RE: Usable modern classics, for less | Six of the Best
RE: Usable modern classics, for less | Six of the Best
Sunday 3rd May

Usable modern classics, for less | Six of the Best

Modern classics are best enjoyed from behind the wheel, not behind glass - here's proof


BMW M3 CS (E46), 2006, 134k, £26,995

As cars from the (relatively) recent past become more valuable seemingly by the month, so a conundrum presents itself: is the joy of driving it worth the potential impact on the value? Well, there’s a simple solution - buy the modern classic that’s already been used and enjoyed. Well used. Then there’s nothing to stop you driving exactly as intended; the car can still be kept well, but there’s much less concern about what adding miles could do. Once beyond 100k - as everything here is - then it’ll never be considered low mileage, really. So go have some fun already. That’ll be simple enough in a M3 CS, the run-out E46 that took some of the CSL’s best bits but kept the manual gearbox option. This one has it - and plenty of life to live beyond 130k…

See the original advert

Aston Martin Vantage, 2006, 108k, £23,995

If a BMW seems a little humble for your high-mile manual sports car from 2006, how about this? A bonafide Aston icon, with a clutch pedal, for less than £25,000. The various merits and drawbacks of the V8 Vantage have been discussed at length over the past 20 years (we won’t rehash them here), but it feels safe to say that the looks, theatre, handling and sound still outweigh any reservations about performance or running costs. Little at this money is going to give you the fizz, even parked outside, like a V8 Vantage. This example has 21 stamps in the history file, £30k in receipts, and 108k on the clock. The price has already been dropped by £2k by the looks of it as well, so over to you…

See the original advert

Lotus Elise S1, 1999, 160k, PH Auctions

There isn’t a Lotus Elise on the planet that isn’t recommendable to some extent; hard to think of any, however, that appeal quite so much as this one. There’s the obvious stuff like the Norfolk Yellow paint, the unmodified spec and smart wheels. But get this for provenance: this Series 1 goes to auction later on this month consigned by the first owner. Yes, really. The same person who bought it new from Lotus in 1999 - and has covered 160,000 miles since then - is selling it now. For more than 20 years, it’s been cared for by the same garage, too, and there’s an MOT until 2027. See you at 200k…

See the original advert

Audi quattro 20V, 1991, 128k, PH Auctions

You don’t need to spend long looking at classics over 100,000 miles in the classifieds to notice a theme: there’s an awful lot of German cars from the late '80s and early '90s around. When they were really built to last, solid and stoic while also very desirable. Nothing quite encapsulates the era as well as the Audi quattro: technologically advanced, fast as heck, cool as cucumber sorbet and tougher than a marine. What’s good for rallying is good for long-term use, surely. 130k looks to have been a walk in the park for this 20-valver, and such is the iconic status of the quattro that it’s never not going to be desirable. With a recent spend of almost £5k, too, it’s on the button and ready to rock. Which retro rally to visit first?

See the original advert

Porsche 911 Carrera (997.2), 2008, 112k, £27,925

Sometimes looking at the values of old 911s is a pretty disheartening experience. Cars that couldn’t be given away not very long ago because they were too track-focused or strangely specced are now prized for their rarity and spartan chic. Restomodding has hoovered up a lot of air-cooled cars. And have you seen what Targas cost? Anyway, help is at hand, in the form of this 997. You know, the 911 that’s still loved as the sweet spot between classic charm and modern usability. Its six-figure mileage puts it well under £30k, but that use is backed up by a full Porsche history. There was a £10k option spend when new also, so it still looks smart. And even an early PDK will feel a world away from dozy Tiptronics. Don’t be surprised if many more miles fly by...

See the original advert

Bentley Arnage Red Label, 1999, 101k, £18,950

If you really want the miles to pass effortlessly, though, there can’t be many better ways than by Bentley. Indeed, a smidge more than 100k for this Red Label - so that means the 6.75, fret not, not the 4.4 - in more than a quarter of a century is very modest use. Of course, it will be a formidably expensive way to travel, but when has the lap of luxury even been affordable? A comprehensive history and recent head gaskets should mean a tad less fiscal woe. Just look at the leather, the veneers, the sheer majesty of such a saloon. Every single mile of many thousands more would surely feel very special. Especially having paid less than £20k for the privilege.

See the original advert

Author
Discussion

chirurgus

Original Poster:

463 posts

241 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Whilst I love the S54 in my Z4M Coupe and the S1 Elise is a very special car, I wouldn't choose any of the others in the list over a V8 Vantage.

