RE: Magnificent, money-off hybrids | Six of the Best
RE: Magnificent, money-off hybrids | Six of the Best
Today

Magnificent, money-off hybrids | Six of the Best

Hybrid performance has become the combustion benchmark - but only for the super-rich. This is the best of the rest


BMW i8, 2015, 38k, £39,990

Hybrids, you might have noticed, are all the rage. Not so very long ago, the concept was dismissed by some as a meaningless cul de sac on the way to wholesale electrification - but that grossly underestimated the market’s affection for the century-old combustion engine. These days, virtually every new supercar is a hybrid, and while they’ve not all been brilliant, some (like the Revuelto or the 911 T-Hybrid) have broken new ground, while keeping the spotlight very much on the oily bit. Of course, if you want the original petrol-electric ground-breaker, you’re looking at it. The BMW i8 was a remarkable toe in the water back in 2014. It is also the shining example of what we’re talking about here: brand-new, it was a six-figure prospect. Now, for a one-owner, low-mile example, you’ll pay around £40k. Talk about the best of both worlds.

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McLaren Artura, 2023, 3k, £129,990

Flash forward a decade and the Artura proved just how good a hybrid could be if you went at the idea full tilt. Granted, McLaren’s notion of ‘full tilt’ created numerous teething problems - some of them dramatic - but in the fullness of time a fantastic supercar emerged, every bit as feelsome as the model it replaced. Perhaps it helped that Woking had never coaxed a truly memorable noise from its V8, yet the introduction of the twin-turbocharged, 120-degree V6 was no bit player, nor its hybrid system a redundant add-on. Make no mistake, beneath the top-tier, silly money options, this is arguably the best part-electrified supercar you can buy - which makes it all the more pleasing that just a few years on from its launch, you can have an early example like this one for around £70k off list. Mental.

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Porsche Panamera Turbo S E-Hybrid, 2019, 95k, £40,995

The Turbo S E-Hybrid is perhaps a less clear-cut solution insofar as it was sold alongside non-hybridised versions of the Panamera that were clearly better to drive (the GTS, for example, was 200hp behind in horsepower, but arguably twice as good on a brittle stretch of B road). But that was then: now, in the power-to-pound ratio, the flagship looks decidedly more interesting. And that's because a high-mile example like this one can be had for hot hatch money - and when you consider that it buys you not only a proper, all-singing 4.0-litre V8, but also the fit and finish of a Porsche interior (not to mention the peerless status of the badge), you can probably forget about it being a slightly less lively steer than its lighter siblings. A compelling head-over-heart purchase, in other words.

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Honda NSX (NC1), 2017, 13k, PH Auctions

Talk about history repeating itself. Just like the original NSX, the second gen showed the rest of the world where the mid-engined supercar was heading years before the more established brands. In the '90s, that meant supercars that you could see out of, and use every day; a decade ago it was a turbo V6 with hybrid help, just like the Artura and 296 GTB crow about today. But because both NSXs seemed a bit futuristic and had Honda badges on, buyers weren’t so keen - pity. With a nine-speed DCT and three electric motors, this 2017 NSX boasts everything we’d currently expect of a new exotic. Only now it’s a more affordable, super rare, really significant secondhand supercar. This PH Auctions car has minimal mileage and great history in its favour - plus some genuine YouTube fame…  

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AMG GT 4-Door E-Performance, 2023, 10k, £112,950

Always a gloriously niche AMG ‘bahnstormer, don’t be surprised if the first AMG GT 4-door is reevaluated over the coming months. Because, well, have you seen the second one? What was always mean and moody, if not the prettiest car in the world, now looks like a Mercedes masterpiece. And there was plenty to the GT 4-door package beyond the appearance, driving with real purpose and energy while accelerating like a cannonball. Those attributes were cranked even further for the wild E-Performance, with more than 800hp. Sure, the electric range was pitiful and the weight massive, but the experience was unforgettable. And value? This one has almost £80k off 10,000 miles. It’ll be a lot longer before it’s another £80k less - if ever, given the reaction to the new one… 

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Ferrari 296 GTB, 2023, 10k, £185,000

Trust Ferrari to take its time with a technology, then deliver the very best version of it. (So maybe there’s hope for the Luce yet.) Despite the advancing years of the previous F8 Tributo, there was still some angst around replacing the turbo V8 with a hybrid V6. Much as there was when the turbo V8 superseded the old 4.5. The concern didn’t take very long to confound; like all the best berlinettas, the 296 was bewitching to drive, deft and delicate despite the weight gain, only now with hybrid hypercar performance on top. And a return to genuinely pretty mid-engined Ferraris. That roster of talents made the 296 popular when new; add that to the buyer uncertainty around used electrified supercars and there are huge savings around. This smartly specced 2023 car is £185k, or little more than a much older 488 with similar miles… 

See the original advert

Author
Discussion

Orangutangerine

Original Poster:

826 posts

206 months

Some cracking cars but ALL for huge money. Was it worth the article? Really?...

