RE: Shed of the Week | Peugeot 407 V6 Coupe
RE: Shed of the Week | Peugeot 407 V6 Coupe
Friday 6th June

Peugeot 407 V6 Coupe | Shed of the Week

The two-door 407 was rare when new, let alone 20 years later. And this one's a manual...


Time to stoke up the fires of righteous indignation once more as we bring you this Peugeot 407 Coupe, a car almost guaranteed to generate high levels of frothing among the forum faithful.

Shed brought us one of these 3.0 manual petrol 407s in early 2023, just after the SOTW limit had been controversially raised from £1,500 to £2,000. That ’23 shed was a 98,000-mile GT from 2006. The GT was the same as the SE in more or less every area, but for grand touring purposes it had sat nav and, er, a stitched leather dash. No, Shed doesn’t know why, although the extra £1,700 or so that Peugeot GB charged for the GT might have had something to do with it. 

Saddled with an automatic gearbox, these 209hp/218lb ft 3.0s weren’t massively quick, edging their way from zero to 60mph in a leisurely 8.4 seconds. They were a little bit quicker when fitted with a manual box, which is what we’ve got here. With lightning coordination of foot and hand you might even get it into the sevens, but straining acceleration wasn’t what these cars were about. They were tourers, not terriers. In theory, they would hit 150mph, but heaven knows what the fuel consumption would be at that sort of speed given that the combined average was only 27mpg and the urban 19mpg. The 242g/km emissions figure plonks it squarely into VED Band L which will now cost you £710 a year, groogh. That’s about twice what it was just two years ago.  

This 407 will cost you in other ways too. 3.0 Coupes weighed nearly 1,700kg, of which around 1,600 felt like it was over the front wheels, so they do chomp through ball joints and tyres at the pointy end. Sure enough, the MOT test in March this year revealed that both front hoops were worn. The screen of Shed’s Amstrad hasn’t had its annual scrape-over with a wire brush yet, so it isn’t up to showing him whether they were changed after that test. If they weren’t you’ll find budget tyres for under £50 each and premium ones for under £130.

Talking of pointy ends, as the postmistress sometimes does with her mates at the weekly village bingo night, the styling of the 407 Coupe (one of which she used to own herself) has always aroused more than its fair share of comment. It’s the front overhang that seems to rile people the most. The best way to get around that is to get inside, then you won’t see it. And there’s every reason to get inside this one, too, because it looks so beautifully fresh. 

Shed’s never been sure why 407 Coupe steering wheels were just as plumptious as the upholstery. Whenever he drove the postmistress’s own 407 Coupe he always went along very carefully so as to avoid the possibility of having a lion painfully stamped onto his gentleman’s area in the event of the airbag being fired by a bump or some sort of unusual electronic vibration. 

For info, that GT we had on here in early ’23 has passed two more MOT tests since, with nothing more than a non-excessive oil leak and a couple of worn tyres (this time the rears) for the tester to write about. Based on that admittedly skimpy evidence you could say that they do keep going, but they’re not perfect. As noted, many of the suspension/rolling chassis parts need to be tagged as consumable items and, as hinted in the last paragraph, electronic stuff had a habit of fritzing out. The windows, horn and tailgate were the main culprits. That last issue was usually easily fixable by looking in the rubber concertina wotsit in the upper left area of the boot, where you would normally find a broken wire. A dod of solder later and you were good to go. 

The colour-coded covers for the headlamp washers were known for dropping off, too. That’s why, whenever the postmistress brought her 407 Coupe into his workshop for servicing, Shed always paid close attention to her body-coloured flaps – but that’s another story awaiting clearance from PH’s legal team. 


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Author
Discussion

Resolutionary

Original Poster:

1,417 posts

187 months

Friday 6th June
quotequote all
I have a secret like of these, and the more venerable 406 coupe. Looks in remarkable nick for the mileage and price - sure its probably not LEZ compliant and likely suffers high VED to boot, but for a stylish and rare(ish) throwback Frenchie, I'm in.

TonyMac

43 posts

62 months

Friday 6th June
quotequote all
Never could quite get over the styling of the 407, especially as a replacement for one of the more handsome repmobiles of the 90s.

This one isn’t quite offending me as much ast they used to so maybe in another 20 years or so I’ll quite like them. I’m sure it’s a great thing to drive and it’s a good shed, but I’d take a 406 with any of the body shells over any 407.

Gt6turbo

364 posts

7 months

Friday 6th June
quotequote all
Built to a high standard on their own line.

Just absolutely massive. Amazing cars inside but nightmare parking, high tax and low mpg will need a very dedicated, nutter.

rallycross

13,570 posts

253 months

Friday 6th June
quotequote all
Had a 3.0 petrol manual was a very good car to drive, nicer on the motorway than a BMW 330, lots of clever design features, sadly killed by silly VED tax rates.
The previous model 406 coupe is/was a design master piece compared to this 407.

