Help for car for Daughter

Help for car for Daughter

Author
Discussion

Steve H

Original Poster:

1,169 posts

226 months

Friday 23rd June 2023
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Hi all,

We need to look for a new car for my 21yr old Daughter who has just got a new job but will now be doing 40 mile round trip to work as opposed to 3 mile at present. She passed her test in April and currently has a Toyota Aygo, 2005 AUTOMATIC. Its a bit beaten up, leaks in the boot and has marks (from Pre Purchase) on most panels.

My concern is reliability but also comfort for the long Journey. The problem is that she passed her test in an Auto and so we can only consider an auto. I am VERY keen to avoid anything with a clutchless auto, as a family we have had a few Auto's, including a Fiat 500 and Citreon C2 and these have all had gearbox issues.

So, after setting the scene can anyone recommend a "proper" auto, smallish type car up to about £5K ? or at least a manufacturer that doesn't use these clutchless type, semi auto boxes

Cheers




SteBrown91

2,417 posts

131 months

Friday 23rd June 2023
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if you can stretch to 6/7ish you can get a Yaris Hybrid with a CVT.

Or you can get an Auris hybrid for 6ish but might be a bit big

Steve H

Original Poster:

1,169 posts

226 months

Friday 23rd June 2023
quotequote all
SteBrown91 said:
if you can stretch to 6/7ish you can get a Yaris Hybrid with a CVT.

Or you can get an Auris hybrid for 6ish but might be a bit big
That would be ideal but the top of her budget is set at £5k.

Edit to add: also isn't the CVT box one to avoid as well?

Edited by Steve H on Friday 23 June 13:55

sherman

13,469 posts

217 months

Friday 23rd June 2023
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SkodaIan

727 posts

87 months

Friday 23rd June 2023
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There's not many "proper" autos in smallish cars.

Kia and Hyundai used proper TC autos until about 2012 I think, and then DCTs after that. You don't hear as much about problems with their DCTs as you do for VAG so even a DCT Kiayundai would probably be OK.

Not every VAG DCT box will instantly explode either, so perhaps not write them off entirely. I'd avoid any of the single clutch automated manuals (Ford Powershift, Citroen EGC etc.) as they are horrid to drive as well as not having the best reputation for reliability.

Another option at that budget would be for a fairly early Nissan Leaf or battery owned Zoe. All EVs are obviously auto, and both within the 5k price range now. Even if the battery isn't in its first youth, it should easily still manage a 40 mile round trip between charges.

MustangGT

11,701 posts

282 months

Friday 23rd June 2023
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20 miles away is not a long journey by any stretch of the imagination, however, I do understand your concerns At 21 she probably has some NCB so insurance should not be too prohibitive. For £5k you have a pretty extensive list of cars available. Take a look around your local area and she can try out cars in her budget.

SturdyHSV

10,125 posts

169 months

Friday 23rd June 2023
quotequote all
https://www.autotrader.co.uk/car-details/202305267...

£4,900.



Or if she needs to be REALLY comfortable, might as well go full S class.

https://www.autotrader.co.uk/car-details/202303145...

£3,990.



These options make even more sense if her friends all drive Porsches hehe

MrGTI6

3,169 posts

132 months

Friday 23rd June 2023
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Definitely worth getting a proper auto. All the cars you've mentioned have automated manuals and are pretty nasty things!

Both the Hyundai i10 1.2 and Mazda 2 1.5 come with a very old-fashioned 4-speed torque-converter auto. Neither are cutting edge but both are reliable and suit the cars well.

Shabaza

219 posts

99 months

Friday 23rd June 2023
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2011 onward honda Jazz has the CVT gearbox.
Avoid the i-shift.

Infact, ive just purchased a Honda Jazz Hybrid for my father inlaw for £4800 (2011 with 85k mileage) after some keen negotiation.

anonymous-user

56 months

Friday 23rd June 2023
quotequote all
Not sure a 21 year old will get insurance on an old 3.2 TT or an old Mercedes S class.

The problem you have is you are looking at the most in demand car (small automatics) in the most common price range (under £5000). The reality is small automatics are in short supply as so few were sold compared to the manual versions.

What about an Astra 1.6, is that too big? I know these use a traditional torque converter.

imck

801 posts

109 months

Friday 23rd June 2023
quotequote all
Steve H said:
That would be ideal but the top of her budget is set at £5k.

Edit to add: also isn't the CVT box one to avoid as well?

Edited by Steve H on Friday 23 June 13:55
Toyota CVT is OK. Same train as in the Prius.
Avoid the multimode in the Auris and Yaris. Automated manual.

MK1 Yaris has conventional auto up to 2005ish
Getting on a bit though and expensive.
Sold our 1.3 Auto 2003 a couple of years ago, Very reliable. Decent enough on the motorway but was getting some age related faults
Exhaust, shocks, brake pipes. Nothing too expensive.

trevalvole

1,082 posts

35 months

Friday 23rd June 2023
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If the Aygo is still reliable, then why not keep it and get the boot leak fixed?

OutInTheShed

8,021 posts

28 months

Friday 23rd June 2023
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40 mile round trip is a 'long journey'?

Either keep the current chariot or consider doing a test on a manual?

A leaf is maybe another option? Bloke down the road bought one for a similar commute, he reckons it's nearly paid for itself in diesel saved, and it's still working.

chrisch77

649 posts

77 months

Friday 23rd June 2023
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The solution is clear. Early Nissan Leaf for £5k. No gears or road tax to worry about, charge it at home every night and it should be good for a 40 mile round commute.

https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/334920327079?mkcid=16&a...

An early Zoe would probably fit the bill better, but you’ll need closer to 6k to secure one.

Trevor555

4,467 posts

86 months

Friday 23rd June 2023
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A friend runs a Nissan Cube auto.

His is a proper auto, later one's are CVT I think.

Based on a Nissan Micra.

He's run it for quite a few years now, zero issues/costs, apart from servicing.

£5,000 would buy a nice, low mileage, one.

But the looks.... Love it, or hate it...

Edited by Trevor555 on Friday 23 June 17:43

randomeddy

1,448 posts

139 months

Friday 23rd June 2023
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I looked for a small auto for the MIL recently, difficult section to buy for a price.

Settled on a Nissan Pixo, she is over the moon with it.

C69

412 posts

14 months

Friday 23rd June 2023
quotequote all
£5k could buy a previous-generation Fiesta with an automatic transmission (which I think was a proper four-speed torque converter).

However, it was only available with a 1.4 petrol engine, so insurance and fuel costs might be higher than she wants.

I wouldn't rule out a CVT before testing a few to see how they drive.

TwigtheWonderkid

43,719 posts

152 months

Friday 23rd June 2023
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Joey Deacon said:
Not sure a 21 year old will get insurance on an old 3.2 TT or an old Mercedes S class.
Yes they would, very easily. Whether they wanted to pay the premium required is another question.

Steve H

Original Poster:

1,169 posts

226 months

Wednesday 28th June 2023
quotequote all
Thanks all,

Some good suggestions there and some errrm extreme ones! I didn't give early electric cars a thought to be honest and so that may be an interesting option.

Bannock

5,127 posts

32 months

Wednesday 28th June 2023
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