A sporty but also practical car
A sporty but also practical car
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Discussion

Jimmay

Original Poster:

8 posts

169 months

Wednesday 29th February 2012
quotequote all
I'm looking for a fast but practical family car. Budget 8k but I could stretch to 9k if absolutely necessary. I need 4 doors ideally and a large boot to fit a mountain bike inside fairly easily. Although I might consider a rear bike rack if necessary. I've been looking at hot hatches mostly as they seem to tick most boxes, but I'm open to any suggestions. Most coupes and saloons have tiny boots so I have avoided these for now. I would consider estates if the performance is good and its cheapish to run.

I've been reading reviews/articles, watching videos for about a week now but can't even come up with a shortlist to test drive! Just seems to be so much choice. Every car has its positives/negatives but I'm finding it hard to find a good compromise.

These are the cars I've looked at so far. I haven't ruled any of them out, but I'm leaning to some more than others for various reasons.

VW Golf GTI mkv
VW Golf R32
SEAT Leon Cupra
Focus ST-3
Mondeo ST220
BMW 130i
Subaru WRX hatchback or Sportswagon
Audi S3(old) Mazda3 MPS

blearyeyedboy

6,741 posts

202 months

Wednesday 29th February 2012
quotequote all
I'm going to do my usual trick of suggesting you add a Skoda Octavia vRS to that list. The hatch boots are enormous and you get something which is mechanically very close to a Golf GTi for a lot less.

veevee

1,458 posts

174 months

Wednesday 29th February 2012
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3 series touring?

Jimmay

Original Poster:

8 posts

169 months

Wednesday 29th February 2012
quotequote all
Anyone have experience driving/owning any of the cars I listed, and can comment on what they're like? Anything to look out for when viewing/driving any of the cars on the list?

rallycross

13,691 posts

260 months

Wednesday 29th February 2012
quotequote all
I would take a look at the BMW 335i.

Petrol, 310 bhp, twin turbo, 30+ mpg.

If you look for a while you will find a high mileage 100k plus one owner ex co' car within your budget of £9k.


ben_h100

1,548 posts

202 months

Wednesday 29th February 2012
quotequote all
Jimmay said:
I'm looking for a fast but practical family car. Budget 8k but I could stretch to 9k if absolutely necessary. I need 4 doors ideally and a large boot to fit a mountain bike inside fairly easily. Although I might consider a rear bike rack if necessary. I've been looking at hot hatches mostly as they seem to tick most boxes, but I'm open to any suggestions. Most coupes and saloons have tiny boots so I have avoided these for now. I would consider estates if the performance is good and its cheapish to run.

I've been reading reviews/articles, watching videos for about a week now but can't even come up with a shortlist to test drive! Just seems to be so much choice. Every car has its positives/negatives but I'm finding it hard to find a good compromise.

These are the cars I've looked at so far. I haven't ruled any of them out, but I'm leaning to some more than others for various reasons.

VW Golf GTI mkv
VW Golf R32
SEAT Leon Cupra
Focus ST-3
Mondeo ST220
BMW 130i
Subaru WRX hatchback or Sportswagon
Audi S3(old) Mazda3 MPS
I've owned two ST-3s, very nice cars, very reliable, cheap to service, good handling, great for cruising down the motorway (GT type car), but also good on the twisties if a tad heavy. They sound amazing and you can have 270+ BHP from a simple remap. The only downside I found was the fuel economy, expect high twenties average at best if you drive it enthusiastically. On the motorway if you drive it like a saint (eggshell under the pedal!) it is possible to get 40mpg. The interior (Recaro heated leather) is IMO excellent, especially on the facelifted models, very nice place to be and on a par with, if not better than, any of the other cars listed. You may be able to get one with keyless unlock/start for that price, not sure. Engine has character, exhaust burbles and pops on the overrun. Did I mention the engine sounds incredible? (Test drive one!)

My dad owns one of the S3s you mention (53/54 plate, can't remember). Again it's a very nice car, if slightly dated. For driving, it sticks to the road like glue and has decent performance for everyday driving. Again, a remap can give you extra horses for not too much wonga.

I test drove a R32 and the performance and overall feel of the car impressed me, however it is said to suffer from poor mpg for the performance, and I'm not sure if the tax is more due to the engine size. In the real world performance wise, it is similar to a standard ST. What mileages are you looking at for your budget?

Haven't driven any of the other cars but the 1 series might be a bit small for carrying your bike about and general practicality.


