[TW]Fox;16460788 said:
Shabby, tired base models at the bottom end of the price bracket are a pain and are trouble.
But exactly what potentially catastrophic realibility issue is it going to have?
I completely accept your point that you have to be careful with older low priced examples, but 316 Compacts live within a different sub-market to the likes of E36 or E46 Coupes which tend to attract more chavvy types, the older and cheaper they are.
Take this evening for example. I was on my way to football and a '53 E46 Compact went across the roundabout in front of me. Who was in it? A middle aged / middle class looking woman with her husband in the passenger seat. Should I be asking her if she's been hooning it to the garden centre and back, and skimping on servicing?
A guy I work with recently traded his X plate 320i in for a new A4 Avant. The car was that horrible grey colour, had orange repeaters and green mould all along the window frames. I also don't think it had been washed in years. He got £1.5k p/x for it. But he's been the owner from new and it has a FBMWSH.
My car's another example. It's got parking scrapes and dents across the doors, rear wing and bumper. It's got patches of paintwork where I've had a go with touch up paint and other parts where Chips Away have had a go at it. The interior smells of cigarette smoke and had Coke and food (accidentally) dropped inside it on more than one occasion. By your criteria, its a tatty, tired example. But then you look at the service history and you see that everything that's needed to be done mechanically, has been done. All the Inspections, cooling system, suspension, sensors, steering pump, thermostat and various switches, from memory. All with stacks of paperwork showing a full BMW/indie history. But if I sell it tomorrow, I'm going to get pennies for it, even though whoever buys it is going to get a bloody good car without any mechanical problems.
Not every low priced BMW is a dog. You just have to keep your eyes peeled for a good one, and look at the type of owner you're buying from and the car's history. If its had all the necessary work done on it, why should it be a problem? A 2 owner 316 Compact with full history and evidence of a conscientious maintenance regime really isn't something that going to explode with some sort of catastrophic mechanical failure.