I've done.
ax - 1.1 popular - fiat panda 750.
All brilliant fun.
Bought one of these to stop getting the Bimmer all muddy. Brilliant. Get two riders and their bikes IN the car easy for trips to Wales.Load it up and get a winters worth of cr"p to the tip. Fashion some blinds on the windows and sleep in the back. Best of all it goes like an absolute rocket, even if it does still have a national trust sticker in the back window.
with a bit of sharpir action
National trust = nathional thrust
In order of me owning them:
Volvo 240 GLT Estate - slow, ugly, thirsty (20mpg tops) and a horrible image. Amazing car for doing a summer of festivaling with a marquee in a trailer behind it. All my mates took the pee when I bought it for £20, by the end of the summer it was held in high regard. Nicknamed 'The Tank'.
Kia Pride - seriously, it had a good 1.3 engine and was so bad you just didn't care about it.
Citroen AX 1.0 - slow, flimsy and poorly built. Leaned like hell on a mild corner! Indestructible, floated in floods and would go pretty much anywhere. Nicknamed 'The Tank's illegitimate French lovechild'!
Ford Ka (54 plate) - had the later Duratec engine so went better than the early Endura's. My favorite car I've ever owned, even more than my Mini. So much fun to chuck around, no tech to go wrong (well, the cassette player broke) and ridiculous fun in the snow 😆
I am another one to say Fiat uno (Lancia Y10 I had a MK2 45 fire as my first car. 45 is the BHP.
Huge on the inside and quick for the power it had.
The start of the topic says the KA, this is a great little car and if you can carry the speed in the conners can make it quick and tons of fun to drive. The 1.6 Sport KA is even better and the Street KA is also very good.
The Ka was a MASSIVELY popular car when it first launched and pretty much turned Ford around in the UK (or maybe the Focus did, whichever car first) but I agree they're bloody brilliant!
I had one for a week in work after my boss crashed his car and got it in replacement and refused to drive it - if you drive them like a complete tool they're amazing fun - they snarl, pop and growl and you can throw them about - they're as good as Original Mini owners think thier cars are - it was 2003 but i remember it now, started it up, pulled away and it was dog slow so I floored it and it shot off, 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 90 right out of trading estate - braaaaaap Boss (in the passenger seat) says shouts over the sound of the tortured engine "bloody hell, what are we doing!!!"
24 miles per hour...
Feels like a rally car, sounds and feels like you're giving it the full Ari Vantennan up Pikes Peak, whilst not breaking the law or doing 3mpg - what's not to love.
Ah the Rover Coupe! I had the 1.6 Honda engined one and loved it. Didn't hold up so well in a crash mind you! Awesome glass roof panels!
A quick look on Autotrader pops up a few Ka's within 20 miles all for around the £700-800 mark with surprisingly little mileage on. Definitely a contender for when the other half finally gets round to learning to drive and steals the Berlingo off me.
+1 on the Y10. I had a 1.0 turbo. Mental little car once the revs got up!
Also had a 2CV. Would only do 80 flat out, but would run flat out all day. Felt like you were scraping the door handles on anything remotely resembling a corner. I loved it.
Have to add the original Fiat Panda. Petty much an updated 2CV in my mind. Basic but fun.
[url= http://s50.photobucket.com/user/Baz70/media/PICT0009-1.jp g" target="_blank">http://s50.photobucket.com/user/Baz70/media/PICT0009-1.jp g"/> .html]The Renault 11 GTL it really was only a stop gap car bought for £750, I ran it for 7 years for several thousand miles, never serviced it! I finally rolled it into a car dealers as a trade in and got £300 for it. Proper bangernomics![/url]
Spectacular picture fail! Sorry
😳
A quick look on Autotrader pops up a few Ka's within 20 miles all for around the £700-800 mark with surprisingly little mileage on. Definitely a contender for when the other half finally gets round to learning to drive and steals the Berlingo off me.
Thats because they like to rot like mad.
Sills , rear quarters, and floorpans.
Got asked to take a look at my neigbours daugters with a view to repairing for them . No danger i was touching that.
Watch out for bodged up rust repairs in Ford Ka's, they are one of the last truly great rusting cars especially around the fuel filler cap/rear wing!
I think the fuel filler cap rust thing they copied off the Mk3 Fiesta (same floorpan) as both mine went there, although I managed to break an engine mount in the second one before the rust killed it.
Peugeot 106 1.5d Graduate. Bought for £250, ran it for a year and sold it on for £250. Brakes were shocking, 0-60 was measured in days but it handled well for what it was. Never had less than 60 mpg out of it. Taught me how to read the road better.
It was the first car I didn't give a shit about, I'd quite happily bounce it off hedges or park it in dodgy areas.
