The perfect cheap used car - SLO76
Picked up my new/old car, a replacement for a contract lease Honda CRV I was tired of paying for. I needed space and wanted comfort and reliability so went for a petrol 60 plate Toyota Avensis 1.8 Estate with 70,000 miles and full history in a local private sale for £4150, around £1500 less than dealers are asking for similar.

I prefer buying privately because you get to meet the last owner face to face and seeing where they live tells you a lot about how their attitude to maintenance and their personal finances. This one was on the drive of a particularly nice large home and the very pleasant lady who occupied it had recently had a promotion and car allowance which was the reason for selling despite recently having shelled out for new tyres, rear calippers and a full service.

First appraisal done now it’s on my drive and it’s in near perfect condition inside and out, drives exactly as it did when new and is genuinely vast inside. It managed more than 40mpg on the run home and is quieter and better on the road than the much more costly CRV it replaces. A win win so far and all for a fraction of the cost of another new SUV or large estate. The good lady wife is of course less than impressed with having to slum it down among the plebs on the road again but if she wants another SUV she can fund it.



The perfect cheap used car - Steveieb

you may think of putting all your knowledge into print SLO along the lines of James Rupport in his bangernomics books.

Keep up the posts and thanks for being on hand during the difficult negatiation times when buying a car.

The perfect cheap used car - SLO76
“you may think of putting all your knowledge into print SLO along the lines of James Rupport in his bangernomics books.”

I’m a keen follower of James, even had a few of my past purchases appear on his page in Autocar. We often differ in views on what constitutes a wise budget buy however, he all too often recommends diesels and expensive to repair execs to people of limited means. Always a good read though.

Edited by SLO76 on 15/09/2018 at 12:44

The perfect cheap used car - badbusdriver

I remember a long time ago buying a book of his on bangernomics. There was a list of cars which, at the time, would have been candidates for this.

Under Renault 20, it said something like; big, comfy, softly sprung, French hatch.

Under Renault 30 it said; as per the 20, plus wild, uncontrollable wheelspin!. Nearly bought one of them in my youth, wish i had.

Of course, the two Renault's, like many others on that list, would now be all but extinct!.

The perfect cheap used car - SLO76
I was a bit of a fan of big blue collar barges like that old Renault. Granada, Carlton, Safeane, 25, XM etc etc. Great used buys and like a sofa on wheels.
The perfect cheap used car - nellyjak

Nice one, SLO...good decision....good deal.

The perfect cheap used car - Sprice

Agreed, I did the same thing. I went from a leased 9G 63-plate Civic 1.6 diesel to an 8G 09-plate 1.8 petrol Civic earlier this year. My mileage changed from circa 22k p.a to about 8.5k. The 9G was a great car, genuine >70 mpg consistently (measured by brimming), but after 4 years, 84k miles decided not to push my luck, even though the DTEC seems pretty reliable, I certainly had no issues with DPF etc, just the pretty common clutc judder when cold.

The Avensis is a really nice car, I had a 13-plate 2.0 diesel as a hire car, but being a bit of a Honda fanboy it was another Civic for me, plus I'm not a fan of EPB's. Mine was FHSH, 71k miles, new MOT and despite the oft-reported hard ride, I don't find it any worse than the 9G, plus a genuine 45 mpg and it can shift. Even came with the quire rare factory bluetooth and space-saver options, strangely it also has the compressor and gunk, plus knowing if I scratch it I won't get a potential fine when returning it to the lease people (like I did for a v.small dent on the bonnet of the leased car).

The perfect cheap used car - catsdad
"strangely it also has the compressor and gunk" they probably did what I did. My 9G came with gunk kit and jack and I bought a spacesaver. So I ended up with both options.

