Clio 172/182 / Fiat Panda 100HP / Ford Puma
Clio 172/182 / Fiat Panda 100HP / Ford Puma
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Discussion

snowen250

Original Poster:

1,094 posts

204 months

Monday 29th January 2018
quotequote all
Looking for some advice from the Forum here.

I recently had my Skoda Octavia VRS written off for me, so as a result I have £1500 from the insurance company (plus a bit more potentially) to go buy a replacement.

I already have an MX5 track day car which I also daily (well I have two actually....but moving on...) so this doesn't need to be a mighty machine, it will in fact largely be used by the other half for her short (2miles) commute to work. But I also want something that when I do drive it, is fun, and I could track if the Mx5 is being all rusty and falling apart one weekend.

So my current feelings are:
Clio 172/182 - Had a 197, loved it. But bit concerned these can be pricey to run, what with being all French. But will hold its value. Found a nice local one for £1400

Fiat Panda 100HP - Slow, but fun. And I like slow fun cars. Also tiny and easy to park. We live on a very narrow set of terraced streets, parking is a real problem. Such, the car MUST be small. But, these seem to vary in price hugely.

Ford Puma - oldest of the three, but so cheap! and meant to handle really well? found one locally with allegedly no rust for £900. But......it will have rust. Do I want three rusty cars?

Any feelings/suggestions? Remember:

Small.

Fun.

Cheap.

Reliable.

Not an MX5. Must be able to transport flowers. Girlfriend is a florist.

Thanks!

Simon

james_gt3rs

4,816 posts

212 months

Monday 29th January 2018
quotequote all
Don't the Clios have the £1000+ cambelt? Much faster than those other cars though!

Squadrone Rosso

3,549 posts

168 months

Monday 29th January 2018
quotequote all
Puma’s are great but sadly, real rot boxes.

Clio’s are expensive service wise.

Panda 100 are epic fun. Practical too. Straight forward mechanics.

snowen250

Original Poster:

1,094 posts

204 months

Monday 29th January 2018
quotequote all
I didn't think a belt service on the Clio's was quite that much? This one has just been done though...

I am leaning more towards the Fiat, but finding one in my price bracket is tough. Especially as I cant go look at anything til this weekend, although we are in no huge rush.

Thanks for the replies.

Mo28

907 posts

121 months

Monday 29th January 2018
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Suzuki Swift Sport?

culpz

4,962 posts

133 months

Monday 29th January 2018
quotequote all
The only really expensive items on the Clio's are the big cambelt job, every 5 years or 72k miles, whichever comes first. At a specialist, if you have the cambelt, auxiliary belt, tensioners, dephaser and water pump all done at once, it's around £700 quid i think. Might be a bit more.

The other is the clutch, which is requires the subframe dropping to get the the little bugger. You're probably looking at £500 total, including the price of the parts, i believe. It's probably something else i'd leave to a specialist too.

They're generally pretty cheap to run other than that. Consumables are cheap. Most other little issues are generally cheap fixes aswell.

Toed64

299 posts

141 months

Monday 29th January 2018
quotequote all
Fiat Punto Sporting diseasel - 1.9l Vauxhall engine that can be mapped to interesting torque outputs - gearboxes fail before the motors.

Skoda Fabia VRS...

My favourite:

https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Ford-Focus-st-2-0/13248...

ayman82

1,537 posts

202 months

Monday 29th January 2018
quotequote all
Clio 172.

Have driven/owned the 100hp, handles well, but the Clio is the one to go for.

Cambelt change shouldn't be much more than £500. I changed mine every 3 years.

Squadrone Rosso

3,549 posts

168 months

Monday 29th January 2018
quotequote all
Toed64 said:
Fiat Punto Sporting diseasel - 1.9l Vauxhall engine that can be mapped to interesting torque outputs - gearboxes fail before the motors.

Skoda Fabia VRS...

My favourite:

https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Ford-Focus-st-2-0/13248...
A Vauxhall engine!!

Please.

A FPT engine shared with GM in exchange for some platform & engine sharing with Fiat & Alfa.

mrtwisty

3,057 posts

186 months

Monday 29th January 2018
quotequote all
snowen250 said:
Looking for some advice from the Forum here.

I recently had my Skoda Octavia VRS written off for me, so as a result I have £1500 from the insurance company (plus a bit more potentially) to go buy a replacement.

I already have an MX5 track day car which I also daily (well I have two actually....but moving on...) so this doesn't need to be a mighty machine, it will in fact largely be used by the other half for her short (2miles) commute to work. But I also want something that when I do drive it, is fun, and I could track if the Mx5 is being all rusty and falling apart one weekend.

So my current feelings are:
Clio 172/182 - Had a 197, loved it. But bit concerned these can be pricey to run, what with being all French. But will hold its value. Found a nice local one for £1400

Fiat Panda 100HP - Slow, but fun. And I like slow fun cars. Also tiny and easy to park. We live on a very narrow set of terraced streets, parking is a real problem. Such, the car MUST be small. But, these seem to vary in price hugely.

Ford Puma - oldest of the three, but so cheap! and meant to handle really well? found one locally with allegedly no rust for £900. But......it will have rust. Do I want three rusty cars?

