RE: Higher mileage heroes | Six of the Best

RE: Higher mileage heroes | Six of the Best

Yesterday

Higher mileage bargains | Six of the Best

Life begins at 150,000...


Rolls-Royce Phantom, 2007, 185k, £49,995

We all know the temptation of a higher mileage motor. Some of us will have taken the chance and come out smelling (mostly) of roses. When it all goes well, when a car has been maintained properly and money spent where required, it can be a smart way into great cars for less money. Nothing spooks the average car buyer like a six-figure mileage. But when it goes wrong, and more cash ends up being spent than would have bought a regular example, you feel a bit silly. All part of the used car fun. Whatever the future holds for this Phantom promises to be interesting: already it’s accrued 185,000 miles, which is unheard of for these, yet it still looks decent for it. The MOT history is incredible, too, with just one fail in 2010 for - take a guess - the headlight being too high. It’s passed every year since 2012 (at just over 90k) without even an advisory. Maybe there’s something in this regular use of cars malarkey…

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SEAT Leon Cupra 300 ST, 2017, 128k, £9,495

Naturally, it’s hard to follow up a Rolls-Royce Phantom in any list, though we aren’t all in a position to spend £50k on a V12 that’s approaching 200,000 miles. What more of us will be likely to buy, however, is a £10k fast estate, and with that in mind this Leon Cupra looks a great shout. The ST was always a handsome junior wagon (certainly more so than Cupra’s current effort), and this one is an especially rare spec: 300hp was the most ever available bar the limited Cupra R, and the manual gearbox with front-wheel drive is seldom seen because most plumped for the DSG/4Drive combo. This did play into the all-weather, all-scenario suitability of a Leon wagon, but the manual was lighter, faster once off the line - and more fun to drive. This one is thousands cheaper than any comparable Cupra (if you can find one) thanks to almost 130k, but the history is said to be great and it’s only ever had an MOT problem for tyres. Which is to be expected for 300hp, front-wheel drive, and doing tens of thousands of miles between tests. A whole lot of modern, likeable, capable performance car for £9,495.

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BMW 320i, 1985, 133k, £11,995 

Alright, this one shouldn’t really be here. Covering 130,000 miles in 40 years of driving is a paltry return, really - little more than 3,000 miles a year on average - and so no car boasting that tally should really qualify for a high mileage hit list. It’s not a classic that’s been to the moon and back, or a new car that’s barely left the motorway. It’s a car with an entirely expected mileage return for its age. We know that, we get that. Put most simply, we saw this E30 3 Series and it had to feature, despite a tenuous claim to inclusion. Hopefully you can see why. Acacia Green with cream makes for what might be the smartest 320i ever seen, and it’s a manual. But with Koni dampers, Eibach springs and those 14-inch BBS rims as well, the stance is absolutely perfect on top. Should the next owner ever get bored of just gawping at it, the E30 benefits from a recent big service and some polybushes, so it can make its way to a proper high mileage total in due course. 

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Mercedes S63 AMG, 2009, 129k, £11,995

Well, this must have been expensive. Even in 2009, an S63 would not have been the most frugal way for a powerfully built company director type to get themselves around. Largely the point, of course, because displays of wealth come little more effective than a big, bad Benz. But even by the supersaloon standard, this era of W221 S-Class AMG was a greedy guts, because there were no turbochargers to help with mid-range muscle or to massage test scores. Like the Maserati Quattroporte and Aston Rapide of the era, it was raw displacement that did the job for the S63, here - of course - with the iconic M156 6.2-litre V8 powering the rear wheels. With 525hp, too, some way from the 457hp produced in C63s of the time. Almost 130,000 miles of super unleaded at 19mpg must have cost a fortune, and continuing to run an S63 won’t come cheap - especially with a service due and MOT looming. But what a damn cool way to spend it.

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Subaru WRX STI UK, 2013, 149k, £7,590

Bet you didn’t expect to see one of these. Put most simply, the Subaru EJ25 doesn’t have the best reputation for reliability; to avoid triggering any of those with prior bad experience, let’s just it rhymes with bread baskets. That’s the problem. And it seems quite common. We’re going to assume this 2013 STI Type UK has been similarly afflicted at some point in its 150,000-mile life, too, because there’s a receipt in its history for £6,000 of engine refurbishment work for the flat four turbo. It’s not clear when it was, or who did the work, though it does make a cheap STI seem like a slightly less daft idea. Because the whole thing is £7,500. There’s nothing comparable for even twice that. The Impreza hatches on PH are £10k. And while the MOT history isn’t impeccable, the Scooby presents well enough - bet you didn’t think the seat bolster would last this long - and promises a unique driving experience. Fortune favours the brave, right?