Funnily enough my preceding car was a 2011 Avensis diesel estate. Perfectly OK but I prefer the Civic. Thats not to say SLO has made a wrong choice, if anyone knows what meets his needs its him!
The perfect cheap used car - SLO76
I’d be quite happy with a Civic but you can’t be too particular when buying used on a budget. It’s what’s available at the time and condition and history over make and model.
The perfect cheap used car - SLO76
Three months in and not a single problem to report. Good used cars like this seriously make you doubt the need to spend a fortune on a new car via monthly PCP or lease. I’m intending on keeping this longterm as a workhorse/dog wagon when it’s pensioned off main family car duties. Only noise it’s generating comes from the passenger seat where sits snobbish swmbo who still moans the passing of her CRV.
The perfect cheap used car - gordonbennet

The only reason there isn't an Avensis estate on our drive is the electric parking brake, EPB has been my line in the sand and will remain so, it ruled out the 2009 on Subaru Outback which was otherwise on the cards when we replaced the previous one for SWMBO.

IIRC the EPB on your beast was fixed before you bought it, or is my memory playing up again, what are you doing to keep it working well SLO, oiling it working it regularly or is there some secret you've found out about to keep them happy?

The perfect cheap used car - SLO76

The only reason there isn't an Avensis estate on our drive is the electric parking brake, EPB has been my line in the sand and will remain so, it ruled out the 2009 on Subaru Outback which was otherwise on the cards when we replaced the previous one for SWMBO.

IIRC the EPB on your beast was fixed before you bought it, or is my memory playing up again, what are you doing to keep it working well SLO, oiling it working it regularly or is there some secret you've found out about to keep them happy?

No fan of these unnecessary gadgets myself. It did have new rear callipers before I bought it but I’m actually not that sure of the inner workings of these EPB’s having never had the pleasure of stripping one down. Possibly it’s been attended to already but to date it’s worked without fault. The only receipts relating to it are for the callipers. It will be interesting to see how reliable it is over time. The only problem came when my 4yr old son switched the interior lights on which flattened the battery over a weekend and I had to move the car to get access for the jump leads. The hand brake disengaged but wouldn’t re-engage so it left me having to jump it on a hill with my foot on the brake. No big hassle but a manual handbrake is by far the sensible option. I see no real benefit from this gadget. Battery was fine and interior lights are checked before leaving car anywhere especially when boy wonder has been in it.
The perfect cheap used car - corax
The hand brake disengaged but wouldn’t re-engage so it left me having to jump it on a hill with my foot on the brake. No big hassle but a manual handbrake is by far the sensible option. I see no real benefit from this gadget.

Amazing isn't it, you end up in the one scenario that could have done with the old system, I wonder if the designers ever thought of that. I suppose you could have put some bricks behind the wheels, that is if one has some convenient bricks lying around. But that is still questionable and won't work on a steep hill.

The only thing that I think is a boon is the modern hill holder, but I think this uses the ABS to hold brake pressure in the system and is separate from the electronic handbrake.

The perfect cheap used car - Heidfirst

No fan of these unnecessary gadgets myself. It did have new rear callipers before I bought it but I’m actually not that sure of the inner workings of these EPB’s having never had the pleasure of stripping one down. Possibly it’s been attended to already but to date it’s worked without fault. The only receipts relating to it are for the callipers. It will be interesting to see how reliable it is over time.

I am just about to go into my 7th year of driving an Avensis with an EPB (actually 2 T27s, a 2012 & now a 2017) & have been active on the toyotaownersclub forum for much longer than that as I also had an older 2007 model Avensis T25 with a mechanical handbrake before that.

From what I have read/seen over the years whilst there definitely have been EPB actuator failures on Avensis T27s & it is an expensive part to replace/repair:

  • imo fear of Avensis EPB failures is much, much higher than actual failure rate
  • The Avensis EPB doesn't seem to have had the failure rate of VAG group ones
  • It has been improved over the years so failures are rarer in later cars
  • Toyota customer service tends to look after people with goodwill even outside normal warranty subject to the customer having shown goodwill to them (i.e. keeping the car serviced to schedule within the dealer network)

Edited by Heidfirst on 22/12/2018 at 18:45

The perfect cheap used car - SLO76
I agree. I know a few folks who run these including several taxi drivers, one with over 170k up and none have had bother with it to date. It doesn’t seem to suffer anywhere near the same failure rate as other EPB’s and so far mine has been faultless. Previous owner has now mentioned the calliper replacement wasn’t related to the EPB. It doesn’t have a dealer history however, it’s mostly a good local indi but at 8yrs old I wouldn’t expect much help anyway.