Edited by chirurgus on Saturday 2nd May 09:55

wistec1

760 posts

66 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Quite a decent line up. The Audi is winking at me and the Lotus got a second look as well but both would have been overlooked for a Alpina.

Slowlygettingit

885 posts

66 months

Saturday
quotequote all
The M3 for me out of a really good list.

sixor8

8,107 posts

293 months

Saturday
quotequote all
You can get an Arnage for a lot less than that, I have been tempted. But it's running one, not buying one!

A BMW 4.4 V8 'Green' label with 56k miles went for just over £10k at H+H on Wednesday in Buxton:

https://www.handh.co.uk/auction/lot/60-1999-bentle...



An Arnage T with 56k miles went for £14,500 at Manor Park 3 weeks ago:

https://www.manorparkclassics.com/auction/lot/202-...


gtiwannabe

8 posts

3 months

Saturday
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I didn’t even know an E46 CS existed! This is a hard list to pick a favourite from…

hammo19

7,253 posts

221 months

Saturday
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911 in that colour would be a dream car for me. It looks beautiful.

MiniMan64

18,957 posts

215 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Aston all day long, I didn’t realise they were down this cheap now.

Dads being eyeing an F-Type V8 for a while at a similar cost, is the Vantage better?

S600BSB

7,667 posts

131 months

Saturday
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Interesting list.

Jte3397

726 posts

121 months

Saturday
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Good list from what is becoming, for me anyway, as one of the best eras of motoring. I'd be happy with any of them. If I could only chose one, it would be the AM provided I could keep my own e46 M3

MikeM6

5,865 posts

127 months

Saturday
quotequote all
MiniMan64 said:
Aston all day long, I didn t realise they were down this cheap now.

Dads being eyeing an F-Type V8 for a while at a similar cost, is the Vantage better?
No, the F Type V8 is a much more modern car. Much more capable with 540hp and a more useable gearbox. I haven't driven a Vantage, but they strike me much more as a great weekend car with a badge that makes you feel great, but not something that completes with modern performance cars. Still a very lovely thing though.

AndySheff

6,862 posts

232 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Good list of brave pills.

Its Just Adz

18,099 posts

234 months

Saturday
quotequote all
M3 for me. Then the 911.

I wonder how much that Elise will go for.

GreatScott2016

2,322 posts

113 months

Saturday
quotequote all
The BMW of that era continues to look great to my eyes, and I think it will continue to look great for decades to come. Similarly, the Vantage will never look dated. That would probably be my pick but the red would not be my first choice colour frown.

josh00mac

422 posts

133 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Great list. Mileages wouldn’t bother me. My car is on 125k and having been looked after, is as good as it’s ever been. Wouldn’t have thought you could get a CSL for tha money even on those miles.

Jte3397

726 posts

121 months

Saturday
quotequote all
josh00mac said:
Great list. Mileages wouldn t bother me. My car is on 125k and having been looked after, is as good as it s ever been. Wouldn t have thought you could get a CSL for tha money even on those miles.
It's a CS rather than a CSL. It gets the same rack, brakes and a couple of other bits but not the CF roof, airbox, tune etc

AB

19,914 posts

220 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Jte3397 said:
josh00mac said:
Great list. Mileages wouldn t bother me. My car is on 125k and having been looked after, is as good as it s ever been. Wouldn t have thought you could get a CSL for tha money even on those miles.
It's a CS rather than a CSL. It gets the same rack, brakes and a couple of other bits but not the CF roof, airbox, tune etc
Am I right in thinking it's pretty similar to the Z4M in that regard? Airbox and tune can be sorted fairly easily.

_Rodders_

2,003 posts

44 months

Saturday
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Those M3 CS seemed to drop to mid 20's relatively quickly and then have stayed there ever since.

They looked overpriced for a while but now seem decent value.

coolchris

1,029 posts

227 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Nice list and being the owner of 2 high mileage cars I would not be put off by the mileage better to buy a car thats been used rather than sat for long periods

LotusOmega375D

9,103 posts

178 months

Saturday
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I haven’t seen a Q plate for decades. I didn’t know they were still a thing. Is the Audi really stuck with it?

“This particular Audi Quattro RR is a late model 1991 example that the vendor reports was registered abroad before being brought back to the UK and first registered here in 1997, at which point it was given its “Q” registration”

MCBrowncoat

1,707 posts

171 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Really tough this week. I'd go:

M3
Audi
Elise
911
Aston
Rolls