Kurtcobain

167 posts

169 months

Wednesday 29th February 2012
quotequote all
E39 m5

Liam79

413 posts

274 months

Wednesday 29th February 2012
quotequote all
Mazda 6 mps would be worth a look

Golaboots

369 posts

171 months

Wednesday 29th February 2012
quotequote all
The Mondeo and Octavia boots are plenty bigger than most of those. Have you seen a 1 series, they're tiny.

Somnophore

1,364 posts

199 months

Wednesday 29th February 2012
quotequote all
Cupra R

spogxy

138 posts

170 months

Wednesday 29th February 2012
quotequote all
Honda S2000....

This is a 2 1/2M bit of timber I brought back from b und q! Now that's practical, no? scratchchin

edit: Ooops, I didn't read the OP properly I just saw, practical, sporty and 9K - by which I thought you meant 9000RPM



Also I can fit a bike rack to the boot, so not an entirely ridiculous response...hehe

Edited by spogxy on Wednesday 29th February 19:31

Jimmay

Original Poster:

8 posts

169 months

Wednesday 29th February 2012
quotequote all
ben_h100 said:
I've owned two ST-3s, very nice cars, very reliable, cheap to service, good handling, great for cruising down the motorway (GT type car), but also good on the twisties if a tad heavy. They sound amazing and you can have 270+ BHP from a simple remap. The only downside I found was the fuel economy, expect high twenties average at best if you drive it enthusiastically. On the motorway if you drive it like a saint (eggshell under the pedal!) it is possible to get 40mpg. The interior (Recaro heated leather) is IMO excellent, especially on the facelifted models, very nice place to be and on a par with, if not better than, any of the other cars listed. You may be able to get one with keyless unlock/start for that price, not sure. Engine has character, exhaust burbles and pops on the overrun. Did I mention the engine sounds incredible? (Test drive one!)

My dad owns one of the S3s you mention (53/54 plate, can't remember). Again it's a very nice car, if slightly dated. For driving, it sticks to the road like glue and has decent performance for everyday driving. Again, a remap can give you extra horses for not too much wonga.

I test drove a R32 and the performance and overall feel of the car impressed me, however it is said to suffer from poor mpg for the performance, and I'm not sure if the tax is more due to the engine size. In the real world performance wise, it is similar to a standard ST. What mileages are you looking at for your budget?

Haven't driven any of the other cars but the 1 series might be a bit small for carrying your bike about and general practicality.
Great post. Thanks for that.

I only do about 30 miles a day(commute) and then about 50 at weekends. So not much really.

The Focus has been one of my favs from the start. Hopefully I can get a drive this weekend.

And the more 1 series BMWs I see the more I realise how small they are. I'm sure their performance is amazing, but I can't help think if I got one I'd wish I'd got something bigger.

WeirdNeville

6,034 posts

238 months

Wednesday 29th February 2012
quotequote all
Do you have to spend all 8k and What do you mean by "cheap to run"?

It just seems odd that someone wanting economy has £8k to burn on a car.

FWIW, I'd look at BMW Estates and test drive an Impreza Estate to see if you can live with the comparatively "raw" feel (rod noise etc), in exchange for a bit more performance and B-Road pace.

But the default option is a nice 6 cylinder engines BMW estate. Very, very hard to beat at what they do.

Fat Albert

1,461 posts

204 months

Wednesday 29th February 2012
quotequote all
<AHEM>
Shopping:

Mountain Bike:

kids & Dog:


'nuff said



Edited by Fat Albert on Wednesday 29th February 23:28

rob.e

2,862 posts

301 months

Wednesday 29th February 2012
quotequote all
blearyeyedboy said:
I'm going to do my usual trick of suggesting you add a Skoda Octavia vRS to that list. The hatch boots are enormous and you get something which is mechanically very close to a Golf GTi for a lot less.
+1

VRS estate will easily swallow your bike.

Matt UK

18,080 posts

223 months

Wednesday 29th February 2012
quotequote all
Audi S4 4.2 V8

Or an Audi RS6 V8TT if you can afford to run the bugger

blearyeyedboy

6,741 posts

202 months

Thursday 1st March 2012
quotequote all
rob.e said:
blearyeyedboy said:
I'm going to do my usual trick of suggesting you add a Skoda Octavia vRS to that list. The hatch boots are enormous and you get something which is mechanically very close to a Golf GTi for a lot less.
+1

VRS estate will easily swallow your bike.
My hatch swallows mine. With careful placing and a tarp to stop getting mud everywhere wink you could get two in with the seats down.

Edited by blearyeyedboy on Thursday 1st March 00:32