On a further note I’m finding the heater exceptionally good which is very welcome on my very short commute in deepest darkest (and wetest) West Scotland winter.

Edited by SLO76 on 22/12/2018 at 19:50

The perfect cheap used car - SLO76
Seven months later and (touch wood) not a single problem with my £4K family workhorse. I still maintain the Avensis in any generation makes an excellent used buy. Economy is averaging early 40’s and to date it’s been no bother at all. No monthly payment, excellent reliability and minimal depreciation make for cheap motoring. No fun to drive but excels as a motorway mile muncher with good refinement, excellent high speed stability and decent ride comfort. I’d recommend one to anyone.
The perfect cheap used car - TQ

You purchased an excellent CAR...not some fancy German thing dressed up as a car but being nothing of the sort. Long may your Avensis live (it probably will!).

The perfect cheap used car - badbusdriver
Seven months later and (touch wood) not a single problem with my £4K family workhorse. I still maintain the Avensis in any generation makes an excellent used buy. Economy is averaging early 40’s and to date it’s been no bother at all. No monthly payment, excellent reliability and minimal depreciation make for cheap motoring. No fun to drive but excels as a motorway mile muncher with good refinement, excellent high speed stability and decent ride comfort. I’d recommend one to anyone.

Sounds good SLO. Through various posts on the forum, i have found myself looking at used cars like this. Some of them really do look like spectacular bargains for folk unconcerned about image or keeping up with the neighbours/work colleagues/family members. Fingers crossed that EPB doesn't cause you any grief!.

The perfect cheap used car - SLO76
“Sounds good SLO. Through various posts on the forum, i have found myself looking at used cars like this. Some of them really do look like spectacular bargains for folk unconcerned about image or keeping up with the neighbours/work colleagues/family members. Fingers crossed that EPB doesn't cause you any grief!.”

That is the only real concern but to date it’s been fine and I’ve a work colleague with a diesel one with over 175k up and the EPB hasn’t been an issue to date. In fact it’s never had anything beyond an exhaust and other wear and tear items like brakes and tyres.
The perfect cheap used car - edlithgow

Puzzled as to why SLO, with that level of UK automotive market knowledge (not, I'd have thought, acquired overnight), and with his head screwed on fairly firmly, was in a lease deal in the first place.

None of my business, of course. Just seems odd.

The perfect cheap used car - SLO76

Puzzled as to why SLO, with that level of UK automotive market knowledge (not, I'd have thought, acquired overnight), and with his head screwed on fairly firmly, was in a lease deal in the first place.

None of my business, of course. Just seems odd.

Darling wife wanted a newer and larger car to replace the ageing but utterly reliable Honda Civic I bought many years before and amazingly offered to pay half the cost if I bought a new car. I did the sums and shopped around online then called dealers to see if any would match the best deal I found and one Honda dealer in Glasgow would to get his numbers up. It was around £50 a month less than the Honda contract hire list price saving £2,400 over the 48mth term. Taking into account the list price, any likely discount and the depreciation over 4yrs leasing with such a sizeable discount often works out the cheapest way to own £25k plus cars. It was in this case. The boss lady is now a student teacher and commuting to Uni for free on the bus via my family work pass so expensive car was no longer sensible but while old Toyota is an excellent car and suits my miserly nature the gaffers snob radar isn’t quite satisfied and will require another new or newish SUV whenever teacher wages start poring in. Another CRV is likely next year but old Toyota will stay as second car and current diesel Polo will be sold.

Edited by SLO76 on 28/04/2019 at 10:15

The perfect cheap used car - nellyjak
Seven months later and (touch wood) not a single problem with my £4K family workhorse. I still maintain the Avensis in any generation makes an excellent used buy. Economy is averaging early 40’s and to date it’s been no bother at all. No monthly payment, excellent reliability and minimal depreciation make for cheap motoring. No fun to drive but excels as a motorway mile muncher with good refinement, excellent high speed stability and decent ride comfort. I’d recommend one to anyone.

