Viewing 40 posts - 1 through 40 (of 67 total)
  • Cars. Do you change yours frequently or run them until they die?
  • Harry_the_Spider
    Full Member

    We keep ’em until they die.

    54 Vectra

    53 Fusion

    Hopefully with a good few years left in them because we’re skint!

    deadlydarcy
    Free Member

    Every 2 years or boredom threshold if sooner.

    Bregante
    Full Member

    54 plate Honda FRV here. Had it since new and see no reason to sell it as yet as it’s performing faultlessly.

    Edit: I’ve done it now haven’t I? 😯

    molgrips
    Free Member

    I was considering a newer Prius to replace our 55 plate, but then I thought screw it – I’ll see how long it runs so I can shut up all those folk who tell me it’s going to explode in a shower of toxins after 100k miles. 82k so far 🙂

    djglover
    Free Member

    You might die of boredom pretty quickly with a vectra and a fusion

    donsimon
    Free Member

    Only when dirty, which might be problematic in the UK.

    forge197
    Free Member

    Regular normally every 12 to 18 months might try and keep the two we have at the moment longer but I always say that :). But then the car I just replaced I did 35k in under a year so was bored of it it’s like three years average motoring in 11 months 😯

    LadyGresley
    Free Member

    The old M reg Mondeo estate finally went to the great car park in the sky earlier this year. I now have a T reg Astra, which will again be kept until it dies. I don’t see the point in changing cars if the one I’ve got still works.

    trail_rat
    Free Member

    Ive always managed to sell mine on even being honest ….

    Diesel fiesta became a farmers pump Bodywork as facked beyond repair

    Escort got sold to a fella in carnoustie – had 60 k on the clock and mayo for oil

    Hyundai – drove it to my parents one day reversed it onto the drive and the clutch gave in – pushed it the rest of the way – handed the keys to my dad and said ill arrange to have to collected …. He asked what i ment – said it being scrapped.

    He put a new clutch in and serviced it for 400 quid and sold it for 500 he was chuffed till i told him i was getting 100 for scrapping it ….

    I might change the van but probably wont costs so little to run ….. Likely sell the mrs golf and get her something i can use for towing

    stratobiker
    Free Member

    I run them until they don’t run no more.
    Merc estate, w123, 13 years.
    Merc estate, w124, 10 years and still going strong.

    Cars – they are tools to transport you/things to places.

    SB

    john_drummer
    Free Member

    when it’s paid for, or when I can’t afford to service it. Or when it’s breaking more regularly than I fill it with petrol. I had a Renault 5 like that.

    I got 133k miles out of an Alfa 146. Would have kept it longer if the muppet who fitted the new clutch had remembered to fasten the drive shafts to the gearbox

    I traded my BMW in for a Saab when I’d reached 104k miles. Got rid of the Saab when I couldn’t afford the £1000+ service bill (regular service plus 4 new tyres I could have lived with, but the £600+ for the cambelt change broke the camel’s back). Wish I’d kept the Beemer. The Saab was lovely but jeez a bag of sand for a service? 😯

    ton
    Full Member

    till they die.

    250,000 miles on my van. goes pretty good, but a bit thirsty.

    Big-Dave
    Free Member

    till they die

    +1

    Mainly out of spite with my current Astra 😈

    matt_outandabout
    Full Member

    till dead or costing silly money for too long…

    scaredypants
    Full Member

    last car died at 14yrs old and 130,000

    virtually new replacement hopefully to last about as long

    tazzymtb
    Full Member

    every 120k (company car) so just over 3 years usually, I can’t wait to get rid of the current poobox

    ton
    Full Member

    my wife has a astra. it is crap.

    stumpy01
    Full Member

    ’til they become uneconomical to repair.

    First car 6 year old Fiesta Si 1.4 with 54k on clock. Kept it for 6yrs and got it up to 144k miles. Was still mechanically sound, but rust was eating it.

    Replaced with current Ibiza Tdi sport 130, which I have had for just over 5 years now. It’s an 03. Bought with 24k on it. Now on 173k and shows no sign of slowing down.
    Can’t justify replacing it while putting 600 miles/wk on it, but do often look at estates to replace it.

    johnners
    Free Member

    I don’t see the point in changing cars if the one I’ve got still works.

    Me neither. Replacing a car because you’re “bored”? WTF, are you 9? And if your driving is exciting, you’re doing it wrong.

    CHB
    Full Member

    Mainly till they die.
    Current longest is a 13 year old Volvo estate with 170,000 miles on it.
    Still runs strong.

    I need a newish car for work, but even thats an 8 year old car!

    molgrips
    Free Member

    My neighbours get rid of cars when they run out of warranty at 3 years cos they think it’s safer and cheaper in terms of repair bills.

    If they kept the cars and put the money they’d spent on the payments in the bank they’d have way more than they’d need to cover the worst possible scenarios, and given they drive reliable brands they’d probably get many years of trouble free motoring, so the money they saved could be spent on something else.

    aka_Gilo
    Free Member

    First ever car – Ford Sierra Sapphire 1.8L, bought at 2 years old, kept for 8 years.

    Next, Seat Ibiza 1.9TDi – bought new, traded in after 3.5 years as we needed a bigger car for the kids.

    Next, Citroen Picasso 1.8SX – bought new, kept for 9 years, sold privately.

