The Reliable Car Thread

The Reliable Car Thread

Author
Discussion

xcseventy

Original Poster:

393 posts

76 months

Thursday 18th January 2018
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Not been on here long, but constantly reading stories about people's cars having a major problem costing £xxxxx to fix, or the engine blowing up because... This thread is for cars that you've had for years with very few issues.

For example.

Ran a 2000 1.8 tddi focus for 18 months and 20k miles. Apart from 1 oil and filter service literally nothing went wrong with it. Sold on 125k

Still have a 2003 Rover 75 (cdt) on 140k. Owned for 3 year and 30K in that time apart from 2 snapped springs, and 2 new shocks it's been perfect. Serviced when needed an totally reliable.

My parents are currently running a 2005 Audi A6 (2.0tdi) bought at 60k, now on 212k. Serviced when needed, but still on original gearbox, clutch, exhaust! It's not just sat on the motorway either.

Must be plenty of stories out there.

Rayy

127 posts

141 months

Thursday 18th January 2018
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2008 1.9 diesel VW Touran SE.
Bought at 1yo with 14k miles.
Still own it today and it now has 135k.

Apart from regular servicing, 2 scheduled cambelt changes and brakes/tyres, it has needed:

a new battery
a new suspension bush
a new window regulator
a new fan resistor

Not bad for 9 years and 121k miles.

Agent XXX

1,248 posts

106 months

Thursday 18th January 2018
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oh god, cue another list of "I've got a BMW E/F/Z whatever"

Slow

6,973 posts

137 months

Thursday 18th January 2018
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Agent XXX said:
oh god, cue another list of "I've got a BMW E/F/Z whatever"
Maybe because they are pretty reliable.


Bmw e46, £300 330i touring, 1 year no real issues - now at 177k miles.
Range Rover l322 bought at 148k (bought needing gearbox) but is now on 180k miles without serious issues costing over £100 each.

Pericoloso

44,044 posts

163 months

Thursday 18th January 2018
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Bought a 15yo FIAT Barchetta just over 5 years ago.

VERY reliable ,best car I've owned.

46,000 miles put on by me ,very pleased with it.

any excuse for a pic.

thatdude

2,655 posts

127 months

Thursday 18th January 2018
quotequote all
Honda Civic 1.6i VTEC Sort (2005 model year).

Bought in 2013 as my first car; I copied my brother as he had one and it looked simple enough for me to work on in my driveway. Covered 20,000 miles in the first year; currently sitting on about 100,000 miles (bought with 45,000 on it). Regularly serviced (oil changes every 6000-8000 miles, a cam belt - water pump was ok - gearbox oil change, couple of spark plug changes and air and cabin filter changes) the only thing that has actually caused need for fixing was cleaning the throttle body when the idle control valve got sticky. It's not perfect, but it is living up to the Honda stereotype.


anonymous-user

54 months

Thursday 18th January 2018
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Suzuki Jimny softtop - bought when 8 years old. Soft top was in poor nick and was too stiff with age to undo. Passed its MOT every year for the next 3 years with no work needed. Never let us down. Sad to let it go. Would buy a hardtop next time.

Fiat Panda - 10 years old - bought at 5 years old. Never broken down. needed bits and bobs for MOTs.


jhonn

1,567 posts

149 months

Thursday 18th January 2018
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Toyota Yaris (yr 2000), went to 150k before we sold it - nothing mechanical went wrong with it, wasn't bad for rust either.

MDMA .

8,894 posts

101 months

Thursday 18th January 2018
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Bought MrsMDMA a brand new VW Golf back in 2005. Still owns it today. Oil and filters every year, has had a set of front pads, set of tyres and a replacement battery. That is all it has needed in over 12 years.

OverSteery

3,609 posts

231 months

Thursday 18th January 2018
quotequote all
Agent XXX said:
oh god, cue another list of "I've got a BMW E/F/Z whatever"
Chevrolet camaro v8 5.7litre. 3 years and 20k miles. Oil and filters - that's it. Probably was due for new pads when I sold it for the same price I paid.

Even with the petrol bill, cheap motoring.