Good to hear SLO...though as a long time Toyota fan (with currently 2 Toyotas) it doesn't surprise me at all.

For me, they are still just about the best mass produced marque available...maybe not the most "exciting", but in terms of quality, reliability and depreciation there's little to beat them IMO.

The perfect cheap used car - Steveieb
Totally agree.
My daughter in laws Y Reg Japanese built Yaris has completed another flawless 12 months service and passed the Mot with no advisories .
Brilliant and being auto too , amazing performance for a 20 year old car !
The perfect cheap used car - Alby Back
All sounds great, apart from the "no fun to drive" bit.
The perfect cheap used car - SLO76
All sounds great, apart from the "no fun to drive" bit.

The fun comes from beating the system and saving money but yes my old Mazda MX5 toy is much missed. Another cheap fun toy will be sought when and if swmbo brings in a wage.
The perfect cheap used car - John F

...another cheap fun car...

;-)

www.ebay.co.uk/itm/273821121971?ul_noapp=true

Edited by John F on 28/04/2019 at 11:39

The perfect cheap used car - SLO76
That’s quite nice actually John. Thinking more of an 80’s or 90’s hot hatch or possibly a Ford Puma if I can find a good one when funds allow. I’d like another MX5 but no chance of getting away with just two seats with petrolhead wife and 4yr old in tow.

Edited by SLO76 on 28/04/2019 at 11:42

The perfect cheap used car - nellyjak
All sounds great, apart from the "no fun to drive" bit.

That depends on the model and what you want/expect from it...a few years back I had a Celica..now that WAS fun to drive.!!!

My current 3 litre V6 MPV beast is a joy to drive for different reasons...extremely comfortable and powerful and devoid of any stress...that's what I wanted now I'm getting on a bit..lol..and it certainly can give me some fun if I care to use the power available. (and I sometimes do.)

The perfect cheap used car - Trilogy.

SLO, Puma would be my top choice for a an inexpensive fun car, if something more practical was needed it would be an Alfa 147/156, bought with open eyes. All can be found for relatively little dosh.

The perfect cheap used car - SteveLee

My favourite bangers were both Japanese. A Honda CRX for £250, 1 years of lots of fun before the tinworm finished it off. And a £500 Nissan Primera P11D 2.0SX - what a chassis! - an absolute hoot to chuck down the lanes - it could keep up with just about anything on the twisties. Ended up giving it away to a friend when a bargain XM came up.

Though an honourable mention has to go to a Opal Senator 3.0CDX auto I bought from an auction for £80. Two years of comfy motoring, switchable sports suspension when I wanted to have some fun and a sublime cruiser when I didn't.

The perfect cheap used car - Trilogy.

I like the Primera MK1 and 2. Most think they're boring and dull, nothing could be further from the truth.

The perfect cheap used car - SteveLee

I like the Primera MK1 and 2. Most think they're boring and dull, nothing could be further from the truth.

Yep, a better chassis than the superb and much-lauded Mondeo, nobody took any notice so Nissan quit using expensive suspension for the MK3. If you're doing the time - you may as well do the crime!

The perfect cheap used car - SLO76
“I like the Primera MK1 and 2. Most think they're boring and dull, nothing could be further from the truth.”

Brilliant cars when they first came out in late 1990. Compared to rivals it was by far the class leader with driving dynamics to match the Pug 405 but with vastly superior quality. It would run circles round Cavaliers, Sierras and Carinas. Ride was a bit firm but not uncomfortable and the handling, steering and gear-change were pin sharp. Lovely car the Mk I especially anything with the lusty 2.0 petrol motor particularly the ZX. But they never really developed it and following gens were increasingly ugly and off pace.

I’d dispute that it was a better chassis than the Mondeo though but it was the best family car on the road for the three years before the Mondeo turned up and would easily outlast one. The Mondeo was a step up to drive though.