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Porsche Cayenne GTS, 2008, 135k, £7,995

Another one where there’s a little more to the car in question than meets the eye. These days, a naturally aspirated, 400hp-plus V8 in anything for £8,000 is interesting, particularly a Porsche. Yes, a gen one Cayenne, but remember - big V8. Trouble with the old bus (one of the troubles), is that the 4.8 is chain-driven, and they’re known to fail. Which is very bad news. ‘Durable but not indestructible’, suggests Google’s AI, for a neat summary. No such worries here - it’s been replaced. And that can’t have been a small job. Indeed there’s an aura about this GTS that suggests money has been lavished on it: there are Michelin tyres on all four wheels, plus the interior scrubs up pretty nicely for 135,000 miles. And get this - in 14 tests, it’s never failed an MOT. There have only been advisories on two, and the current ticket runs until May 2026. Not the be all and end all, of course, but encouraging nonetheless. Means the fuel kitty can be left alone, for one thing…

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Author
Discussion

Motormouth88

Original Poster:

525 posts

73 months

Yesterday (06:48)
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A largely ‘meh’ list apart from the obvious standout, amazing effort up to now, fingers crossed someone has the cojones to push it past 200k. Shows how well built those things are.

fantheman80

1,880 posts

62 months

Yesterday (06:49)
quotequote all
Dam that Cayenne is making me do man maths I didn’t expect to at this hour…looks good for a gen one in them wheels…and we do need a to replace our family run around….

Xenoous

1,735 posts

71 months

Yesterday (07:02)
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Oh damn I really want that E30.

Mysstree

524 posts

59 months

Yesterday (07:02)
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Why do i feel like playing Russian Roulette with either the Cayenne or the S63? Best looking there is the 320i, proper window acreage.

TR4man

5,382 posts

187 months

Yesterday (07:18)
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Considering the age of some of these cars, I’m not sure I’d describe them as “high mileage”.

Unreal

6,623 posts

38 months

Yesterday (07:27)
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I think the Rolls would be amusing to own for a while. The Merc has something about it too. Everything else - nah.

Baddie

708 posts

230 months

Yesterday (07:47)
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Doesn’t the Cayenne get failure of its Lokasil bore liners? Would bother me much more than a timing chain.
Impressive the Phantom’s still £50k, don’t thinks there’s much else that would be.

howardhughes

1,205 posts

217 months

Yesterday (07:48)
quotequote all
I would consider 'High Milers' above 200k 90% of the these listed cars are broke in.

I bought my E30 325i Sport in 2000 with 75k on the clock. Sold it in 2009/10 with 235k. My MINI R50 was sold two years ago with 335k same engine and gearbox. smile

Its Just Adz

15,934 posts

222 months

Yesterday (08:12)
quotequote all
S63 looks great, I'm sure that would be a lovely way to do a long trip.
I wonder how much fuel that would use from Preston to Trivento.
Google Maps says 1415 miles......

FaustF

768 posts

167 months

Yesterday (08:28)
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That BMW is a lovely old thing, thanks for including it.

Big respect for the Rolls usage - long may it continue accruing miles! Wonderful!

pycraft

1,044 posts

197 months

Yesterday (08:40)
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I'll admit, I do like the Rolls, but the leather interior looks quite scraggy. It's funny, but for some reason I can't get my head around modern BMW-era RRs turning into ragged 80s provincial wedding cars.

PRO5T

5,436 posts

38 months

Yesterday (08:41)
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Didn’t Chris Harris daily a Phantom and it nearly crippled him financially?

I mean, if it hurt his wallet I think it would break mine!

86wasagoodyear

683 posts

109 months

Yesterday (08:41)
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Xenoous said:
Oh damn I really want that E30.
Me too. Lovely isn't it.

Firebobby

784 posts

52 months

Yesterday (08:45)
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Interesting list but I couldn't bring myself to part with my hard earned... pension....for any of them. Rightly or wrongly I've always gone for the lowest mileage car available at my price point. Probably due to back in the 70's 80's anything with 70-80k on it was queuing for the crusher!!

blearyeyedboy

6,624 posts

192 months

Yesterday (08:46)
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That E30 is lovely.

The S63 is remarkably tempting. These engines were really reliable, I think? (Compared to other German V8s anyway.)

ferret50

2,087 posts

22 months

Yesterday (08:48)
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Really must dig my E30 cabbie out of the garage and sell.....

ClaphamBoxS

366 posts

77 months

Yesterday (08:49)
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Inside of the Porsche needs a damm good valet,and nice of the garage to highlight the nail in one tyre…

Oberheim

196 posts

4 months

Yesterday (09:04)
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Plenty of want for that E30. Such a lovely colour and the interior complements it beautifully. The advert is cringe-tastic.

Unreal

6,623 posts

38 months

Yesterday (09:26)
quotequote all
Its Just Adz said:
S63 looks great, I'm sure that would be a lovely way to do a long trip.
I wonder how much fuel that would use from Preston to Trivento.
Google Maps says 1415 miles......
If you can't afford it, buy an EV. wink

Alternatively of course, you can afford it, you just prefer the EV. biggrin

Seriously, I think these are simple choices. You're either the sort of person who laughs at the cost and risks, or you're not.

Cryssys

656 posts

51 months

Yesterday (09:37)
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Well done to whoever put 185K miles on that RR, averages 10K miles a year so it seems like it was someones daily drive.

BMW looks great from the outside but that beige velour interior is so 80's.

I'll have the C63 with new tyres a years worth of free V power please.