Moon on a stick car requirements
Moon on a stick car requirements
Author
Discussion

RustyNissanPrairie

Original Poster:

525 posts

18 months

Thursday 20th February 2025
quotequote all
I'm idly musing over a replacement car to buy for MrsRNP.

Her requirements in order of preference are;
Heated seats
Heated steering wheel
Eyeball melting heater
Leather seats

My requirements are;
As cheap as possible
Reliable / easy to repair DIY serviceable (no wetbelt engines, prefer larger capacity non stressed normally aspirated - IE not Ecoboom)
Not a Ford
Practical (MPV / estate)
Galvanized/zinc coated long lasting bodyshells.
Petrol
Better than 25mpg
Supported by grey/cloned aftermarket diagnostic (eg Vagcom, Vida, Peugeot Planet))


For reference the car that has met most of the requirements is her trusty and beloved 21year old Volvo V70 but sadly its showing signs of coming towards the end of it life (corrosion in the bodyshell above the rear subframe). The other two references are our 1st gen Cayenne (only used for towing and adventures, it's not a daily driver) which is where the heated steering wheel requirements comes from. The other is my 2004 M59 Peugeot Partner (Berlingo) multispace that she hates!

The car is mainly used for short local journeys and often for carrying 'stuff' although it doesn't need to be as big as the V70. An EV would be ideal but my budget probably doesn't include them.

Any suggestions welcome!



dmsims

7,354 posts

290 months

Thursday 20th February 2025
quotequote all
You mention budget but don't state it!

RustyNissanPrairie

Original Poster:

525 posts

18 months

Thursday 20th February 2025
quotequote all
dmsims said:
You mention budget but don't state it!
As low as possible, as high as necessary!

Our cars have ranged in cost from £500 for the Porsche through to whatever the Volvo cost us 18years ago (can't remember now).

Think more towards Bangernomics and DIY fettling rather than PCP / shiny main dealers.

Pixel Pusher

10,372 posts

182 months

Thursday 20th February 2025
quotequote all
I'll have a go.

Don't think this ticks the heated steering wheel box though.

https://www.autotrader.co.uk/car-details/202411035...

Faust66

2,363 posts

188 months

Thursday 20th February 2025
quotequote all
If the V70 is OK (as in no major issues) apart from the rear subframe rust, why not spend a bit of cash on that and get it sorted?

If you spend a few grand on a new car, you're bound to end up splashing out even more money on brakes, tyres, suspension or other issues as the owner may well have been aware of bills on the horizon and has sold it to avoid them... so why not invest in the car you've already got?

ChocolateFrog

34,954 posts

196 months

Thursday 20th February 2025
quotequote all
Faust66 said:
If the V70 is OK (as in no major issues) apart from the rear subframe rust, why not spend a bit of cash on that and get it sorted?

If you spend a few grand on a new car, you're bound to end up splashing out even more money on brakes, tyres, suspension or other issues as the owner may well have been aware of bills on the horizon and has sold it to avoid them... so why not invest in the car you've already got?
Sensible. Or get another V70 in better condition.

Discendo Discimus

874 posts

55 months

Thursday 20th February 2025
quotequote all
Something like an 8 year old Skoda Octavia L&K?

Relatively cheap, got all the options, comfortable, reliable and you have vag com to mess around with it. Not difficult to work on either.

My neighbor has one as his work car, takes him 400 miles to Scotland and back each week without complaint.

Dog Star

17,325 posts

191 months

Thursday 20th February 2025
quotequote all
I’ve gone for Mercedes for everything now since I’ve amassed so much experience and special tools.

C class estate. S204.

The only bits that rust are rear subframes (warrantied still). Parts are cheap. They’re well made and easy to work on.

Heated steering wheel is a “no” though.

66HFM

798 posts

48 months

Thursday 20th February 2025
quotequote all
Volvo XC70?

GreatGranny

9,519 posts

249 months

Thursday 20th February 2025
quotequote all
66HFM said:
Volvo XC70?
That was my thinking but no heated wheel (pretty rare on a normal car) and most are diesels which is no bad thing when it's the D4/D5 engine.

There are petrols but no way they will do 25+ mpg

RustyNissanPrairie

Original Poster:

525 posts

18 months

Thursday 20th February 2025
quotequote all
"If the V70 is OK (as in no major issues) apart from the rear subframe rust, why not spend a bit of cash on that and get it sorted?"

I took the arch liners out during covid and cleaned everything before epoxying but I didn't drop the rear subframe and rust has caught hold of the floorpan/spare wheel well above the subframe. The subframe itself is okay

I also had the steering rack refurbished during covid by a good specialist but it's leaking again so is probably worn beyond repair now. A Volvo main dealer replacement is £1k unless I can find the ZF part from elsewhere.

The driver's seat bolster has split and the wheels need refurbishing again.
It's 21years old, done 215k miles and has served us well.......but doesn't have a heated steering wheel!

okv3

3,145 posts

219 months

Thursday 20th February 2025
quotequote all
Mazda6 Estate? Sport Nav+ models from 2018 have heated steering wheels and meet most of your requirements.

Rotary Potato

563 posts

119 months

Thursday 20th February 2025
quotequote all
okv3 said:
Mazda6 Estate? Sport Nav+ models from 2018 have heated steering wheels and meet most of your requirements.
My experience of 21st century Mazdas is that they rust for fun. Maybe they'd upped their game by 2018, but I'm yet to see a 10+ year old Mazda that the underside didn't look like it'd driven to see the Titanic and back! I like Mazdas ... a lot ... but I couldn't in good conscience recommend them to someone who has mentioned good rustproofing as one of their requirements. smile

Maybe things have moved on ... and newer cars are better ... always happy to be corrected.

Gargamel

16,130 posts

284 months

Thursday 20th February 2025
quotequote all

Honda CR-V - from 2017 HSW was an option, then on most specs from 2020

Meets all other requirements I think



ChevronB19

8,522 posts

186 months

Thursday 20th February 2025
quotequote all
Land Rover Freelander 2 HSE, 2014 run out model.

RustyNissanPrairie

Original Poster:

525 posts

18 months

Thursday 20th February 2025
quotequote all
Gargamel said:
Honda CR-V - from 2017 HSW was an option, then on most specs from 2020

Meets all other requirements I think
Good shout - friend has a 2006 MK2 CRV that has been a brilliant car. A newer one with a HSW could be the possible winner!..............

archie456

505 posts

245 months

Thursday 20th February 2025
quotequote all
RustyNissanPrairie said:
Reliable
ChevronB19 said:
Land Rover Freelander 2 HSE, 2014 run out model.
wink

BenS94

3,245 posts

47 months

Thursday 20th February 2025
quotequote all
archie456 said:
RustyNissanPrairie said:
Reliable
ChevronB19 said:
Land Rover Freelander 2 HSE, 2014 run out model.
wink
The 2.2 diesels are robust.

dmsims

7,354 posts

290 months

Thursday 20th February 2025
quotequote all
BenS94 said:
The 2.2 diesels are robust.
Can they use Petrol ?

Evanivitch

25,868 posts

145 months

Thursday 20th February 2025
quotequote all
No electric estates but don't say if dropping seats is an option?

Hyundai Ioniq Premium
https://www.autotrader.co.uk/car-details/202501228...

Hyundai Kona Premium, Electric but not big. Long range.

https://www.autotrader.co.uk/car-details/202502199...

Leaf 40kWh N Connecta £7k

https://www.autotrader.co.uk/car-details/202502068...

MG5 Exclusive, estate shaped by kind of.an extended hatchback.

https://www.autotrader.co.uk/car-details/202412137...