ST330

159 posts

27 months

Friday 6th June
quotequote all
No mention of the 575 F bomb or was that done last time ? Can't believe it's been two years of the £2k shed.

Another car that will succumb to the 'ow much ! to tax ? blow. Is there still a market for ex-European Peugeots in Africa ?

The car looks OK, I'm not sure who the target buyer is. I know it's shed money, as mentioned there weren't many new when you could wander into a Peugeot dealership and order one. Would a Stellantis parts department recognise one today for a broken what's it that can't be found in a scrappie when swapping in some new grass cuttings and MDF brake pads?

TREMAiNE

4,103 posts

165 months

Friday 6th June
quotequote all
Seeing this makes me miss early to mid-2000s interiors before they became so techy.

This 407 cabin looks like a nice place to sit. I'd prefer an auto, given that it doesn't have much poke. While yes, the 406 is the much better-looking car, I think the 7 still looks quite good.

It's a shame we don't really have these big GT coupes from budget brands anymore.

As others have said, the VED is the true kicker.
It's a real shame that these cars are being taxed out of existence when running one would be much more environmentally friendly than ordering something that is brand new.

myhandle

1,288 posts

190 months

Friday 6th June
quotequote all
From a time when a car could be somewhat high performance without trying to set a lap time, a sporting GT. Not as good looking as the abnormally good looking 406 Coupe by Pininfarina, but I suspect this would turn a few heads nowadays, in a good way, and be a fairly good car unless the driver is expecting it to handle like an MX5, which no owner will expect. 5 star, Mr. Shed!

dralig

19 posts

15 months

Friday 6th June
quotequote all
Challenging front end aside, I don’t find these offensive. Nice interior that has buttons and stalks to control things, nothing ripped or chewed and a nice V6 attached to a proper stick - top shed!

JRaj

76 posts

89 months

Friday 6th June
quotequote all
Nothing like it's predecessor in terms of style.

Rob 131 Sport

3,778 posts

68 months

Friday 6th June
quotequote all
Interesting choice and a real improvement over the recent Rover 75.

Wren-went

982 posts

54 months

Friday 6th June
quotequote all
Looks to have worn it's miles very well. Lot of car for the money but no way am I paying over £700 road tax a cheap 407 Peugeot.


daqinggregg

4,784 posts

145 months

Friday 6th June
quotequote all
Unlike its predecessor, it doesn’t matter which way you look at it, not pretty.

el romeral

1,663 posts

153 months

Friday 6th June
quotequote all
I assumed that this would be up at the £2000 shed price limit. At £1150 appears to be a huge amount of car for the money and in great condition too.

username_checksout

269 posts

16 months

Friday 6th June
quotequote all
Coincidentally i drove past a 406 for sale outside a house yesterday. Looked lovely in a light gold colour, £1200 was the asking price stuck in the window. I was instantly reminded of a) you never see them on the road; and b) what a well proportioned car they are.

Edited by username_checksout on Friday 6th June 08:00

LightweightLouisDanvers

2,565 posts

59 months

Friday 6th June
quotequote all
The postmistress's body colour flaps! rofl

CH80

189 posts

13 months

Friday 6th June
quotequote all
After the 406 Coupe, penciled by Pininfarina, the top bods at Peugeot thought this was a good looking successor...they would have been better off snorting cocaine instead of taking mushrooms, clearly.

Edited by CH80 on Friday 6th June 07:52

evojam

712 posts

176 months

Friday 6th June
quotequote all
Not a bad looking car and is ULEZ & CAZ compliant,just a shame about the high VED rate at 700 quid for 12 months but there again you could go and buy a new car and lose that driving out of the showroom so wont be a deal breaker for all.

cerb4.5lee

37,855 posts

196 months

Friday 6th June
quotequote all
LightweightLouisDanvers said:
The postmistress's body colour flaps! rofl
It was a fantastic write up from Mr Shed as usual, and that bit got me as well! biglaugh

The car looks in great condition too, and I can definitely get onboard with this as a shed for definite. Manual and a V6 cylinder engine as well. cool

86wasagoodyear

766 posts

112 months

Friday 6th June
quotequote all
"....or some sort of unusual electronic vibration." In the Postmistress's car hehe Very good. Thanks as always Tony.

I'd be happy to waft around in this. Would always park it front end in...

s m

23,918 posts

219 months

Friday 6th June
quotequote all
When did cars get so heavy people love asking especially about 2-door coupes like the BM 230i featured recently?

About 20 years ago in the case of these - the diesel one was nearly 1800kg