My Cars: Land Rover Discovery Series 1 200tdi 3 door Land Rover Discovery Series 2 Facelift TD5 2020 Fiat Panda cross 4x4 twin air.
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Postby Defender110 »
ken newbold wrote:
Roverman wrote: any BX will do 70mph!
Even mine! 0-70 in 16.5 minutes
The kickdown's working well then
Kevan
1997 Mercedes C230 W202
2003 Land Rover Discovery Series 2 Facelift TD5 - Daily driver / hobby days and camping.
1993 Land Rover Discovery 200tdi Series 1 3 door - in need of TLC
2020 Fiat Panda 4x4 Cross Twin Air.
jacksun1987 wrote:111k Been stood in the gauarge till feb. 05. It has MOT AND TAX.
I asked him how much. Hes loooking for it. He said what it has been put up for. Then i said its auction so ill have to bid.
He wanted around about 1500 for it
lol
Why don't these people check out this club before they advertise and have crazy expectations, especially in the present economic climate. Anyone with that sort of money looking for a "classic car" is not going to spend it on a BX IMO
whare is the maket outside of this club that wants to buy a BX ?
Im not so sure. I got a BX cos I love em. I had a budget of considerably more than what I paid for it, but there was nothing as interesting or in my view as desirable.
I needed a useable (every day) reliable car. I used a DS every day for seven years. So long as you have a well sorted example, access to spares (even just ebay) and someone locally who knows what they're doing (im mechanically challenged) then older cars are manageable. I dont see much in the market thats interesting and practical for 2/3 grand. A saab 900 was one option, but most stuff is fairly uninteresting, certainly amongst the modern classics.
1991 BX TGD Saloon
1990 VW T25 Camper. Currently on sabbatical
My Cars: Land Rover Discovery Series 1 200tdi 3 door Land Rover Discovery Series 2 Facelift TD5 2020 Fiat Panda cross 4x4 twin air.
x 27
Postby Defender110 »
anaconda wrote:I had a budget of considerably more than what I paid for it, but there was nothing as interesting or in my view as desirable.
I needed a useable (every day) reliable car. ... I dont see much in the market thats interesting and practical for 2/3 grand. A saab 900 was one option, but most stuff is fairly uninteresting, certainly amongst the modern classics.
/\ As that, every day reliability with practicality and massive value to boot!
Kevan
1997 Mercedes C230 W202
2003 Land Rover Discovery Series 2 Facelift TD5 - Daily driver / hobby days and camping.
1993 Land Rover Discovery 200tdi Series 1 3 door - in need of TLC
2020 Fiat Panda 4x4 Cross Twin Air.
The only guide to the used car market IMO is auctions, because there is no other way to know the true market price of a used car.
Anyone paying more than £500 for any petrol BX in the autumn in thiis economic climate has more money than sense.
I have had Ami's, Dyane's, and DS's. I have always had a BX since 1989, and I also believe that they are practical cars to have. But I would not now rely on a BX as a sole everyday car, no way.
Would anyone here seriously have a BX as their only car ?
If not, then why is the car being bought, surely not to lock away in the garage, they are not that sort of car. So if BX's are being used fairly frequently, they require a backup car for when they sprng a leak, and there is no point wasting money on a petrol version either.
My BX is my only car and FAR more reliable and cheaper to run than many much newer cars I've had.
As to petrol vs diesel; everyone knows the relative merits of each and depending on what's most important to you you'll make a choice based on that ( I run a diesel because 'performance' isn't that important to me while reliability and cheaper running costs is).
It seems to me that if you're after a 'drivers' car however, then in general the merits of petrol far outstrip diesel. Depends what you're after. Arguing about whether petrol is better than diesel or vice versa is like arguing whether red is better than blue; which you prefer?
I strongly suspect that the 'performance' BXs will continue to attract higher prices purely on those merits - £895 for that 8v looked pretty good to me. They're great cars and starting to turn heads (they always turned mine!)
BX Meteor wrote:Would you seriously have a BX as your only car ?
A ran a BX 16v as my only car for about a year in '08-'09, then again this year for about 6 months. Also due to my age I paid more than £1000 a year just to insure it/them.
I don't actually have much money, but I have even less sense
I would consider a 2CV, or Ami, or Dyane as a reliable car to have as an only car. The only (big) problem with those cars is rust.
The BX does not have a rust issue, but as they get older the rubber returns start to become unreliable. If someone renewed ALL of the rubber returns, and even all of the metal supply piping, then it might be a reliable-ish car.
The weak point of the BX is the hydraulics, so the BX cannot be a reliable only-car-to-have, compared with other cars. Neither is the BX the sort of car that one would buy to lock away in a garage.
So IMO the BX falls into a strange area, which does not give it a high market value.
BX Meteor wrote:But I would not now rely on a BX as a sole everyday car, no way.
Would anyone here seriously have a BX as their only car ?
Yes. From the end of this month a BX will be my only road legal transport after the van goes off the road for the winter. Fair enough, I suppose I could borrow my wife's car at a pinch if she doesn't need it, but it's not cosseted weekend toy. I did 600 miles in it yesterday for work, without being remotely worried (I have no breakdown cover) about problems.
Regarding diesel versus petrol, all I'll say is that the diesels seem to have a higher demand (i.e. from a majority), but the petrols have a lower supply. Supply and demand seem to balance each other out somewhat, with performance petrols going for similar money to turbo diesels.
I prefer red by the way, any other colour is vastly inferior.
Paul296 wrote:
As to petrol vs diesel; everyone knows the relative merits of each and depending on what's most important to you you'll make a choice based on that ( I run a diesel because 'performance' isn't that important to me while reliability and cheaper running costs is).
Susan Donym wrote:I had my 16 valve as my daily driver,
Ok my wife has a people carrier but I don't drive it much,
its a nice frugal 2.7 V6
my golf GTi replaced a 3.0 V6 toyota camry in a bid to save some money
In my reckoning,
smiles per miles rules over miles per gallon any day
I think people are still missing my point, we all already have a BX, b we rely on other cars, if we did not have a BX, why go and fork out a LOT of money on one when they can be bought for not much money ?