Any feelings/suggestions? Remember:

Small.

Fun.

Cheap.

Reliable.

Not an MX5. Must be able to transport flowers. Girlfriend is a florist.

Thanks!

Simon
Ahahahahah, that's a good one!

I've had a couple of Pumas (some time ago now admittedly) and they are good fun for the money, but the only ones you'll find without rust are in the Ford museum (possibly not even then!).

While the boot is big for the size of car, it's pretty shallow - not sure it would suit moving delicate bouquets of flowers around.

Toed64

299 posts

141 months

Monday 29th January 2018
quotequote all
Squadrone Rosso said:
A Vauxhall engine!!

Please.

A FPT engine shared with GM in exchange for some platform & engine sharing with Fiat & Alfa.
Haha... used in Saabs too... & the Doblo van

...actually, I did know that, but thanks for the response! The Alfa/Fiat 1.9 diesel is one of the toughest out there and much tougher (IMO) than the GM 2.0 DTI. I had a Doblo van in the driveway until a few days ago, that had covered 180,000 miles without an engine problem, ever.


Edited by Toed64 on Monday 29th January 13:34

Leicester Loyal

4,911 posts

143 months

Monday 29th January 2018
quotequote all
Get a Clio 172/182.

HustleRussell

26,011 posts

181 months

Monday 29th January 2018
quotequote all
Gotta be the Panda hasn't it? It's the newest, most practical, most efficient, most reliable, cheapest to run...

The Clio is tempting on the face of it but the running costs will probably be double

gordyshreds

50 posts

118 months

Monday 29th January 2018
quotequote all
Suzuki Ignis Sport? Could get a really good one for that money and will hold its value also in my opinion

HustleRussell

26,011 posts

181 months

Monday 29th January 2018
quotequote all
gordyshreds said:
Suzuki Ignis Sport? Could get a really good one for that money and will hold its value also in my opinion
Good shout, no experience with them but they are somewhat of a PH hero and score bonus points for Japaneseiness.

snowen250

Original Poster:

1,094 posts

204 months

Monday 29th January 2018
quotequote all
Thanks for all the replies!

Great info on the Puma regarding the boot, the old Octavia VRS had a huge boot, but we do need something with some height. Also fair point on rust. I'm fighting tin worm on two cars, three sounds demoralising.

I'll check out the Ignis and Swift options too. I'm not too fussed about straight-line speed, been there done that, i'd rather a nice chassis. Plus she drives like miss daisy, so it will only be wasted on her...

The Clio im looking at had all the belts done last year, so that's a plus point.

The only thing was a 325Ti Compact Sport? But these seem rare as manuals.

No diesels i'm afraid, average journey of 5 miles a day wont do it much good I feel. Plus I don't like them.

Toed64

299 posts

141 months

Monday 29th January 2018
quotequote all
The 325TI was a lovely thing. I had a gently battered one for a year or so...and I loved it.

For some reason, they don't seem to rust as badly as the other E46 models. The rear chassis/subframe still cracks (mine did). I bought it to replace my MX5 trackday heap, but someone offered me a price I couldn't resist.

I have a Corolla TSport trackdaycar now. That's another cheap hot hatch you might consider. Great engine and very tough, so long as you keep the oil topped up...and a bit overfilled for track days to overcome the oil starvation that kills many of them on track.

snowen250

Original Poster:

1,094 posts

204 months

Monday 29th January 2018
quotequote all
Toed64 said:
The 325TI was a lovely thing. I had a gently battered one for a year or so...and I loved it.

For some reason, they don't seem to rust as badly as the other E46 models. The rear chassis/subframe still cracks (mine did). I bought it to replace my MX5 trackday heap, but someone offered me a price I couldn't resist.

I have a Corolla TSport trackdaycar now. That's another cheap hot hatch you might consider. Great engine and very tough, so long as you keep the oil topped up...and a bit overfilled for track days to overcome the oil starvation that kills many of them on track.
For the 325 it is finding a good manual in budget that is the issue!

Corolla is I am sure a great car, but I struggle to be excited by them? Il have another look though. The reliability factor is tempting. Plus the fact it is so discreet. The Skoda drank oil like a Texan drinks bourbon so topping it up is no hardship.

Thanks

Krikkit

27,785 posts

202 months

Monday 29th January 2018
quotequote all
Clio all the way, should be able to get one with a recentish cambelt. If not it's a £400-500 job to do it right (depending on labour rates). The right locking tools etc are essential.

The others are good (the Puma especially), but not as exciting in the longer-term as the Clio.

aaron_2000

5,407 posts

104 months

Monday 29th January 2018
quotequote all
What about the Focus ST170? Clio will be better, but as said above £1000+ for a cambelt change. A very good ST170 will be no more than £1k, get one with the Climate Pack, that comes with bi-xenons, quick clear screen and the climate control. 5 doors seem to be better condition than the 3 doors of the same price, if you can find one in Capri Blue then that's the colour to go for. Like a VTEC the power and torque is at the top end, so you have to rev them. The real golden point of the car is the steering/handling though.