In theory, yes...in reality, no. I saw a 2004 1.8T-Q and a 2.5V6-Q and whilst well priced (the trade seems to hate them), they both had service/maintence/repair invoices as long as your arm with all sorts of gremlins needing £300 here, £500 there. The owner of one those cars I saw had spent over £2k of work in the space of 12 months and he was only the 2nd owner. It seems that there are a lot of little mechanical or electrical/electronic things that can go wrong with those Quattros.
[TW]Fox;20009554 said:Thats pretty much what happens with old BMW's and Audi's though, only the 'I have £3k its all the money i have in the world but I refuse to buy a Ford' brigade kid themselves otherwise surely?
Nobody buys a £4k Audi with any sort of mind on low cost? Do they? Surely? Really?![]()
I certainly don't remember having to replace any brake pipes in my 323i, and that was a 160k, 11 year old car by the time it went to the BMW garage in the sky.
But given the wallet risks, I would certainly want to take the time to find a proper, genuinely mechnically well kept, 2 reputable owner, FASH example, and try to keep things simple specwise. Personally, I didn't find a very well kept car in 3 weekends of looking though admittedly I was looking for a certain spec.
[TW]Fox;20009951 said:I honestly think that at this end of the market perhaps 1 in every 10 cars of this type are the rare gem thats actually worth buying. To most buyers though, provided it has the bling and the badge they dont care.