RE: Surprisingly cheap Grand Tourers | Six of the Best
RE: Surprisingly cheap Grand Tourers | Six of the Best
Saturday 4th April

Surprisingly cheap Grand Tourers | Six of the Best

Perhaps £30k doesn't go very far on a new car - but it's more than enough for an epic secondhand GT


Jaguar XKR, 2010, 63k, £27,995

With the clocks now forward, the weather (hopefully) warming up and summer holiday planning afoot, it’s hard not to daydream about European road trips. Taking a car to the continent may be more faff (as well as more money) than ever, but done properly there really is little to beat a great driving tour. A top-tier GT is the ideal car for the job, of course, quiet and comfy enough for the long slog through France while also sufficiently thrilling when the tarmac gets twistier. And if it announces your arrival at the overnight stay in some style, then all the better. It’s exactly the kind of car that Jaguar’s reputation is built on, that its latest model hopes to fortify, and which this sort of XKR perfectly encapsulates: fast, suave, and supremely satisfying. £30k is top money for the second-gen model, but good XKs are becoming desirable after too long in the doldrums. Bring on those autoroutes. 

See the original advert

Audi e-tron GT, 2021, 33k, PH Auctions

Before we get to yet more cylinders, a curveball. Yes, before you say anything, it will undeniably take longer to do hundreds of miles across Europe in an electric Audi than a V8 Jaguar, even with 270kW charging. Moreover, it might not be much cheaper to charge an EV rapidly along the way than fuel a big engine either. Nevertheless, the Audi e-tron GT remains a fine choice: massively fast - nothing here will beat it from a toll booth - supremely refined, and capable of cornering at incredible speeds. While looking a million bucks, too - certainly more arresting than the Taycan with which it shares so many important bits. French service stations are nicer than British ones, too, so decent espressos and pastries every couple of hundred miles doesn’t sound too bad. Finally, like all the great GTs in this list, the Audi has depreciated significantly; expect to part with nowhere near the original £112k sticker when it goes under the PH hammer next week.

See the original advert

Aston Martin DB9, 2007, 33k, £29,980

While that Top Gear race against the train was a perfect advert for the DB9’s grand touring abilities, it was no real surprise to find it perfectly suited to the task. It was an Aston Martin, after all, another British brand with a legendary reputation built on brilliant sports cars and tourers. The Vanquish had already set out its 21st-century stall in fine fashion, which the DB9 followed up expertly: perhaps even more debonair, certainly with a swankier interior, and with almost as much power from the glorious V12. The perfect DB7 replacement, and desirable to this day thanks to how it looks and sounds. Early cars weren’t the best to drive, but that improved, and this 2007 example looks to have the Sport Pack wheels. Even if the full SP isn’t included, there’ll be aftermarket upgrades. Plus it’s Pentland Green, for heaven’s sake - don’t be surprised if it’s very easy to forgive a Pentland Green DB9 quite a lot. 

See the original advert

Mercedes S500, 2016, 66k, £29,990

For so long what was to all intents and purposes an S-Class Coupe was called the CL. Back in the '90s, the two-door model typified all that was best about a great era for Mercedes-Benz: beautifully built, stoically stylish, bursting with tech and a pleasure to drive. Subsequent CLs were not so universally worshipped, even with some epic engines. Only when Mercedes had rediscovered its mojo did the S-Class Coupe name from the '80s return, the C217 arriving in 2014. As in previous decades, the two-door Sonderklasse showed off the latest in M-B tech in a very handsome body, complete with a strong engine lineup as well. This S500 gets the 4.7-litre turbo V8, which means both 450hp and an official 32mpg. Who said stylish can’t be sensible as well? There’s a full service history with almost every conceivable extra included. Benefits of being just 10 years old...

See the original advert

Maserati GranTurismo S, 2010, 18k, £28,990

But if the Mercedes is a tad too, well, German for your road trip exploring, then grand tourers really don’t come any more charming than the Maserati GranTurismo. It too has a 4.7-litre V8 engine, but instead of turbo torque and parsimony you get 7,500rpm and a sound to die for. This won’t cruise quite so effortlessly as some of the others, but the Maser will be fabulous on smooth and sweeping tarmac when the opportunity comes; a transaxle layout was good for weight distribution, and going without forced induction or four-wheel drive made that overall mass lower. Then you’re going to arrive in one of the best-looking 2+2s of the 21st century, here jazzed up with the best wheels and red leather. Persuasive, right? Especially at £28,990. Unlikely to be drama-free; very likely to be absolutely worth it. 

See the original advert

BMW 840Ci Sport, 1999, 47k, £24,975

Back when it launched, the 8 Series didn’t quite hit the spot, a bit too tech-obsessed while forgetting about being a great BMW as well. Not what was needed when Mercedes had just launched the best SL that ever there was. But the E31 improved as it went along, culminating in the wonderful 850 CSI, and these days the design alone is reason enough to recommend it. Hard to believe something this sleek and with such presence is now more than 35 years old. The budget won’t stretch to a CSI, though it does buy a really nice 840Ci, the V8 with basically the power of a standard 850 V12 and a bit less fear factor. This one is not only very rare as Individual Glacier Green, but is also one of the very last 8 Series ever made in 1999. A bit of BMW history that looks better than ever. 

See the original advert

Author
Discussion

JottoSW1

Original Poster:

17 posts

51 months

Saturday 4th April
quotequote all
Mercedes for me, though I'm not sure what the hell "stoically stylish " means ?

pb8g09

3,094 posts

94 months

Saturday 4th April
quotequote all
Yum yum, lovely list of cars, even the Audi is the best looking EV to be made so far.

