJ8 X300/X308 and Lexus LS400 probably deserve a special mention too.
On balance though, I think that I would choose a BMW 528i SE in dark metallic blue/green, no real preference on transmission, a slightly predictable but good choice I think. Other than the original, I think it's the best looking 5, modern power, better fuel economy than the E34 and still with most of the comfort and convenience features and space of a modern car. It may even ride better too!

So, if you had to run a 20 year old car as a daily (so we're talking P/R-registration cars here), what would you pick?
There are the obvious modern classics: Ferrari F355/550 Maranello, Porsche 993 Carrera, R129 Mercedes SL etc but these are all appreciating classics, so I'm not sure whether you would want to be piling commuter miles on them.
Peugeot had some pretty decent hot hatches around at the time: 106 GTi/Rallye/306 GTi-6 but having run a 205 GTi as my daily at 12 years old, I'm not sure whether a 20 year old Peugeot is the best choice. Quite a few 4-seat coupes and 2-seat roadsters available at the time but nothing really jumps out at me.
Which brings me on to luxury cars. I can kind of see people's obsession today with German cars if I look back 20 years, as there are some fairly modern, comfortable and handsome options and the perceived difference in build quality between a mass-market Ford/Vauxhall/Rover/Peugeot/Citroen/Peugeot really did exist back then. I'm thinking the then all-new C5 Audi A6 quattro, D2 Audi A8, E38 7-Series etc. The Jaguar XJ6/XJ8 X300/X308 and Lexus LS400 probably deserve a special mention too.
On balance though, I think that I would choose a BMW 528i SE in dark metallic blue/green, no real preference on transmission, a slightly predictable but good choice I think. Other than the original, I think it's the best looking 5, modern power, better fuel economy than the E34 and still with most of the comfort and convenience features and space of a modern car. It may even ride better too!

So, if you had to run a 20 year old car as a daily (so we're talking P/R-registration cars here), what would you pick?
This: https://www.pistonheads.com/classifieds/used-cars/...
Characterful, refined, fast, ride & handling, parts availability etc. etc.


Characterful, refined, fast, ride & handling, parts availability etc. etc.


I run a '98 C-class estate as a daily work donkey. Still drives great, but bodywork is a mess. Suits me perfectly though as my work cars get cosmetically ruined anyway (decorator). Then again my good car is a '99 e39.
I think the key to running old cars is to go for a n/a petrol engine (or basic old diesel) with a manual gearbox, by the mid-nineties most manufacturers had this pretty well sorted.
I think the key to running old cars is to go for a n/a petrol engine (or basic old diesel) with a manual gearbox, by the mid-nineties most manufacturers had this pretty well sorted.
I've got a '96 525i touring (E34) which does everything. I chose it over lots of newer cars and have spent an amount on money sorting it which could've bought a 5-7 year old alternative, but the E34 has standout qualities which newer cars don't.
I depend on it to tow my Caterham race car and it doesn't let me down.
I depend on it to tow my Caterham race car and it doesn't let me down.
m444ttb said:
My daily is a BMW e36 323i touring so. It sure I get to choose! My 996 is only 5 years behind it too. It's an era of cars I really like.
Me too, all the cars I really enjoyed owning were from the 1990's: Citroen ZX 16V, Golf VR6, BMW 325tds touring, Mercedes C240 sport estate, Audi 80 Cabriolet and Porsche 964 RS, they all felt special. I have a soft spot for motorcycles from that era as well, that's why I love my old Fireblade.Edited by Gunk on Monday 29th May 22:16
Any other criteria to consider, such as practicality or running costs?
My ideal would be a Rolls Royce Silver Seraph, dream luxury.
For build quality, probably a BMW, 525I with manual gearbox.
For all things considered, practicality, costs etc and keeping it real then for me it's a no brainer. Peugeot 306 HDi (R reg) or a P reg 306 D turbo sport. They were bullet proof cars, good power, comfortable and easy to drive.
My ideal would be a Rolls Royce Silver Seraph, dream luxury.
For build quality, probably a BMW, 525I with manual gearbox.
For all things considered, practicality, costs etc and keeping it real then for me it's a no brainer. Peugeot 306 HDi (R reg) or a P reg 306 D turbo sport. They were bullet proof cars, good power, comfortable and easy to drive.
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