    Next (and current), Ford Galaxy 2.0TDCi, bought 18 months ago at 7 months old, intend to keep it for at least 8 or 9 years.

    Don’t see the point in changing cars if they meet your needs and are reliable.

    steveh
    Full Member

    I tend to change cars every 6-12 months. Buy them cheap, look after them, do little bits and bobs and then sell them on for the same money. I’ll do 10k ish miles in that time normally.

    My only vehicle is an ’07 Ford Ranger pick-up – bought it Jan 2010 with only 2500 miles on the clock (company cars before that). It now has 68k on the clock and the plan was to sell it after 2 years when it had 80k on. It seems it’ll go a bit longer than next Jan, so I’ll prob sell next summer and maybe lease another truck.

    RustySpanner
    Full Member

    Five cars in 25 years.
    All pretty knackered when I got them and I ran them until they died.

    Just bought a nice car for the first time. Let’s see how long this one lasts 🙂

    Mintman
    Free Member

    Depends on the car and my circumstances for me. My last one was an old Citroen Picasso and I decided (for a variety of reasons) to adopt the “run to destruction” approach to maintenance. I replaced it with a new-ish c-max and this one I’ll maintain and use for a few years but will probably flog it after that as I’ll be tired of it and circumstances will no doubt have changed.

    esselgruntfuttock
    Free Member

    Been past my test for 38 years & had 7 cars, none of which, luckily have been much bother really.
    51 passat at the mo with 212K on it.

    simon_g
    Full Member

    I’m on car allowance and supposed to stay under 5 years / 100k miles, so change on that.

    I can’t be bothered with the hassle of changing cars so generally change as little as possible. Before this job (and those restrictions) I owned a 106GTi for nearly 6 years. I’d probably still have it now.

    epicyclo
    Full Member

    Die.

    Once you consider how much of your life is spent paying for huge depreciation in cars, you become reluctant to pay the ‘prestige’ tax.

    Let’s say you lose £5,000 on instant depreciation of a new car. How many working hours did it take you to acquire that much disposable cash? Even if you have £1,000pw surplus, that’s 5 weeks of your life gone for nothing. That’s what I regard as being enslaved to a possession.

    There’s a whole industry dedicated to making you feel as if your manhood and social standing is determined by what you drive.

    A private car is simply a transportation box.

    (Cars required for work and business are a different case – they’re earning you money)

    neilsonwheels
    Free Member

    Vw beetle – fell to bits.
    XR2 died in a crash.
    Mitsubishi colt – B pillars completely made of rust and had to go.
    306 estate still going at 140k. Not going anywhere yet.

    My current one is a tool for ferrying bikes and crap.

    molgrips
    Free Member

    I will say though that I really like new cars. They are usually nicer in some small way than your older one, they are shiny, they are much tighter all round, and a change can be fun.

    If I were really rich I might be tempted to buy more cheaper cars than fewer more expensive ones.

    thekingisdead
    Free Member

    My neighbours get rid of cars when they run out of warranty at 3 years cos they think it’s safer and cheaper in terms of repair bills.

    You mean thats how he justifies needing to keep up with the Jones’? 😀

    molgrips
    Free Member

    Hardly, they have a Mazda 2 and a Kia whatever it is small thing. Not exactly prestige.

    RustyNissanPrairie
    Full Member

    20 year old Defender, will own it for the rest of my life.

    Neil-F
    Free Member

    I’ve had 5 cars in 21 years of driving. I tend to sell them for sweeties at the end of their tether, or scrap them. My current Mazda is a 52 plate, 81k, and, like the rest of my cars it’ll die in my ownership. 😀

    luke
    Free Member

    The wife went through a spate of crashing cars so that used to determine when we got a new one.
    Now it tends to be when they start costing a bit of money to keep on the road, last car needed a new turbo so it went the car before needed a fair bit of work so it went.
    The current car has 117k on the clock and is going fine I suspect it will be somewhere near 160k before we consider getting rid of it, unless it starts to fall apart.

    deadlydarcy
    Free Member

    Mol, I think you should put that in writing to your neighbour.

    konaboy2275
    Free Member

    Always kept my cars for a while or until something expensive is looming. Had both my ‘keepers’ stolen and been trying to get back to something I want to keep. Just bought a Lancer Estate which I’m gonna have for a while. Wife drives a y reg civic which we’ve had for a few years and runs like new, she’s put a dint in every panel so not keen on getting anything more shiny! My mate runs a volvo t5 estate which he bought for £600 about 5 years ago and never had a prob with it!

    Can’t understand how people can afford a couple of brand new cars on the drive although they may not have a bike habit 😕

    iainc
    Full Member

    Can’t understand how people can afford a couple of brand new cars on the drive although they may not have a bike habit

    we were talking about that last night – next door have 2 brand new spankers – a white E class convertible and a matching white X1….our kids go to the same football kids team and it came out in conversation that they pay close to £1000 a month combined for the cars…..and will never own them…

    GJP
    Free Member

    I buy new and keep them for 5-6 years. However, my current Audi Quattro (5 years from new) is a keeper. First car I have ever had that I haven’t get bored with, plus to pay £30k+ for a new one ain’t going to happen any time soon, if ever again unless I win the Lotto. I am not mechanically minded and as soon as things start to go wrong I get shot.

Viewing 40 posts - 1 through 40 (of 67 total)

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