Edited by SLO76 on 28/04/2019 at 23:59

The perfect cheap used car - SteveLee
But they never really developed it and following gens were increasingly ugly and off pace. I’d dispute that it was a better chassis than the Mondeo though but it was the best family car on the road for the three years before the Mondeo turned up and would easily outlast one. The Mondeo was a step up to drive though.

The P11 handled every bit as well as the P10, but yes the rest of the car wasn't really modernised. Lusty is a good word for the 2.0 - a very nice "real-world" engine. I think the Mondeo suspension was tweaked more towards comfort - it would under-steer way before you could provoke the Primera to do the same thing, but it was still a cracking handler. The Mondeo was better in every other way though, much nicer interior, refinement, equipment - a real game changer.

The perfect cheap used car - Heidfirst

sadly, the chances to enjoy driving around here are becoming few & far between :( - more congestion, worse roads & increasingly automated enforcement ...

The perfect cheap used car - gordonbennet

sadly, the chances to enjoy driving around here are becoming few & far between :( - more congestion, worse roads & increasingly automated enforcement ...

Correct, the few enjoyable drives i get now are at 3.30 am when i leave for work, especially if i've got SWMBO Forester XT for the journey, generally though Northamptonshire's road network is ruined and the county is grinding to a motoring halt.

The county has suffered a massive influx of warehousing and regional distribution centres, due to its central location, and of course any spare bit of green land (except for the more well heeled parts of the county owned by the right people) is having many thousands of houses thrown up for the new population influx, and don't forget indentikit retail/leisure parks again with no new roads, their idea of road infrastructure is to put roundabout and traffic light controlled junctions dotted along the same existing roads...which couldn't cope 40 years ago...to handle the feeding in of rapidly increasing merging traffic.

Obviously these traffic volumes, much of which is heavy lorry traffic is constantly destroying those few roads hence the third world surfaces found in much of the county, where roads can't be repaired (even if the county wasn't bankrupt) because we haven't any other routes available.

The perfect cheap used car - RT

Don't expect commuting drives to be enjoyable - they never have been for most people.

Get out into the countryside at weekends - we had a pleasant drive across Wales to the coast yesterday, even a vintage tractor road run didn't spoil it as it was great to blast past as opportunities arose. Even driving straight through the centre of Birmingham was no issue.

We were treated to some sort of sports car gathering, coming the other way over the mountain road from Devil's Bridge to Elan Valley, a McLaren, couple of Ferraris, several Porsches plus a number of Audi's, etc - all thoroughly enjoying themselves.

The only numptie we saw was in a Jaguar XF slowing to 35 on bends and then accelerating to 55 on the straights.

The perfect cheap used car - eustace

SLO76, Does your avensis have the problem with the cracks on the front door, as illustrated in the below links?

https://www.toyotaownersclub.com/forums/topic/171984-front-door-cracking-at-check-strap-reinforcing-and-repair/

https://www.toyotaownersclub.com/forums/topic/175765-door-crack-on-2012-avensis-tourer/

https://www.autoexpress.co.uk/car-news/consumer-news/35635/watchdog-fix-avensis-fault

Three avensis I had looked at in the past 2 months all had this problem. A 2011 saloon, a 2010 saloon and a 2010 estate.

If this was purely a cosmetic, issue I would have been happy to ignore it. But I understand that these cracks can cause a whistling noise while driving at motorway speeds. I don't know if sealing it with duct tape, will prevent the wind noise.

Also I understand that the cracks will eventually get larger with time. I have not seen anyone on the toyota forums offer a solution on how to deal with these cracks, short of replacing the doors...

The perfect cheap used car - badbusdriver

SLO76, Does your avensis have the problem with the cracks on the front door, as illustrated in the below links?

https://www.toyotaownersclub.com/forums/topic/171984-front-door-cracking-at-check-strap-reinforcing-and-repair/

https://www.toyotaownersclub.com/forums/topic/175765-door-crack-on-2012-avensis-tourer/

https://www.autoexpress.co.uk/car-news/consumer-news/35635/watchdog-fix-avensis-fault

Three avensis I had looked at in the past 2 months all had this problem. A 2011 saloon, a 2010 saloon and a 2010 estate.

