What to look for
What to look for
Author
Discussion

Jet Fixer

Original Poster:

96 posts

263 months

Sunday 28th March 2004
quotequote all
As a first time cerbie buyer I was wondering if you guys could give any pointers for specific items to look for that are commonly a problem.

Not the normal car things like blue smoke etc but anything important that i should pay particular attention to.

Many thanks

munir

62 posts

271 months

Sunday 28th March 2004
quotequote all
Jet Fixer said:
As a first time cerbie buyer I was wondering if you guys could give any pointers for specific items to look for that are commonly a problem.

Not the normal car things like blue smoke etc but anything important that i should pay particular attention to.

Many thanks


Apparent condition, service history, hi-speed drive, steering wabble, straight line hands-off drive, straight line hands-off breaking, overheating (>100C or >95C at cruising - aim for '12:30' on the temp gauge), accessory noises, gear rattle or stickiness and the driving history. Do not settle for any Cerbera short of very very quick.

No matter what you do it is difficult to tell.

The Cerbera you have to buy would have been bought within 10sec of seeing it.

Non TVR drivers get impressed by the performance all too easily.

Good luck.

Jet Fixer

Original Poster:

96 posts

263 months

Sunday 28th March 2004
quotequote all
Thanks.

Ive had a chimaera in the past so iknow the TVR way of doing things in the past but not sure whats new on the cerbera. Any info is a help

kojak69

4,547 posts

275 months

Sunday 28th March 2004
quotequote all
Mike.

This question comes up 2/3 times a month. There are a few quirks that cerberas are noted for, but to go through them all will take ages. The best thing to do is to do a search under cerbera, and you'll get loads of info you need to make a discision, and to 'know' what to look for.

Good luck.

j_s_g

6,177 posts

272 months

Sunday 28th March 2004
quotequote all
To some extent it depends on the kind of car you're looking for, too. There are common things to all of them, but I'd pay special attention to certain things if I was going for an older car that I wouldn't with a newer one. Simple example: check for upright recall on earlier ones, whereas if it's one of the first with the new style windscreen/uprights, there are other slight niggles. Then there's the whole S6/AJP thing.

Personally, I'd always go for a car that's really been driven, not one that looks exactly as it did (down to the odometer) when it left the showroom X years ago. If it's done > 6,000 miles per year then it's clearly been on the road and working for extended periods of time. (Although it does mean some things may have started to wear)

Jet Fixer

Original Poster:

96 posts

263 months

Sunday 28th March 2004
quotequote all
Im going to look at a 99 4.5 on tuesday, just dont want to miss something thats obvious to someone in the know

>> Edited by Jet Fixer on Sunday 28th March 13:28