In fact here it is squeezed in next to some inconsiderate arsehole.
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And yes the Lexus had gone when I came back which means the chump had to climb in from the passenger side.
Love my Mondeo.
52 plate 130hp TDCi with nearly 180k on the clock.
Drives lovely, never less than 40mpg, & it can shift a bit too.
I agree with hora!
The 107 is amazing fun. Tiny skinny tyres, an engine with the torque of a hand held blender but am interior that will fit a family of four, a mclaren stroller and a rucksack in the boot, incredibly tactile to drive, enormous sense of speed (even while reversing into a parking space).
Fun, fun, fun 😀
Could I have one as a daily driver doing 20000 miles a year probably not! But as a rental car on holiday for a day or two fantastic (especially in purple)
I had a beige triumph acclaim as my first own car.
That was a surprisingly good motor. 1300cc twin can engine, comfy, and surprisingly quick. You could get a small mtb wheels and seatpin off in the boot too.
I second the Ford Ka. Had one as a hire car in Italy about 12 years ago. Thrashed it round from Rome and up through Tuscany on dirt roads and all the side streets. It was like a go kart...
However not a patch on my C reg (1985?) scarlet red Vauxhall Nova 1.0 saloon bought for £800 in 1996. My first car- Looked like an old mans car but was a fantastic servant and brilliant fun. Kept fixing it with bits and bobs from a Nova breakers garage 'Just Novas'in Long Eaton. Happy days.
breadcrumb - Member
Peugeot 106 1.5d Graduate. Bought for £250, ran it for a year and sold it on for £250. Brakes were shocking, 0-60 was measured in days but it handled well for what it was. Never had less than 60 mpg out of it. Taught me how to read the road better.
It was the first car I didn't give a shit about, I'd quite happily bounce it off hedges or park it in dodgy areas.
In fact here it is squeezed in next to some inconsiderate arsehole.And yes the Lexus had gone when I came back which means the chump had to climb in from the passenger side.
POSTED 2 HOURS AGO # REPORT-POST
I like to play that game with rented vans for work only i sit in the drivers seat eating my food and watch them crawl across.
Proton 1.5mvi 3valve
I paid 150 quid for it
dec
Discs snapped the first time I used it, had to be still sawed off.
Never put any oil in it. My mechanic mate one day decided to check it over for me after hooning around it to find nothing on the dip stick, in fact it was dry. Car kept running.
I used to drive it through Heaton in newcastle, at 30-40 over the speed bumps 4 up and it just jumped the bumps like Daisy Duke. When I was designated driver on the way back from clubs, it was always entertaining if a mate had picked up a girl to see their faces as we bounced along the road.
One of the lads spilled a macdonalds strawberr mlkshake in the passenger footwell, just before we went out one night. Car didn't get driven for about a fortnight after that, in the summer time.
When we cam back there was this wonderful pink mould living in the footwell and on the seats. It was like a free retrim.
It was an amazing car.
Looks terrible, drives terrible, not even remotely exciting, goes FOR EVER. NEVER, EVER DIES!!!!
Mine went past 200k miles like it was just getting run in. All I replaced were tires, brake pads and the clutch bearings. Absolutely nothing else went wrong with it. When it sold it at around 220k, it still ran perfect, started first time,every time and was in great condition.
Land Rover Defender (waits for flaming.......)
I have owned 5 90s and a couple of 110s. By any standards, a ridiculously poorly made, uncomfortable, slow and uneconomical choice. Objectively a crap car. You can match the off road performance in much much more sophisticated ways these days.
But I bloody love them!
Living with one is not the never ending charming experience that people might have you believe, and the idea of owning one and actually owning one are quite different. But they get under your skin.
Returning home to the UK from Asia in a few weeks with our newborn and facing a commute, so I have had to succumb to a sensible 3 Series Touring but I think there is always room for a Landy rusting away gently on the drive!
Citroen Saxo VTS 16v.
0-60 in 7.2 seconds (source dependent)
Sublime handling.
Will do near 80mph in second gear.
[u]Exactly[/u] the same car as much lauded and sought after Peugeot 106 gti.
Now rare.
Universally hated for being chavvy and being confused with the very common and lesser spec VTR model that adorns carparks on a Fri eve.
Makes a wicked track day toy and will no doubt one day be sought after once the stigma has passed.