If this was purely a cosmetic, issue I would have been happy to ignore it. But I understand that these cracks can cause a whistling noise while driving at motorway speeds. I don't know if sealing it with duct tape, will prevent the wind noise.

Also I understand that the cracks will eventually get larger with time. I have not seen anyone on the toyota forums offer a solution on how to deal with these cracks, short of replacing the doors...

The issue with the front doors is completely seperate and something i have seen afflicting many cars while working at garages. It isn't a major problem to rectify, just take the car to a body repair shop and have them weld it up (just make sure the repair is also painted to prevent any rust). The second two links appear to be an issue around the rear doors, and looks like something i'd be much more concerned about were i buying one, as (to me) it would indicate a weakness in the structure of the car.

As you are only mentioning the front door issue, i wouldn't be too concerned, but maybe use it as a bargaining point?.

The perfect cheap used car - eustace

Hi BBD, Actually all 3 links are regarding issues with the front door. The photographs make it look like they are of the rear door. Actually its the front edge of the front door. The door needs to be opened wide, and you need to lean forward of the front door to take these photos.

https://www.toyotaownersclub.com/forums/topic/171984-front-door-cracking-at-check-strap-reinforcing-and-repair/

The above links describe the efforts an owner has taken to get the door repaired.

I understand that fixing it is difficult because of the shape of the door service, and the thinness of the material used.

The perfect cheap used car - eustace

Sorry BBD! The third link I posted does deal with the rear door. The link I intended to post was the below:-

https://www.carbuyer.co.uk/news/155620/watchdog-toyota-refuses-to-help-on-avensis-door-crack

The perfect cheap used car - SLO76
Can’t say I’ve noticed any additional wind noise and I wasn’t even aware of this issue. I’ll take a look at mine when I get a chance tomorrow and will report back. Work colleague with the 175,000 miler hasn’t mentioned it either.
The perfect cheap used car - Heidfirst

If you read through the TOC links you will see that my previous 61-plate, MY12 facelift was 1 of the cars affected (driver's door only, probably because 99% of my driving is driver only so passenger door rarely used). I was never aware of any increased wind noise due to it & I suspect that even fewer of the cars that develop the crack (& that is a very small % to start with) develop any wind noise due to it. Tbh I think that some of the cracks are caught as cracks in the paint due to flexing rather than the skin having already developed a crack (although long term they almost certainly would).

On rear doors simply not an issue (possibly because overall they tend to get much less use but you would expect taxis might develop it but I have never seen a report of even 1).

The perfect cheap used car - SLO76
9 month report on cheapo family wagon and.. yup, you guessed it not a thing to report. No rattles, no loose trim, no issues at all and still early 40’s to the gallon. Not exciting but minimal depreciation and utter reliability so far. Dog very much in love with it too since he’s actually allowed in the boot unlike much too valuable CRV.
The perfect cheap used car - nellyjak
9 month report on cheapo family wagon and.. yup, you guessed it not a thing to report. No rattles, no loose trim, no issues at all and still early 40’s to the gallon. Not exciting but minimal depreciation and utter reliability so far. Dog very much in love with it too since he’s actually allowed in the boot unlike much too valuable CRV.

Oh what a surprise...NOT.!!..lol

The perfect cheap used car - badbusdriver

Dog very much in love with it too since he’s actually allowed in the boot unlike much too valuable CRV.

I'm sure the dog also enjoys the easier access, with the back of the Avensis being closer to the ground than an SUV.

Not surprised at all by the lack of any problems though!.

The perfect cheap used car - SLO76
First Mot and a wee service too. Needed a bulb for its test (which I hadn’t noticed) and I had them secure the rear exhaust heat shield which I’ve been meaning to do for ages but that’s it for a years motoring it’s cost me all of £176.
The perfect cheap used car - Heidfirst

Mine was in for a service a week ago. Only thing outside usual checks, 2-yearly brake fluid change, oil & assorted filter inspection/changes was the rear wiper blade was starting to tear (a Bosch replacement is £6), nothing else required.