As for the pricing, some of these feel they have quite a bit of depreciating still to come (the Jag and Merc specifically).

I’d pick the Maserati if I’m feeling romantic, but realistically I’d probably go for an Aston V8V as a ‘sensible’ purchase.

_Rodders_

2,080 posts

44 months

Saturday 4th April
quotequote all
E31's are magnificent. The only problem is when you've seen them for £3k it's hard to see them for 10x as much nearly 20 years later.

chirurgus

465 posts

241 months

Saturday 4th April
quotequote all
That seems very expensive for an XKR. It wasn’t long ago that I saw face-lifted cars without huge mileages advertised for 10k less than that.
As said, the BMW 8-series was once a cheap car. I’d quite like one with an S85 V10 transplant and a manual gearbox.
I’ll take a DB9 from 2013 please, they improved dramatically in many ways with that model year.

Kipsrs

660 posts

74 months

Saturday 4th April
quotequote all
The Aston seems very good value for a prestige GT however, I think I’d have to agree with others that the Mercedes would also be my choice, out of what is, a great lineup!

yme402

617 posts

127 months

Saturday 4th April
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Have to say that Audi does look stunning. Yes it’s an EV etc but it would be one out of this group I would pick.

McRors

435 posts

81 months

Saturday 4th April
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Ooof, what a line-up of cars. Has to be the Aston for me: grace and pace personified. Mercedes would be fun until the air suspension went wrong, which it will. The e-Tron would be fun for a more leisurely tour through.

seefarr

1,767 posts

211 months

Saturday 4th April
quotequote all
What's with the PH doctrine that a grand tourer has to be an auto? Surely the bit about "sufficiently thrilling when the tarmac gets twistier" would encourage some (gear) knobbery? And I would think having to shift yourself is unimportant on the autoroutes because you're stuck in top gear at 135kph.

We've done a few tours (Germany, Spain, Switzerland, Portugal, Spain, Austria and this year....Spain) and they are our favourite holiday now. There really is nothing better than finding your dream road empty of traffic day after day, then ending the day with some fantastic wine and food. Get out there now while you can still work a clutch pedal! biggrin


Mouse Rat

2,050 posts

117 months

Saturday 4th April
quotequote all
What a fantastic list.
The Audi is a great looking car.
The XKR and S500 need to be a convertible for me.
The Maserati is probably one of the best sounding and prettiest cars around around.


michaeldouglas72

85 posts

157 months

Saturday 4th April
quotequote all
Ran a Granturismo as a daily for nearly 3 years and 26k miles, massively under appreciated car. Nothing went wrong with it, sound was outrageous, drive was superb, a real sense of occasion every time you started it up. I could not recommend these cars enough.

hammo19

7,267 posts

221 months

Saturday 4th April
quotequote all
DB9, has to be.

Jte3397

753 posts

121 months

Saturday 4th April
quotequote all
The Audi is literally the only Audi in the last 25 years I'd want. That, e31 or DB9 for me please

whp1983

1,319 posts

164 months

Saturday 4th April
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DB9 and they’ve been £30k forever so you’ll probably be able to sell it for same again when you’re done, great colour too

86wasagoodyear

908 posts

121 months

Saturday 4th April
quotequote all
hammo19 said:
DB9, has to be.
from the list, this ^^

Back in the real world, anything will be perfect for a trip full of fun

stuart100

1,099 posts

82 months

Saturday 4th April
quotequote all
_Rodders_ said:
E31's are magnificent. The only problem is when you've seen them for £3k it's hard to see them for 10x as much nearly 20 years later.
I’ve always loved the look. In 2012 I thought about pulling the trigger but i went for a E46 330 ci. Over a decade younger, lighter, faster and manual gearbox. Much better to drive than a sluggish 840 and 850. Much less bills.

Years later I picked up my E93 M3 and there’s was an 840 in the garage behind being worked on. He dealer wasn’t enthusiastic and said it was old and in there all the time.

But they were £3-£5k at the time, some outliers toward £10K. I couldn’t pay £30k now either.

PSB1967

447 posts

181 months

Saturday 4th April
quotequote all
If going to the Alps, Audi for the Journey then either the Jag, Masser or Aston once there. Anywhere else I'd probably stick with the Audi. Hours and hours of boring motorway is still boring regardless of fuel.

The BMW would most likely need to stop for fuel as often as the Audi, provided you could actually get some petrol.

Charging on the continent is about half the price of the UK. The VED saving alone would pay for the trip fuel. €150 each way to Barcelona according to my Electoverse app.

And to my eyes, the Audi is the best looking of this bunch. (I never thought I'd say that in the presence of such automotive beauty as Aston and Jag.)





stuart100

1,099 posts

82 months

Saturday 4th April
quotequote all
I still remember how enthusiastic Clarkson was on the DB9 challenge and it earned its only fridge on TG. For style I’d love one, but the Vantage is probably better to drive.


Baddie

777 posts

242 months

Saturday 4th April
quotequote all
A colleague has the Merc, cost him £4k for a front suspension strut and replacement for a cracked wishbone, then £1.3k for a seat sensor for the airbag. Deep pockets needed for all of them, Jag perhaps best on that score?

E31 or Aston for me.

macky17

2,237 posts

214 months

Saturday 4th April
quotequote all
Does Audi do a better job of supporting the etron than Porsche does the Taycan? Could be tempted if so.

TA14

14,332 posts

283 months

Saturday 4th April
quotequote all
michaeldouglas72 said:
Ran a Granturismo as a daily for nearly 3 years and 26k miles, massively under appreciated car. Nothing went wrong with it, sound was outrageous, drive was superb, a real sense of occasion every time you started it up. I could not recommend these cars enough.
Great to hear.