That Strada's reminded me of my dad's car list:
Fiat 127 x2
Fiat 500
Fiat Strada x2
Fiat Uno x3
Fiat 126
Fiat 126 BIS
Fiat Panda
Vauxhall Cavalier mk1
Hyundai Pony X2LS
Rover 213 S
Loved them all apart from the Rover. The Pony had a crap Mitsubishi engine so he bodged a turbo on it, suddenly it was rather rapid! Was meant to be my first car but the bulkhead collapsed 🙁
Can't remember the lst time I saw a Cougar, for some reason I always felt my Puma was the better buy. I sold my Puma 4 years ago but still had some spare wheels/tyres in the garage which I finally got rid of on Ebay. Bloke that bought them arrived in a Jag and had the Puma as his 2nd car.
2CV.
I saw one in the Maritime Alps in Italy, at about 2000M altitude, on a track that was rough as a badgers, and it just took it all in it's stride. Most folks I know with Chelsea tractors wouldn't have ventured where he was.
Not saying that they're good or owt, but was impressive.
My brother had a Cougar 3.0 V6 and at the same time a friend had a Vectra V6.
The Vectra was actually a nicer car and a much smoother engine.
northernmatt - MemberA quick look on Autotrader pops up a few Ka's within 20 miles all for around the £700-800 mark with surprisingly little mileage on. Definitely a contender for when the other half finally gets round to learning to drive and steals the Berlingo off me.
Yeah, watch for rust! My Wife's one got chopped in because of the rust, but it had never been in a ding and was well looked after. I think it was 9 years old with about 70k miles on & our local garage warned us of impending rust doom from underneath (the bodywork was fine) so we got rid.
Mrshora once said I never know what car you'd turn up in next but when you turned up in a Puma I remember the moment you said 10yrs previous that one day you'd scratch that itch.
I'm glad I did. the rust was well rusty but the 1.7 engine was rev-tastic peach. Lovely car. The dashboard was weird- never had a car with a dashboard that far away from me.
takisawa2 - MemberLove my Mondeo.
52 plate 130hp TDCi with nearly 180k on the clock.
Drives lovely, never less than 40mpg, & it can shift a bit too.
Despite the crappy sub-frame bush setup, dodgy handbrake cables, diesel leak in the engine bay and the fact that it began cutting out on the motorway, I loved my 53 plate Zetec S. I was always amazed at it's ability to keep up with a colleagues ST TDCi, even when making considerable progress.
When not having fun it got me a long way into France (from Glasgow) before I started getting paranoid that the fuel gauge must be broken
My other half's Corsa was actually a good little car. I hated it with a passion, but it cost sweet FA to run, never broke down and was better at carting stuff around than my 325. Horrid driving position though.
My Clio 1.4 Extreme was made of cheese, not very big inside but was reasonably swift (sub 10 secs) and never gave returned less than 41mpg no matter how I drive it.
Fist Coupes were crap but brilliant. My uncle had a limited edition run out 20v turbo. It was quick, sounded pretty good but had the turning circle of an oil tanker, access to the rear seats was useless and painful when it went pop. Still bloody ace though.
Agree that the Puma shouldn't be in this thread as they're highly regarded. I take out the Volvo too, but I love that era of Volvo especially if it says T5 on the back!
Another one:Citroen AX
I had one. The head gasket blew twice and the engine caught fire. So a crap car that was actually crap.
I'm glad I did. the rust was well rusty but the 1.7 engine was rev-tastic peach. Lovely car. The dashboard was weird- never had a car with a dashboard that far away from me.
Agree Puma's have no place on this thread. Good Puma's are appreciating now.
The 1.7 was actually made by Yamaha, a great engine.
Nova GTE. Mental car, rusted and came with a Jeremy Kyle image but by god it cornered and went like stink.
Then the valve stem oil seals went, gearbox and some scrote nicked it and left it burnt out on the Wirral.
Made me grin....
I saw one in the Maritime Alps in Italy, at about 2000M altitude, on a track that was rough as a badgers, and it just took it all in it's stride. Most folks I know with Chelsea tractors wouldn't have ventured where he was.
the 2CV was allegedly designed in such a way that you could drive it across a ploughed field and still keep a basket of eggs inside without breaking a single one. or something.
I heard a story of a 2CV being used in the ice & snow of an Ardennes winter going where owners of so-called rally cars wouldn't dare. skinny tyres would cut through the snow to the firmer stuff underneath
Very surprised at that johndoh. I've had the 2.5 v6 in a Mondeo (my cougar was the 2.0 vtec) and it was a superb engine but never driven a Vectra. The Cougar big plus for me against a Puma was that it has a boot like a cave!
What anyone else thinks about my car is usually last on the list of requirements - keeps the price down.
For example, the company Vectra. Did 70k in 2 years with nothing but 2 services and a couple of sets of tyres. In fact, I went and bought a private one this year..
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Or the Jaguar (or Mondeo as folk who don't know call them. AWD rocketship - 230bhp 'vtec' and sub 7 secs 1/4 mile plus proper wood and leather.
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