The perfect cheap used car - macscrooge

Some years ago I had an 07 Avensis 1.8 as a hire car (while waiting, coincidentally for a leased CR-V...). I wanted to not like it and trashed it mercilessly for a week. I ended up being rather sorry to see it go. And the 36mpg was pretty respectable in the circumstances.

If I was paying cash for a big reliable car I'd certainly consider an Avensis.

The perfect cheap used car - SLO76
macscrooge... love it, wish I’d used that one. Macscrooge’s misery motoring.
The perfect cheap used car - SLO76
Just back from wee UK holiday all 1616 miles of it and not a problem to report that was of the cars doing. Unfortunately even Toyota can’t completely idiot proof their cars as I proved when I lost the keys in Minehead and had to call the RAC to fish out the spare set I’d wisely brought but stupidly forgot to remove from the drivers door pocket.

Little mishap aside old Toyota performed admirably with no issues at all. Economy for the trip was just over 42mpg which for a heavily laden, petrol powered, largish estate is quite decent especially when much of it involved typical (and perfectly safe in good conditions) UK motorway speeds and a fair bit of traffic around Windsor and again on the M6 thanks to torrential rain causing flooding and a few accidents. Typical British summer.

As always I enjoyed my wee visit to rural England, I’ve a particular fondness for your wee village pubs. Believe it or not it was also a pleasure to visit London too which always has a very different feel from other European cities I’ve visited in recent years. While Paris, Barcelona and Rome were full of illegal’s trying to rob or con you and armed police everywhere London felt perfectly safe with a very low obvious police presence. The trains were clean, ran on time and were staffed by polite helpful people and our Merlin passes saw us straight on the London Eye with hardly any wait.

As with most UK holidays though the cost is far far too high. Hugely underestimated my spending and shall now be on beans and toast for the remainder of the year. It has cost far more than two weeks in a nice resort somewhere but after Paris last year I’m uncomfortable taking wife and 4yr old son abroad. On a sight seeing excursion we were mobbed at any tourist site you stopped at by illegals trying to distract and rob you. I won’t be back there or to Rome. Both are like war zones.

I was given a task by brother in law on a short visit on route home to hunt for a car up to £6k so the next few days will be enjoyable (for me) as I always get pleasure from spending other people’s money.

Edited by SLO76 on 29/07/2019 at 01:53

The perfect cheap used car - Smileyman

Great to read a positive report for London, we don't always appreciate the good things we have going for us.Thank you.

The perfect cheap used car - V4 Heaven

@SLO76

Just wondering how you're getting on with your Avensis?

I'm quite interested in your mpg now that you've had the car for a while.

I previously ran a 1.8 petrol Toyota Carina E and even at over 200,000 miles, my mpg was never less than 42 on my commute. I now have a Lexus CT200h and while the mpg is now in the high 50s/low 60s, I'm missing the space and versatility of a bigger car.

For info my commute is 26 miles of flowing B roads and A roads with a couple of small towns to negotiate. Traffic is generally light and my max speed is 60 due to the nature of the roads/traffic.

If your mpg is around the mid 40s, then the Avensis will be a viable option.

Cheers!

Edited by V4 Heaven on 03/09/2019 at 16:28

The perfect cheap used car - badbusdriver

@SLO76

Just wondering how you're getting on with your Avensis?

I'm quite interested in your mpg now that you've had the car for a while.

I previously ran a 1.8 petrol Toyota Carina E and even at over 200,000 miles, my mpg was never less than 42 on my commute. I now have a Lexus CT200h and while the mpg is now in the high 50s/low 60s, I'm missing the space and versatility of a bigger car.

For info my commute is 26 miles of flowing B roads and A roads with a couple of small towns to negotiate. Traffic is generally light and my max speed is 60 due to the nature of the roads/traffic.

