TIDY TGS on EBAY
Linky...
Fleebay
If anyone buys it to break for spares I`ll happily pay for the rear spoiler and wheel trims!
Fleebay
If anyone buys it to break for spares I`ll happily pay for the rear spoiler and wheel trims!
Vauxhall apologist.
- Philip Chidlow
- Over 2k
- Posts: 11594
- Joined: Fri Oct 07, 2005 1:08 pm
- Location: Chelmsford, Essex
- x 25
- Philip Chidlow
- Over 2k
- Posts: 11594
- Joined: Fri Oct 07, 2005 1:08 pm
- Location: Chelmsford, Essex
- x 25
- ken newbold
- Over 2k
- Posts: 4408
- Joined: Sun Aug 14, 2005 10:53 pm
- x 5
Does anyone have any advice on the advisability of trying to repair this engine ? I was seriously considering buying it to restore and keep when it was first listed at £100. Is a blown head gasket generally an indication that a car has been driven very hard ? I seem to remember reading that the 1.9 BXs have a much more durable head/engine than the smaller engines. Would it be feasible to swap the engine from my 19TRS into the Meteor, or is everything arranged differently ?
- DavidRutherford
- BX Digit man!
- Posts: 2706
- Joined: Wed May 18, 2005 5:07 pm
- Location: Placing comments on YouTube.
Sounds like a lot of work to save a petrol BX. The 1600's and 1900's are very similar, as they are both XU series engines, but it has to be said that it would be far more worthwhile to spend a bit more and buy a diesel one. The difference between 35-40 mpg and 50-55 mpg makes a massive difference.
plus... even £50 for a bx with a blown head gasket sounds expensive, when you consider mr Cavmad managed to buy a 1600 with a poped head gasket for £1.60!, and mr mdne got a very nice 1600 BX in lovely condition with current mot for £100.
I once saw a very good method for valuing old/cheap cars on the bangernomics site. It's something like:
Start with the value of the car if it had no MOT, and was to be broken for parts.
Add on the value of the MOT, at £30 per month remaining (£360 for a full year)
Subtract the cost of immediate repairs needed to keep the car roadworthy.
works surprisingly well.
In this case:
Value of Car in running order: £50?
Value of MOT £180
Repair to head gasket -£150
Recon/Replacement carb -£50
overall value of car... £30. (scrap value)
in this case, the cost of the repair work is more than the value of the MOT, so the car becomes worth less than it would be if it was in running order, but with no MOT... so barely worth it.
Plus... if you were to drive it 6000 miles over the 6 months of MOT remaining, it would cost about £675 in fuel. A diesel BX would cost £475 in fuel, so you might as well spend an extra £200 on a diesel bx, that doesn't need repairing, and save an awful lot of grief.
or, of course, just spend £150 on a diesel BX, and save all round.
plus... even £50 for a bx with a blown head gasket sounds expensive, when you consider mr Cavmad managed to buy a 1600 with a poped head gasket for £1.60!, and mr mdne got a very nice 1600 BX in lovely condition with current mot for £100.
I once saw a very good method for valuing old/cheap cars on the bangernomics site. It's something like:
Start with the value of the car if it had no MOT, and was to be broken for parts.
Add on the value of the MOT, at £30 per month remaining (£360 for a full year)
Subtract the cost of immediate repairs needed to keep the car roadworthy.
works surprisingly well.
In this case:
Value of Car in running order: £50?
Value of MOT £180
Repair to head gasket -£150
Recon/Replacement carb -£50
overall value of car... £30. (scrap value)
in this case, the cost of the repair work is more than the value of the MOT, so the car becomes worth less than it would be if it was in running order, but with no MOT... so barely worth it.
Plus... if you were to drive it 6000 miles over the 6 months of MOT remaining, it would cost about £675 in fuel. A diesel BX would cost £475 in fuel, so you might as well spend an extra £200 on a diesel bx, that doesn't need repairing, and save an awful lot of grief.
or, of course, just spend £150 on a diesel BX, and save all round.
this might be a signature