Interesting shed.
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Discussion

Integroo

Original Poster:

11,589 posts

106 months

Wednesday 31st January 2018
quotequote all
I am getting shot of my Type R as it is costing me a fortune to run and I have completely lost all interest in it. Once it is gone, I have decided to go down the shed route - no car loan, refuse to do expensive repairs, more freedom.

Requirements:

  • £1500 or less. Cheaper the better.
  • 12 month MOT and preferably not moon miles (unless excellent, excellent history and condition).
  • Relatively reliable and relatively cheap parts (I never want to spend £478 for front discs, pads and a caliper, or £450 for a backbox, again).
  • Small wheels - I don't want to spend £150 a corner on tyres.
  • Interesting in some way or another. (RWD convertible? V6/8? Rare sight on our roads?).
  • Petrol with a bit of poke (I moved to a Type R from a 1.8 Civic as I felt the 1.8 wasn't quite quick enough - it was 140bhp, but 140bhp in a much lighter car would probably be okay).
That's about it ... I don't really care about fuel economy.

Thoughts so far include Mk1 MX5, MR2, MG ZS 180/200 (the saloon has side vents and an Impreza style spoiler!), some sort of big barge ... don't really know. My driving is a mix of motorway and trips across the Scottish countryside to various castles etc. I don't commute and only drive at the weekends, do around 8k a year but that is probably 300-500 or so a month with a couple of long trips (300-1000 miles) a year.



Edited by Integroo on Wednesday 31st January 10:21

culpz

4,962 posts

133 months

Wednesday 31st January 2018
quotequote all
Clio 172/182? Cheap consumables and generally more reliable than you may expect. Can be had from about £1500, sometimes cheaper buy may require a bit of work. They should still be cheap fixes though.

The two main expenses are the big cambelt job and the clutch. If you get one with those two recently done, it shouldn't cost you the earth to run and should also be an interesting little hot-hatch too.

nitrodave

1,262 posts

159 months

Wednesday 31st January 2018
quotequote all
an early skodia octavia vrs seems to tick all your boxes.

I had the same requirements a couple of years ago and bought a 2006 saab 93 aero. 2 years later and all it has needed are oil changes and a replacement coil spring.


Integroo

Original Poster:

11,589 posts

106 months

Wednesday 31st January 2018
quotequote all
Probably not interested in another hot hatch based on a popular car - too common, not all that interesting (sorry!), unless they have something particularly interesting about them!. Also worried about finding a decent example - feel they are likely to have been ragged. If I was getting a small car, I would probably prefer a roadster than a hatch.

SpanishTony

432 posts

146 months

Wednesday 31st January 2018
quotequote all
You're going to have on-going costs as well, what about a cheap lease?

Integroo

Original Poster:

11,589 posts

106 months

Wednesday 31st January 2018
quotequote all
SpanishTony said:
You're going to have on-going costs as well, what about a cheap lease?
Nah, not interested in leasing. I am not totally against leasing, but I don't commute by car and seem to like to chop and change, so don't want to be stuck in a lease. I don't mind on-going costs, as long as they are (a) not as expensive as they have been with my Type R (£600 for tyres! £500 for a backbox!) and (b) not accompanied by a car loan.

SpanishTony

432 posts

146 months

Wednesday 31st January 2018
quotequote all
Integroo said:
Nah, not interested in leasing. I am not totally against leasing, but I don't commute by car and seem to like to chop and change, so don't want to be stuck in a lease. I don't mind on-going costs, as long as they are (a) not as expensive as they have been with my Type R (£600 for tyres! £500 for a backbox!) and (b) not accompanied by a car loan.
Fair dos

designforlife

3,742 posts

184 months

Wednesday 31st January 2018
quotequote all
An "interesting" shed *could* cost as much to keep on the road as the type R....I ran a retro mitsubishi and it never broke down, but refreshing parts to keep it on the road wasn't exactly cheap motoring.

But if you want to minimise your maintenance costs, something like a 90s bargey lexus would probably fit the bill.


Integroo

Original Poster:

11,589 posts

106 months

Wednesday 31st January 2018
quotequote all
designforlife said:
An "interesting" shed *could* cost as much to keep on the road as the type R....I ran a retro mitsubishi and it never broke down, but refreshing parts to keep it on the road wasn't exactly cheap motoring.

But if you want to minimise your maintenance costs, something like a 90s bargey lexus would probably fit the bill.
Indeed. I am concerned that I end up having to pile money into something new. I am just so utterly fed up of the R I want rid. My bro runs an MX5 he bought for 1200 quid and it hasn't needed a penny spent on it in 10 months (few things he could fix, but nothing he cares about enough to fix). If I can find something where the parts etc. are relatively cheap I am okay with that (and also spending a few hundred quid fixing something would be much more palatable without also spending 262 a month on the car loan!). I think something newer than 2000 and a non-turbo petrol should help. Probably stay away from premium brands a la BMW/Merc.

designforlife

3,742 posts

184 months

Wednesday 31st January 2018
quotequote all
steer clear of mx5s unless you've got a grand kicking about for rust repairs...a £1500 mx5 is gonna need some TLC in the arches/sills.

Bodywork aside they're fairly cheap to maintain, but sorting the sills runs at about £400 a side, and will need doing every few years.

