Alfa Romeo 156 - talk to me
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crofty1984

Original Poster:

16,799 posts

226 months

Tuesday 17th August 2010
quotequote all
Hi all,
I've got the opportunity to buy a 156 for my mum.
My parents generally buy a car and run it till it dies, so if it lasts 3-4 years (Being an 03 plate you'd hope it would!) without any major issues that should be fine.

Could someone that knows the car give me any advice?
If they have any common faults that may stop it getting an MOT, etc?
It's very low mileage for the year. 10k, but I'd assume that being a dealership-type car it's got about 25k of wear on it, which should still be pretty good for a 7 year old car.
I was thinking if I could get it for a song it might be worth it.

Zod

35,295 posts

280 months

Tuesday 17th August 2010
quotequote all


"Talk to me."

Arese

21,157 posts

209 months

Tuesday 17th August 2010
quotequote all
crofty1984 said:
Hi all,
I've got the opportunity to buy a 156 for my mum.
My parents generally buy a car and run it till it dies, so if it lasts 3-4 years (Being an 03 plate you'd hope it would!) without any major issues that should be fine.

Could someone that knows the car give me any advice?
If they have any common faults that may stop it getting an MOT, etc?
It's very low mileage for the year. 10k, but I'd assume that being a dealership-type car it's got about 25k of wear on it, which should still be pretty good for a 7 year old car.
I was thinking if I could get it for a song it might be worth it.
I have a 2003 (facelift interior) 1.8 TS that I bought to replace my 147GTA last November. I needed to free up some cash, so sold the GTA and got my 156 from a local Alfa specialist (private sale).

Obviously, it was a bit of a come down in terms of performance, but not so much in terms of enjoyment. I find myself throwing the 156 around a lot more, and it makes you try harder because you don't have oodles of power on tap to pull you out of corners.

Anyway, I've done around 18k miles in the ten months I've had mine and spent around £300 over-and-above general maintenance (needed a new suspension wishbone). In that time, I've driven to Shetland and back, and Bournemouth and back a few times without any major problems.

Things I'd advise:

- Take it for a drive over speed-bumps, listen out for any suspension noises. Budget in a few hundred quid if it sounds like something needs doing, bushes etc
- Make sure it has had a cambelt and water pump change recently. Even though it has low miles, the belts can perish over time
- The 1.8 I have does around 480 miles to a tank, mixed driving. The 2.0 will probably do around 450, the 2.4 diesel probably around 500.
- Make sure there's no engine management light on. Electrics can be a bugger.
- Make sure someone checks the oil regularly!

For a 10k miles 2003 model, don't pay more than £2500.

Hugo a Gogo

23,422 posts

255 months

Tuesday 17th August 2010
quotequote all
your parents killed many cars within 3 years have they?

what do they do, banger racing?

crofty1984

Original Poster:

16,799 posts

226 months

Tuesday 17th August 2010
quotequote all
Hugo a Gogo said:
your parents killed many cars within 3 years have they?

what do they do, banger racing?
Only the banger part smile
They have a boat so their money goes on that. I've never known them to spend more than £1500 on a car. And that's rare. Bangernomics FTW!
Oh, it's the 1.9 JTD model, sorry.

sklar

1,491 posts

238 months

Tuesday 17th August 2010
quotequote all
crofty1984 said:
Oh, it's the 1.9 JTD model, sorry.
Sounds like a cracker then. 10k miles only, wow.

Edited by sklar on Tuesday 17th August 11:29

crofty1984

Original Poster:

16,799 posts

226 months

Tuesday 17th August 2010
quotequote all
hora said:
Are they mechanically minded or not easy to pull wool over?
Pretty mechanically minded (Well, Dad is). My worry is if there's a case of "This important £500 part always fails and it's very important" Then it's not so bargain-tastic. If something like sat nav (doesn't have it) or rear parking sensors often fail, that's not an issue, they'll just carry on without it. But if it's something that would stop the car running/passing an MOT then it's an issue.
Sounds like I'll have a punt and change the cambelt/oil and hope for the best.

alfabadass

1,852 posts

221 months

Tuesday 17th August 2010
quotequote all
The JTD are a lot more solid and reliable enginewise.

It's just the cambelt, suspension wishbones you have to look out for. Both the 147 and 156 I've owned both had them changed as they wear out really fast but 10k miles should mean its not a problem!

Cambelt is still 72k/5 years so it should have still had a change or needs changing now...it's around £350...

DamienB

1,203 posts

241 months

Tuesday 17th August 2010
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A 7 year old diesel with only 10K on it? Are you sure that's not really 110K and has had a speedo changed (they do snuff it from time to time)?

crofty1984

Original Poster:

16,799 posts

226 months

Tuesday 17th August 2010
quotequote all
hora said:
DamienB said:
A 7 year old diesel with only 10K on it? Are you sure that's not really 110K and has had a speedo changed (they do snuff it from time to time)?
I missed that crucial bit.

If I was buying a Alfa it'd need to have annual oil changes, not a penny spared (hence loads of bills or evidence/schedule of maintanence etc) and with NO QUESTION MARKS AT ALL.

A diesel thats only got 10k on in 7yrs flags a warning sign to me.