Big GT

1,810 posts

92 months

Thursday 18th January 2018
quotequote all
Goodun's

Alpina D3Bi - 50K miles no issues
4 BMW's - 250K miles no probs
Many Ford Focus's. 100K mile between them no problems
VW Touareg - 4 years 40K miles no problems
TVR - 1 battery
One Saab which was fantastic
VAG TDI's - 200K miles no issues

OK'ers

Audi A6 3.0 90K miles 1 new clutch
Some Renaults - meh
BMW 4 Series Coupe - Constant electrical gremlins. warranty but hassle
Landrovers

Bad Bad Bad

Porsches - Total Engine failures
300ZX - TBH was a Dog at birth just constant niggles
My Peugeots = Money pit
Every Vauxhall I have had fails before 70K

Dovile

47 posts

140 months

Thursday 18th January 2018
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my 16-reg citroen c1 probably is still too new to make more definitive judgement (though no problems under 2 years and over 50k miles so far)

my husband's 1998 starlet sr, owned as his first car since he passed his test in august 2006 had been mechanically unbeatable, maybe until a couple of months back, engine starting to cut out occasionally..... :s
has needed some major rust repairs to pass past 2 mot's, and the exterior is very shabby looking! though nothing that is offputting from the idea of another toyota being the eventual replacement. 380k miles total, of which 290k done in the 11.5 year ownership period, so only look at it in a good light. though i tend not to miss any of my own former cars, i will miss the starlet,it was in our wedding photos! will be sure to nick the speedline rims before scrapping it..... whistle

IntriguedUser

989 posts

121 months

Thursday 18th January 2018
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Vauxhall Corsa 1.8 Sri x 2 (around 60,000 miles total)

- 1 x MAF Sensor (ECP, Siemens unit around £90)
- 1 x Throttle body (£20 scrapyard)

That's it.




mike80

2,248 posts

216 months

Thursday 18th January 2018
quotequote all
I've had one of each version Ford Focus.

Mk1 1.6 petrol, Mk2 2.0 petrol and now latest 1 litre turbo.

Any problems have been of my own making, all faultless. Might be a bit dull for some here though!

Torcars

8,073 posts

189 months

Thursday 18th January 2018
quotequote all
2007 Mazda CX-7 petrol. Bought new and still in the family.

It needed a new Turbo after a few months which was done under warranty.

For the last decade it has been fine with the only replacements being consumables and a couple of worn suspension bits.

Its still serviced by the supplying dealer.

Theres no point in replacing it until something big fails. Even then...

£23,000 well spent.

murphyaj

631 posts

75 months

Thursday 18th January 2018
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I've owned three old Nissan Micras. One for 3 years during University, bought for £1300 from holiday job pay at 90k miles, the second as a learner car for my wife because she wanted something tiny. The third was because a car accident left said wife with nothing to take her to work and I needed anything with 4 wheels as long as I could pick it up the next day, so I bought the first serviceable Micra I came across for about £900 planning to upgrade it as soon as I had time to shop around for something "proper"; we ended up keeping it as a second car for 2 years because it was faultless (and also because she couldn't care less what she drives as long as it works).

All were between 10 and 14 years old, all with 90k to 120k on the clock, all bought for well under £2000, and all never missed a beat. They were owned for a collective total of 6 years, covering around 40k miles, and in all that time the only unplanned expense was an airflow sensor I fitted myself. Not once did any of them fail to start, fail an MOT, have any electrical gremlins, break down or give any other kind of trouble.

If I suddenly found myself in need of a dependable set of wheels for a bargain price my only question is which Nissan Micra would I buy.

V88Dicky

7,305 posts

183 months

Thursday 18th January 2018
quotequote all
I'll nominate my old Monaro CV8, which I owned for just over nine years (a record for me) hehe

Aside from annual servicing and the usual consumables, the only thing it ever needed was an oil pressure sender, which was a fairly cheap generic part.

I miss the old girl frown


kieranblenk

865 posts

134 months

Thursday 18th January 2018
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Our Swift has been epic; 7 years old in May we got it nearly 4 years ago and covered over 60k so far since. It's got 86k on and it still feels tight as a drum. We were gonna trade it in for a new Baleno but it seemed daft when the Swift just plods on and on.

anonymous-user

54 months

Thursday 18th January 2018
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My old Integra DC2. Owned for 6 years and took it from 12K to 60K. Only failure, interior light bulb. That car soaked up all sorts of abuse, always serviced on time etc but even so, never put a foot wrong. Other notable car was the S60 D5. From 120K to 230K and was utterly dependable. It's only vice was suspension drop links.

parabolica

6,715 posts

184 months

Thursday 18th January 2018
quotequote all
Agent XXX said:
oh god, cue another list of "I've got a BMW E/F/Z whatever"
BMW F13 640i; coming up on 6 years old/3 years ownership/54k miles and apart from an imploding glass roof, I haven't had one thing go wrong with it.

Hope I met your expectations.