Should I downgrade?
Should I downgrade?
Author
Discussion

Ads22

Original Poster:

364 posts

157 months

Wednesday 7th November 2018
quotequote all
Hi there

Been wracking my brains as to whether downgrade from the MK5 Golf GTi i have to something cheaper to run and maintain. Im in two minds as to what to do so keen to hear some thoughts.

The situation is with in the next year or so I plan to go and retrain for a new career, will likely end up doing a 2 year foundation degree and work part time. i will need to get funds together to pay for any courses together having already graduated years ago.

I currently have a MK5 Golf Gti with a nice spec, - leather seats, upgraded apple play stereo, auto lights and wipers ect. i have had to replace quite a few parts over the fairly short time ive had it aswell as some interior items to keep it looking fresh. While its a lovely car it isnt the cheapest to run. Im also very conscious that parts on this car are not cheap, its currently sitting at 111,000 miles. If the Turbo, clutch, flywheel and rack let go then were looking at some very expensive repairs. Ive already had to replace the fuel pump, cambelt chain and tensioners costing a fair amount!

So im considering the alternatives, as I only use my car a few days a week now. I have been looking at cars around the £2k mark (maybe less if its a runaround?) which would be ideal for a cheap reliable car but are not completely mind numbing to drive.

Some ive considered so far are:
Suzuki Swift Sport 1.6 - Great car but pushing the budget a little, although high mileage ones look tidy still
EP2 Honda Civic Sport 1.6/ 2.0 Type S - Nice tidy examples in budget but hearing about issues with steering racks conking out?
Volvo c30 - Nice looking car but would have to 1.6 boggo spec to keep in budget, quite heavy cars for engine size
Honda Prelude 2.0 - Love these but finding a manual is very difficult
Toyota Corolla 1.6 - I dont know much about these but seem to have some nice examples within budget
Slightly wild card but - Lexus Is200 - Plenty in budget but not sure itd fit the criteria for parts, running costs ect.

Or is it best to stick with the devil you know and pray nothing goes wrong. While im aware that any used car can come with their own problems, id say all these ive come across are pretty simple cars that are reliable with no complicated mechanics.

Any thoughts would be great, especially from those who have had to do the same.



Edited by Ads22 on Wednesday 7th November 12:20

ZX10R NIN

29,807 posts

146 months

Wednesday 7th November 2018
quotequote all
All cars of a certain age will need work to maintain them, the Lexus is probably your best bet or a Toyota Celica, or an ST170 both are robust & you should be able to do a lot of the maintenance work yourself which should keep the running costs sensible.

Or a Mazda 3 Sport are worth a look, the bargain car at the moment is the 1.6 Alfa 147 they're robust a decent steer as well as being relatively newer than other cars in this price bracket & it won't cost you the earth to run:

https://www.autotrader.co.uk/classified/advert/201...

https://www.autotrader.co.uk/classified/advert/201...

designforlife

3,742 posts

184 months

Wednesday 7th November 2018
quotequote all
I recently did similar...got married this year and was struggling to justify the financial and practical sense of keeping an integra DC5 which really wasn't getting the use it should.

I miss the car but I don't regret selling up, paid off a good £6k worth of debt and have enough leftover to buy something cheaper but interesting.

I know I can get something else a bit more pokey further down the line when I'm in a better financial position, i was hesitant about letting the DC5 go, but on reflection it was definately the right call.

I've put a deposit down on something JDM and quirky, which should be fun to own, just in a very different way to the DC5.

So i say, if the numbers make sense, better to let it go.



designforlife

3,742 posts

184 months

Wednesday 7th November 2018
quotequote all
In terms of actual car suggestions-

-Suzuki Ignis sport
-Toyota MR2 mk2/mk3
-mx5
-Civic EP2 sport
-Yaris T sport
-Corolla T sport

KomodoWagon

157 posts

105 months

Wednesday 7th November 2018
quotequote all
If it were me, I'd stick with what I knew. Any older car is likely to need work doing over a period of ownership and the upside of your Golf is that you already own and know the car. With something else - even if it is a Lexus or a Honda - everything's an unknown quantity. You will have limited idea of how well it's been treated up to the point you buy it. And less forward visibility on how much it's likely to cost you during a period when you'll be on a reduced income.

So, yeah, I'd probably keep it. But - here's the caveat - the best way to do this would be to stop guessing what might go wrong and praying it doesn't, and start planning in some proactive maintenance now, while you're still on a higher salary. Get it future-proofed a bit, if you will. Can you get it looked at by a specialist - ideally a well-regarded indie, not a VW dealer - and get some advice on how long you've got on those items you mention? Then you can look at planning in getting any critical stuff sorted over the next few months while you're still earning more. Phase the costs a bit.

I mean, I hear you when you say that a Golf GTI is pricey to maintain. And it might be that it is, in fact, uneconomical to keep it. But mights and maybes don't keep cars going. That's why I reckon you need more information. If you've got more foresight from an expert opinion over how much it's likely to cost you, it's easier to do the sums around what it would cost to keep it versus chopping it in.

daniel-5zjw7

646 posts

122 months

Wednesday 7th November 2018
quotequote all
I'd stick with the golf along the lines of the devil you know. you'll likely loose money on the sale of it plus the money you've spent on it, and on top of that take on the risk of the unknown with a cheap car. Lets face it any old car around the 2k mark is going to be relatively old and need work of some sort, you may be able to put it off while you retrain but you could also do that with the golf.

designforlife

3,742 posts

184 months

Wednesday 7th November 2018
quotequote all
And i guess the other important question is, do you own it outright?

Would it free up capital? cut down on a monthly loan repayment? Pay off debt?