If your mpg is around the mid 40s, then the Avensis will be a viable option.

Cheers!

Have you read the thread?. I'm asking because on at least 3 seperate posts on this thread so far, including the last but 1 before yours, SLO says what mpg he is getting (early 40's). Which may not quite be mid 40's, but still very impressive for a car of that size with a n/a petrol engine.

The perfect cheap used car - V4 Heaven

Hi,

Yes, had a look through.

Amazingly, for this forum, you all didn't fall out with each other after the top 3 replies.

So I'm interested, with SLO's experience how it may suit my type of driving/commute based on a good guesstimate of his ownership since 15 Sep 18.

Edited by V4 Heaven on 03/09/2019 at 17:43

The perfect cheap used car - badbusdriver

Amazingly, for this forum, you all didn't fall out with each other after the top 3 replies.

Really?, i have been a member for, i think, about 2.5 years, and in my experience, that is just not the case. Unless of course, you feel people having different opinions is the same as falling out?. Yes, there are sometimes more 'heated' disagreements or discussions, but these usually revolve around very particular topics, and/or, one or two forum members.

The perfect cheap used car - SLO76
Much depends on driving style but i find that it’s quite good on fuel on runs such as your commute. Best I get on longer runs is just over 50mpg but that takes a bit of effort. On average it’s closer to 42mpg but around town it’s 36-37mpg or thereabouts. Fine for a simple big petrol engined family Estate. Drive gently and mid 40’s should be the norm on typical A and B roads.The diesel isn’t hugely better but will offer substantially more midrange pulling power but being less complex the petrol is less likely to go wrong. Now reading just over 85,000 miles and no problems so far other than whining wife demanding something a bit more flash/posh.

Edited by SLO76 on 04/09/2019 at 00:29

The perfect cheap used car - Trilogy.

If she continues to whine perhaps it's time to trade her in for a new model!

The perfect cheap used car - SLO76

If she continues to whine perhaps it's time to trade her in for a new model!

I find most exhibit similar design flaws. Costly to run, noisy and prone to bouts of drama.
The perfect cheap used car - expat

If she continues to whine perhaps it's time to trade her in for a new model!

I find most exhibit similar design flaws. Costly to run, noisy and prone to bouts of drama.

It sounds like she is blowing a head gasket. Perhaps even totally cracked. If you decide to change the head you may be able to get something from a breakers. Try Burke and Hare in Edinburgh. You will be surprised what they can come up with. Be careful if you are doing it in the driveway. You can get some very nasty stains on the concrete which are hard to get out.

The perfect cheap used car - Avant

There are different types of whine. There's the very posh preselector whine (Daimlers either side of World War 2), or the much more downmarket gears-in-sump whine of a 1960s / 1970s BMC Mini or 1100. The louder this latter noise is, the greater the need for major surgery.

:)

The perfect cheap used car - SLO76
Won’t be a posh whine despite pretences Avant, she’s from Kilmarnock and from those who don’t know it look up the TV series the scheme on YouTube.

Edited by SLO76 on 04/09/2019 at 13:01

The perfect cheap used car - SLO76
Certainly showing the symptoms of a head gasket issue. Boils over for no reason so perhaps it’s time to remove the head.
The perfect cheap used car - nick62

The old bikers slogan (slightly modified) pretty much sums it up:

"If it has wheels or breasts, it's going to be trouble"

The perfect cheap used car - expat
Boils over for no reason



They all do that sir.
The perfect cheap used car - Trilogy.

The application of lubricant i.e. alcohol, especially wine, can in some instances reduce the frequency of whining.

The perfect cheap used car - daveyK_UK
The batch of 18 plate Honda Jazz cars motorpoint have up for sale price wise is tremendous (different specs available), S trim in solid colour for £7699! SE trim in metallic for £8699! They have been going through BCA auction at a similar price to motorpoint’s price (at Blackbushe).
.
If you wanted a ‘perfect cheap used car’ a mid spec Jazz 18 months old with 22k for that kind of money fits the bill.