Integroo

Original Poster:

11,589 posts

106 months

Wednesday 31st January 2018
quotequote all
designforlife said:
steer clear of mx5s unless you've got a grand kicking about for rust repairs...a £1500 mx5 is gonna need some TLC in the arches/sills.

Bodywork aside they're fairly cheap to maintain, but sorting the sills runs at about £400 a side, and will need doing every few years.
£800 every two or three years wouldn't be all that depressing!

Brynjaminjones

120 posts

144 months

Wednesday 31st January 2018
quotequote all
A bit different to the things you've mentioned, and definitely coming from a biased perspective (I own one), but I think a 4.0 Jeep Cherokee might fulfil some of those criteria.

Responses in order:

  • Regularly available for under £1500
  • Thirsty, so most haven't done massive miles.
  • Reliable drivetrain and cheap parts - brake discs available for about £60, pads £30, exhaust ~£80
  • 15" wheels with decent tires (not ditchfinders) available for £70
  • RWD, straight-6, not loads of them about.
  • 190hp is pokey for what it is. Gets sideways very easily.
A 4x4 might not be what you're after at all, but I thought worth a mention just in case!

designforlife

3,742 posts

184 months

Wednesday 31st January 2018
quotequote all
along with the rest...I owned a mk2 mx5 for 6 years and was knee deep in the scene. They're not bad cars, but

-the calipers seize for a past-time, i went through 5 or 6 on the car
-slave cylinders like to fail
-rust, as mentioned
-they tend to leak, winter can be a bit grim

other than that, pretty reliable, and parts are cheap, but chasing the rust repairs isn't. unless you have whole sections cut out and things treated properly (which isn't cheap), it always comes back...depends how comfortable you are spending more than the car is worth keeping the rust at bay.

I got fed up of pouring money into a car over the years that i knew was worth sod all...and they aren't exactly quick in a straight line. Handle well though.


Integroo

Original Poster:

11,589 posts

106 months

Wednesday 31st January 2018
quotequote all
Brynjaminjones said:
A bit different to the things you've mentioned, and definitely coming from a biased perspective (I own one), but I think a 4.0 Jeep Cherokee might fulfil some of those criteria.

Responses in order:

  • Regularly available for under £1500
  • Thirsty, so most haven't done massive miles.
  • Reliable drivetrain and cheap parts - brake discs available for about £60, pads £30, exhaust ~£80
  • 15" wheels with decent tires (not ditchfinders) available for £70
  • RWD, straight-6, not loads of them about.
  • 190hp is pokey for what it is. Gets sideways very easily.
A 4x4 might not be what you're after at all, but I thought worth a mention just in case!
Actually might be quite fun, and my girlfriend would be delighted (she hates the R and loves 4x4s!). Only three on Autotrader though, £2,989, £4,995 and £4,995!

ReverendCounter

6,087 posts

197 months

Wednesday 31st January 2018
quotequote all
'04 onwards Gen 7 Celica?

SpeckledJim

32,322 posts

274 months

Wednesday 31st January 2018
quotequote all
designforlife said:
steer clear of mx5s unless you've got a grand kicking about for rust repairs...a £1500 mx5 is gonna might or might not need some TLC in the arches/sills.

Bodywork aside they're fairly cheap to maintain, but sorting the sills runs at about £400 a side, and will need doing every few years decades.
Lets not over-egg the pudding!

Brynjaminjones

120 posts

144 months

Wednesday 31st January 2018
quotequote all
Integroo said:
Actually might be quite fun, and my girlfriend would be delighted (she hates the R and loves 4x4s!). Only three on Autotrader though, £2,989, £4,995 and £4,995!
Yeah, AutoTrader prices for these are daft and those ones have been for sale for months. I helped a friend pick up a lovely 1998 earlier this month for £1100 and they pop up on eBay frequently for that kind of price. smile

SpeckledJim

32,322 posts

274 months

Wednesday 31st January 2018
quotequote all
Brynjaminjones said:
Integroo said:
Actually might be quite fun, and my girlfriend would be delighted (she hates the R and loves 4x4s!). Only three on Autotrader though, £2,989, £4,995 and £4,995!
Yeah, AutoTrader prices for these are daft and those ones have been for sale for months. I helped a friend pick up a lovely 1998 earlier this month for £1100 and they pop up on eBay frequently for that kind of price. smile
This! Cars on AutoTrader tend to be expensive, as they're being sold be folk happy to pay a lot for the listing.

Bargains are generally everywhere except AutoTrader.

culpz

4,962 posts

133 months

Wednesday 31st January 2018
quotequote all
I think interesting sheds could arguably be a bit of an oxymoron. I think it's the reason why i'm probably not gonna get a cheap Clio 172/182 myself, unfortunately. I'd like to have a bit of backup money just in case and i reckon i'd end up spending lots of money on the car cosmetically and growing fond.

Why not just get a shed? Something like an old Yaris that should prove pretty much unbreakable. You could even get a T Sport variant for not alot.

culpz

4,962 posts

133 months

Wednesday 31st January 2018
quotequote all
Or even a Suzuki Ignis Sport? They're definitely rare and interesting! Can be had between £1000 - £1500 for a good one.