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Budget?
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My Travel Blog |
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Unless you're on a good wage, its going to be the usual Punto/Corsa/106 brigade for your first year.
Don't buy new, or nearly new. You'll spend a fortune in depreciation, and you probably can't afford that (even though you think you can). Save buying a new car for 5-10 years down the line, when your insurance will be much cheaper. Oh, and take some further tuition - or you'll crash.
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Meh artwork! Quote:
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If your parents both drive Beemers get them to buy you something brand new with free insurance, worked a treat for me. Although I did end up with a Cinquecento (Sporting I'll have you know, that extra 16bhp makes all the difference), so you may want to sort your own out.
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I broke the dam!
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Just be aware that cars over five years of age are money boxes on wheels. Make sure you can afford the running costs before you jump in.
I remember my first car many moons ago, a 1979 Mini Clubman GT. It cost me £400 (in 1987), had knackered piston rings, a shot rear subframe and a six inch hole in one of the front wings. I swear I must have spent at least £1,000 over the next three years keeping it road legal.
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Life should NOT be a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in an attractive and well preserved body, but rather to skid in sideways - Chardonnay in one hand - pipe in the other - body thoroughly used up, totally worn out and screaming"What a ride!" |
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Take my M roadster, it was the same age as my dad's escort (1998) and had done 20k miles more, yet there was no rust, no rattles and the paintwork looked mint. His escort is rusting at every panel gap, the interior looking very tired and the trim looking rough. My first car was a 1995 (i got it in 2001) Ford Fiesta, a little under £1000. Ok, it was slow and it was a shitbox, but it was very cheap on fuel, cheap on insurance, cheap for parts and it was mechanically simple - no electric gizmos really apart from windows, so it was very Haynes manual when it came to maintaining it. It ran without a hitch for over a year until I traded it in. A modern equivalent would be something like a Clio 1.2 - cheap fuel, cheap tax, cheap insurance, cheap-ish parts, cheap tyres and it's one of the safest cars in its class with a four star safety rating. Something like this? My wildcard would be a Ford Puma 1.4, it got best hot hatch (well, the 1.7 did) in 1997 and they still look pretty modern. Being a 1.4, the usual budget car applies - tax/insurance/fuel/parts, but it'll be quite fun to drive. Very good chassis. Failing those, get a Fiesta 1.1 for mega cheap money, if it blows up after a year then buy another one .
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except blowing a speaker. at 21 you shouldn't get fucked over with insurance as badly as if you were 17, but i wouldn't bother looking at anything with an engine bigger than 1.2, maybe 1.4 at a push. however i drive a crappy m reg clio so what do i know? oh, and my masculinity is intact. just about. although i accidentally walked into the ladies the other night. |
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