Ex press cars - to be avoided or to be revered?
Discussion
I'm looking at a W211 AMG E55, but stumbled across some info today that it's an ex press car (ie. a car used in some magazine road tests at the time, etc). My feeling would be that these cars probably get ragged at the time and should probably be avoided later in their lives, but what's the concensus here?
One of my cars was supposedly an ex-press fleet car. Although I bought it at 180k, so I'd imagine any problems would have been ironed out at this point. It never had any big bills in the (very comprehensive) service history and it's on 230K now, so I'd say that all is ok. If the car is in good condition on inspection, I'd imagine that it would be better to go on that.
Press cars are often 'massaged' or at the very least they are checked very thoroughly to ensure they are the perfect example of their breed and not a Friday afternoon car.
At least you know about it before you buy. I was once told a story about a customer who bought a 12 month old SsangYong Musso (late 90s one) from their local dealer. A week later they returned in the car demanding to see the dealer principal, while brandishing a copy of a magazine featuring a pic of their car airbourne over a jump on an offroad course!
At least you know about it before you buy. I was once told a story about a customer who bought a 12 month old SsangYong Musso (late 90s one) from their local dealer. A week later they returned in the car demanding to see the dealer principal, while brandishing a copy of a magazine featuring a pic of their car airbourne over a jump on an offroad course!
If price is right and the condition appeals to you then I would.
People say otherwise, but I have seen press garages and while the cars get used hard when in the hands of 'the press' the maintenance between loans is second to none. The last thing a manufacturer wants is a press car going to a mag with rattling trim, low power or tired ANYTHING.
They are well looked after, but whether you can live with stumbling across a smokey drift shot in a magazine later on is a decision only you can make.
People say otherwise, but I have seen press garages and while the cars get used hard when in the hands of 'the press' the maintenance between loans is second to none. The last thing a manufacturer wants is a press car going to a mag with rattling trim, low power or tired ANYTHING.
They are well looked after, but whether you can live with stumbling across a smokey drift shot in a magazine later on is a decision only you can make.
ZeeTacoe said:
jamiebae said:
Ask Chris Harris about Ferrari press cars 
According to a source at McLaren the MP4-12C is better to drive, and faster than a production 458 Italia, but the press cars are not quite the same as the regular production ones.
Hardly an impartial source is it?
According to a source at McLaren the MP4-12C is better to drive, and faster than a production 458 Italia, but the press cars are not quite the same as the regular production ones.
Personally I think the antics Top Gear give things is an extreme. There are some press who will try to check the times and do the clutch dropping launches but I guess the majority would just drive it fairly normally.
We get not press cars but manufacturer demos as they try and sell us to the job fleet. Some manufacturers clearly prepare their demo cars immaculately, and some have every conceivable extra on them, would you believe a Passat pushing £50k?
However there are certain manufacturers who seem to not be particularly careful about presentation. Lost count of Audis with odd tyre pressures and running on fumes. Just what you want, "Oh I'm in a rush, have you got a car?" "Yes we've just got a demo, see how it goes." Leap in fire it up, fuel warning light DING!!
Of course it could be the fleet manager pulling a fast one.
We get not press cars but manufacturer demos as they try and sell us to the job fleet. Some manufacturers clearly prepare their demo cars immaculately, and some have every conceivable extra on them, would you believe a Passat pushing £50k?
However there are certain manufacturers who seem to not be particularly careful about presentation. Lost count of Audis with odd tyre pressures and running on fumes. Just what you want, "Oh I'm in a rush, have you got a car?" "Yes we've just got a demo, see how it goes." Leap in fire it up, fuel warning light DING!!
Of course it could be the fleet manager pulling a fast one.ZeeTacoe said:
Hardly an impartial source is it?
It's not the only source though, the rumour of Ferrari massaging their press cars has been around for a long, long time now, and quite a few other auto journals have reported on it. Whether or not that makes it any more accurate, I don't know, but it's food for thought.Gassing Station | General Gassing | Top of Page | What's New | My Stuff