Any car you replace it with will probably broadly cost a similar amount to maintain...but if you have cash tied in the car that you want to free up, then selling makes a lot of sense.

if you are selling just to minimise running costs, then sticking with the golf makes more sense...better the devil you know as has been said.


Ads22

Original Poster:

364 posts

157 months

Wednesday 7th November 2018
quotequote all
designforlife said:
And i guess the other important question is, do you own it outright?

Would it free up capital? cut down on a monthly loan repayment? Pay off debt?

Any car you replace it with will probably broadly cost a similar amount to maintain...but if you have cash tied in the car that you want to free up, then selling makes a lot of sense.

if you are selling just to minimise running costs, then sticking with the golf makes more sense...better the devil you know as has been said.
I do own the car - albeit with a small amount of a bank loan i used to purchase it. I feel that most of the stuff that could potentially let go wouldnt cost much less on a cheaper car. Air Con unts, Steering racks, (especially electric!) and clutches all seem to cost broadly the sameive discovered.
It would be the quirks of that specific model that bother me such as turbo, engine components ect that could sting me. In my eyes VW doesnt seem the best for reliability which is what is attracting me to Hondas mainly.

Im trying to not be caught up in sentiment towards it but i fear im dealing with a time bomb waiting to go off at the worst time. Or am i being irrational. Its a shame as it does come across as a looked after car in a good condition - and those Golfs really do seem to cover all bases!. And if i did sell up, am I just exchanging one set of things that need doing for another. My gripe also is it is not the most economical to run and does owning a 'GTi' really make sense for me.

Ahbefive

11,657 posts

193 months

Wednesday 7th November 2018
quotequote all
Keep it. Theres nothing worse than spending good money maintaining crap cars. At least spend it maintaining something you like.

Mr Tidy

28,586 posts

148 months

Thursday 8th November 2018
quotequote all
[quote=Ads22]

cambelt chain

Edited by Ads22 on Wednesday 7th November 12:20
[/quoteEitherv]

Surely it has a belt or a chain?

I'd just keep it - how much cash are you likely to release from a GTi with 111K miles?

Ads22

Original Poster:

364 posts

157 months

Thursday 8th November 2018
quotequote all
Mr Tidy]ds22 said:
cambelt chain

Edited by Ads22 on Wednesday 7th November 12:20
[/quoteEitherv]

Surely it has a belt or a chain?

I'd just keep it - how much cash are you likely to release from a GTi with 111K miles?
Strangely the AXX engine has both. Chain for one cam and belt for other cam. I really dont know what advantage of this was. Thankfully both have been replaced when the fuel cam and pump were replaced. It wasnt cheap!

designforlife

3,742 posts

184 months

Thursday 8th November 2018
quotequote all
if you aren't going to release more than a couple of grand by selling up, i would say keep it. Any new used car is gonna swallow at least a few hundred in the first year of ownership getting bits and pieces done.

Any used car has the potential to go expensively wrong at any time, it comes with the territory.

Hondas are reliable, but the parts prices are pretty painful.

Pica-Pica

15,771 posts

105 months

Thursday 8th November 2018
quotequote all
Keep it.

Pistonheader101

2,206 posts

128 months

Friday 9th November 2018
quotequote all
Honestly the mk5 is cheap as chips to run and maintain. Oil changes from £30

Ads22

Original Poster:

364 posts

157 months

Wednesday 14th November 2018
quotequote all
KomodoWagon said:
If it were me, I'd stick with what I knew. Any older car is likely to need work doing over a period of ownership and the upside of your Golf is that you already own and know the car. With something else - even if it is a Lexus or a Honda - everything's an unknown quantity. You will have limited idea of how well it's been treated up to the point you buy it. And less forward visibility on how much it's likely to cost you during a period when you'll be on a reduced income.

So, yeah, I'd probably keep it. But - here's the caveat - the best way to do this would be to stop guessing what might go wrong and praying it doesn't, and start planning in some proactive maintenance now, while you're still on a higher salary. Get it future-proofed a bit, if you will. Can you get it looked at by a specialist - ideally a well-regarded indie, not a VW dealer - and get some advice on how long you've got on those items you mention? Then you can look at planning in getting any critical stuff sorted over the next few months while you're still earning more. Phase the costs a bit.

I mean, I hear you when you say that a Golf GTI is pricey to maintain. And it might be that it is, in fact, uneconomical to keep it. But mights and maybes don't keep cars going. That's why I reckon you need more information. If you've got more foresight from an expert opinion over how much it's likely to cost you, it's easier to do the sums around what it would cost to keep it versus chopping it in.
Thats some sound advice and i actually plan to get one to have a good look next week. I know my shock absorbers will need doing but also want to know potential big items that could be looming....

Main fears id say are Turbo, Clutch, DMF, Rack and just making sure its running effeciently. If those appear sound then id be happy to keep things going and deal with anything that goes unless absolutely necessary.

stargazer30

1,691 posts

187 months

Thursday 15th November 2018
quotequote all
For fun and cheap to buy and run I've never had better than the 3 MR2 roadsters I've owned. As long as you don't need more than 2 seats, don't need a boot and don't have to drive at speed/long distance in any really bad weather they are great. Dead easy to fix, cheap to maintain. Warm hatch performance and good economy for an old car.

The only expensive items to watch for buying are oil burners (try to get a facelift) and rusty sub frames.

Mr Tidy

28,586 posts

148 months

Thursday 15th November 2018
quotequote all
I'd keep the car I knew - most cars for sale are for sale for a reason! laugh

And how much cash could you really raise from selling a MK5 GTi on 111K miles anyway?