What car with 5 doors?
What car with 5 doors?
Author
Discussion

dawsonz

Original Poster:

70 posts

174 months

Thursday 25th January 2018
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I was hoping the PistonHeads community could try and help me with my future car. So, I currently have a 3 door Fiesta ST180. This will need to be replaced at the end of the year for something with 5 doors due to a new arrival. Therefore, I'll need to be able to get a baby seat in the back comfortably. The issue I'm having, is finding something to replace the Fiesta ST (which I absolutely love), but that has the additional 2 doors. I only do around 8k miles a year, petrol is therefore preferred and economy isn't the end of the world.

My considerations so far have been:

Alfa Romeo Gulietta 1.4 TB MultiAir - Seems like a good allrounders, good sized boot, 170hp.
Mk6 Volkswagen Golf GTI - Always liked the golfs, read a few stories of timing chain tensioner issues.
Ford Focus ST2/3 (Pre facelift) - Would be one of the early models, therefore higher mileage, but like the look and seems a good upgrade from the Fiesta.

Are there any other suggestions or recommendations that fulfill the following criteria;

Petrol
5 doors
Relatively fun
Somewhat reliable
No older than 8/9 years.


mrbarnett

1,158 posts

114 months

Thursday 25th January 2018
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I know it's rude to talk money but do you have a rough budget?

kambites

70,420 posts

242 months

Thursday 25th January 2018
quotequote all
In much the same situation, we went for an Octavia VRS. The extra boot space over a Golf or Focus really comes in handy with a baby, not least because you can fit one of the ubiquitous fold-up push chairs like this in longitudinally, leaving most of the boot free for other stuff:


AppleJuice

2,162 posts

106 months

Thursday 25th January 2018
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Mazda 3 2.0?

Congratulations on your new arrival smile

dawsonz

Original Poster:

70 posts

174 months

Thursday 25th January 2018
quotequote all
mrbarnett said:
I know it's rude to talk money but do you have a rough budget?
Not at all, definitely helpssmile

A max of 12k.

jimPH

3,981 posts

101 months

Thursday 25th January 2018
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We got an M135i. Just research the spec/options you want, there's always a compromise with BMWs.

bga

8,134 posts

272 months

Thursday 25th January 2018
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A 5 seater Golf GTI was all the car we needed when we were a family of 3. TBH pretty much any 5-door medium sized hatch is going to have family as a significant market so will be able to accommodate.

dawsonz

Original Poster:

70 posts

174 months

Thursday 25th January 2018
quotequote all
kambites said:
In much the same situation, we went for an Octavia VRS. The extra boot space over a Golf or Focus really comes in handy with a baby, not least because you can fit one of the ubiquitous fold-up push chairs like this in longitudinally, leaving most of the boot free for other stuff:
What did you go for, petrol or diesel, and was it a mk2 or mk3?

AppleJuice said:
Mazda 3 2.0?

Congratulations on your new arrival smile
Many thanks smile I like the Mazda 3, just don't think it fits the 'relatively fun' category, but happy to be proven wrong.

kambites

70,420 posts

242 months

Thursday 25th January 2018
quotequote all
dawsonz said:
kambites said:
In much the same situation, we went for an Octavia VRS. The extra boot space over a Golf or Focus really comes in handy with a baby, not least because you can fit one of the ubiquitous fold-up push chairs like this in longitudinally, leaving most of the boot free for other stuff:
What did you go for, petrol or diesel, and was it a mk2 or mk3?
Ours is a petrol pre-facelift mk2 (2006). We've had it a while now though, I'd be looking at an early mk3 if I was in the same position now.

Sk00p

3,967 posts

248 months

Thursday 25th January 2018
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We struggled with a Golf GTI and the rear facing child seat, front seat passenger ended up very cramped when it was in place.

M Sport 3 series Touring? 1 Series is a bit small IMO. You can manage on the smaller cars but life is so much easier with a bit more space.

kambites

70,420 posts

242 months

Thursday 25th January 2018
quotequote all
If you intend to keep the car for long, it's worth deciding now whether you're going to go down the "extended rear-facing seat" route. You need a considerably bigger car to make that work.

Sk00p

3,967 posts

248 months

Thursday 25th January 2018
quotequote all
kambites said:
If you intend to keep the car for long, it's worth deciding now whether you're going to go down the "extended rear-facing seat" route. You need a considerably bigger car to make that work.
Friend of mine did that until his was about 4 years old. Was snug in the back of an A6!

kambites

70,420 posts

242 months

Thursday 25th January 2018
quotequote all
Sk00p said:
Friend of mine did that until his was about 4 years old. Was snug in the back of an A6!
LWB S-class it is then? hehe

stumpage

2,189 posts

247 months

Thursday 25th January 2018
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Octavia VRS

Shaoxter

4,490 posts

145 months

Thursday 25th January 2018
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You're not going to be driving in a "fun" manner with a baby in the back so I'd just get something big and bargey, a V8 engined BMW E61 for example.

SmilerFTM

832 posts

171 months

Thursday 25th January 2018
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A 4 four door 335i could be got I reckon within the rest of your criteria

Shakermaker

11,317 posts

121 months

Thursday 25th January 2018
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Shaoxter said:
You're not going to be driving in a "fun" manner with a baby in the back so I'd just get something big and bargey, a V8 engined BMW E61 for example.
No, but you can still drive fun when the baby isn't in the back

kambites

70,420 posts

242 months

Thursday 25th January 2018
quotequote all
SmilerFTM said:
A 4 four door 335i could be got I reckon within the rest of your criteria
That was another car we looked at (well a four-door, the GT didn't exist at the time) but whilst it would have done the job, it wouldn't have done it as well as the Octavia - the boot is smaller, there's less space in the back, the transmission tunnel intrusion makes it much harder to carry two adults along with a baby seat (which is handy to be able to do occasionally)... but of course it's a far better car to drive and a quieter cruiser so I suppose it comes down to priorities. I have the Elise for when I'm not with the family. smile

Herbs

4,995 posts

250 months

Thursday 25th January 2018
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Ex Mrs Herbs had a Civic Type S which worked very well - enough room for the rear facing seat and the funky split rear seat which folds up gave us a decent amount of room when doing shopping runs etc when the boot is full of buggy and baby bags.

Would highly recommend one.


bga

8,134 posts

272 months

Thursday 25th January 2018
quotequote all
Herbs said:
Ex Mrs Herbs had a Civic Type S which worked very well - enough room for the rear facing seat and the funky split rear seat which folds up gave us a decent amount of room when doing shopping runs etc when the boot is full of buggy and baby bags.
I've not seen that before. Looks very useful.