There are plenty out there.
I'm certain of the mileage. I won't go into too many details as it's a work-related vehicle. But I know the history, it wasn't a dealer demo-car, but think that kind of use.
So I'm treating it as 25-30k of wear, naturally!
Hoping to get it for about half price then spend a couple of hundred on cambelt, decent thorough service, etc.
Thought it would be nice for my mum to have "a nice car" seeing as her E36 is on it's last legs and she likes 4-door saloons.

Reedy156

353 posts

198 months

Tuesday 17th August 2010
quotequote all
alfabadass said:
The JTD are a lot more solid and reliable enginewise.

It's just the cambelt, suspension wishbones you have to look out for. Both the 147 and 156 I've owned both had them changed as they wear out really fast but 10k miles should mean its not a problem!

Cambelt is still 72k/5 years so it should have still had a change or needs changing now...it's around £350...
Cambelt is 36k/3 years, ARUK annaunced shortened intervals due to so many failures, this was in 2006! - If the belt has been done/needs doing, make sure the water pump is/was done with a metal impeller, as these go and take the belt with if not...

jason156v6

31 posts

223 months

Tuesday 17th August 2010
quotequote all

Not so familiar with the diesels but horror stories of dreadful unreliabilty about these cars is unfounded.

Usual cambelt etc intervals are important however with proper changes these won't cause you grief

If there are problems is that many parts on them need to be viewed as consumables, suspension especially. They were designed with thought ("its FWD so lets put some wishbones in rather than a simpler layout of shocks and struts) but.... things like bushes on upper wishbones go quicker than other cars, relatively cheap to fix if you have a friendly indie but these things can become annoyances to some especially mainly the usual pub talk experts taking the piss.

Add a couple of hundred quid extra a year into maintenence budgets and all should be well

The main thing is that your Mum will no doubt love it and be the envy of many of her friends




Spy

1,321 posts

229 months

Thursday 19th August 2010
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What are the electrics like on these cars.

Having owned a couple of Alfas many years ago, I found the engines to always be fine but the problems were generally around electrics and rust - are these issues sorted on the 156 ?

jason156v6

31 posts

223 months

Thursday 19th August 2010
quotequote all
What are the electrics like on these cars?


Not as bad as they say... but as B***h control most of the important stuff, they do go.

Reduce the recomended change by a few thousand miles and change, as their stuff is used in most Euro motors no different with most other makers.

bint

4,664 posts

246 months

Thursday 19th August 2010
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Electrics on ours have been spot on (hopes she hasn't just jinxed herself...) and in fact the blown bulb warning light has been perfect both times.

As has already been said, belts and suspension are the ones to check.

Alfahorn

7,818 posts

230 months

Friday 20th August 2010
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Reedy156 said:
alfabadass said:
The JTD are a lot more solid and reliable enginewise.

It's just the cambelt, suspension wishbones you have to look out for. Both the 147 and 156 I've owned both had them changed as they wear out really fast but 10k miles should mean its not a problem!

Cambelt is still 72k/5 years so it should have still had a change or needs changing now...it's around £350...
Cambelt is 36k/3 years, ARUK annaunced shortened intervals due to so many failures, this was in 2006! - If the belt has been done/needs doing, make sure the water pump is/was done with a metal impeller, as these go and take the belt with if not...
On a twinny or JTS yes but this is a JTD and therefore about 60,000 is fine, wouldn't leave it 'til 72.

vonuber

17,868 posts

187 months

Sunday 22nd August 2010
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Electrics on mine can be.. entertaining. Sometimes the rear fog switches on for no reason, stereo controls on the steering wheel are a lottery (they never do the same thing twice) and occasionally the doors lock for no reason.

Apart from that, it's fine biggrin

robsco

7,875 posts

198 months

Sunday 22nd August 2010
quotequote all
No electrical issues with my 156 so far, and the 147 that it has replaced was fine too. A few bulbs and fuses but otherwise virtually spot on. To echo previous posts, more of a concern to you should be belts, suspension bits and regular oil checks (point 3 refers more so to the Twin Spark.)

CinqAbarth

566 posts

187 months

Monday 23rd August 2010
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03 will (most probably) be the best of the 156s - facelift interior and original shell.
(the external facelift came late in 03).

We bought one a good few years back on a 99V plate with 102k miles on it.

We ran it for 4 years, up 135k miles with very little needed other than regular servicing - all we needed in maintenance was a cat., suspension arm, and air-con pipe.

You can't really go wrong with a JTD - they're proven to be reliable as the lumps have been used by Saab, Vauxhall, Alfa, Fiat, Lancia and Vauxhall / Opel.

We liked our 156 so much, I bought an 02 built, but 56 registered, Selespeed Sportwagon with Momo leather.

What's the spec. of the car you're looking at? - they're absolutely beautiful with biscuit coloured Momo leather and the Bose audio upgrade is also worth having.

bint

4,664 posts

246 months

Tuesday 24th August 2010
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Having said I never had issues with electrics, I did omit to say my remote locking spare key wasn't working. However, it's now fixed (go me!) and she's back up to perfect electrics again smile

Oh, and the fuse box cover will fall off, frequently.