MDT

738 posts

198 months

Orangutangerine said:
Some cracking cars but ALL for huge money. Was it worth the article? Really?...
The Porsche and BMW are both less than the cost of a new 320i so I am not thinking these can be classes as "huge money"

The BMW has gown on me looks wise, still looking current and good now for a 12 year old design.

K7hyd

25 posts

53 months

Hasn’t the late 2010s reboot of the NSX aged remarkably well? So disappointing at its launch, (some big shoes to fill), but add a few years and the parallels with the old car in terms of tec and rarity seem uncanny….

wistec1

774 posts

67 months

The Honda nsx is the car on my bucket list so I'll stick with it despite the competition on offer. Badge snobbery, doubt on future residuals, slightly bland interior and the limited two main UK dealers are often the reasons to avoid this left field choice. It's the wrong colour for me but this should do north of 80k + fees

NGK210

4,778 posts

171 months

PH said:
Despite the advancing years of the previous F8 Tributo…
“Advancing years”??
The F8 was on sale for less than three years.
Used values are now above list, and ascending.

Pent

302 posts

45 months

Since the latest engine swap on YouTube seems to be sticking the B58 engine into the i8. They won’t be that price forever.
Cheapest carbon tub car. What a swap!

Jte3397

1,004 posts

122 months

Only the i8 for me from those as it was designed ground up to be hybrid. The chap who looks after my E46 had one that he really rated and I've been lucky enough to how the carbon tub is constructed. A big oem bought one and had one of my suppliers who specialises in complex CF construction pull one apart. It was literally pull too - they fixed it to the floor and had to use a forklift to break the bonds even a fraction. This was 8 years ago.

Its Just Adz

18,362 posts

235 months

I'll get in early here and say nope, none of them, no thank you.
Better list next week please.

hammo19

7,416 posts

222 months

Its Just Adz said:
I'll get in early here and say nope, none of them, no thank you.
Better list next week please.
+1 here. Yep these lists are becoming predictable. Cars that no one can afford. How about an under £5k, or under £10k list please.

SydneyBridge

11,288 posts

184 months

The BMW still looks superb

scenario8

7,769 posts

205 months

Nine months ago PH peddled the Polestar 1 as an opportunity we needed to act fast on. Thirty grand down on list. A steal. One excitable PH EV Uber fan told us its value was only going one way.

https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&...

This article prompted me to take a look and the curio is still available. Now with an additional forty grand lopped off the original asking.

https://www.autotrader.co.uk/car-details/202603311...

Which still looks to be an outlying purchase opportunity.

A diverting list. I imagine some might be interesting to drive or have in your life one way or another but none appeal to me sufficiently in this world. Glad the BMW and the Honda exist, though.


AlfaG

26 posts

36 months

i8 for me. A timely article as I’m pondering getting one of these. BMW lent me one for the weekend (we had some i3s on our fleet back in 2014) so they tried to lure me into a purchase of an i8. Nearly worked as well but competition was fierce at its them new list price. £40k gets you a minter and I can’t see it losing much from here on it. I think they’re great cars and drive surprisingly well. Back to the classifieds..

WeirdNeville

6,039 posts

241 months

Six of the best has managed to find six vehicles that intersect perfectly with me not being able to afford any of them, whilst also having absolutely zero desire to own any of them.

(Ok I think the i8 is a near concept but not enough to make me aspire to own one).

Thorburn

2,440 posts

219 months

NGK210 said:
PH said:
Despite the advancing years of the previous F8 Tributo
Advancing years ??
The F8 was on sale for less than three years.
Used values are now above list, and ascending.
I'd guess they mean the underlying platform of the F8, which dates back to the 458 from 2009.

OldGermanHeaps

5,043 posts

204 months

40 grand for a car with an 11 year old battery?
Good luck.

Monkeylegend

28,767 posts

257 months

AlfaG said:
i8 for me. A timely article as I m pondering getting one of these. BMW lent me one for the weekend (we had some i3s on our fleet back in 2014) so they tried to lure me into a purchase of an i8. Nearly worked as well but competition was fierce at its them new list price. £40k gets you a minter and I can t see it losing much from here on it. I think they re great cars and drive surprisingly well. Back to the classifieds..
That one has apparently been on sale for over 3 years, makes you wonder why.

cerb4.5lee

42,945 posts

206 months

I've always liked the way the i8 looks, but I'm not fond of the 3 cylinder engine in it though, and it needs a straight 6 or a V8 in it for me.

biggbn

31,353 posts

246 months

Honda would be amongst my first lottery purchases, I'd have that over anything on that list. i8 is second choice. The rest have zero interest for me.

Super Sonic

13,370 posts

80 months

Orangutangerine said:
Some cracking cars but ALL for huge money. Was it worth the article? Really?...
£13,000 huge money?

NGK210

4,778 posts

171 months



I think we can assume the last person to drive this car needs Head & Shoulders.
Very enticing, especially for a £130k McLaren that's selling like fireworks on Nov 7.
yuck