do not get a Corsa please.
good manWish I could multi-quote you all, hopefully yous all read it..
Thanks for the advice, and yous made reality hit me a bit, I need to get something cheap, cane the **** out of it, have fun and save the boring leasing or buying for when im older and just have money for other activities.... (alcohol, women etc)
So now lads... What can we find that wont **** me on insurance, basically anything common will royally **** me, my friend has a Skoda Octavia 05 which was his Mams and I dont think his insurance is too bad, Im liking the cheap car idea now, im not too bad at saving, gonna do the autotrader upto 50 miles etc and run some price checks on random cars.
Gonna run them on ones posted too such as the Suzuki and the Honda and that 3 series (just out of curiosity not because its German)
If you want cheap motoring look at Volvo/Saab etc Basically anything a pimple faced scrotum wouldn't drive.
good man
the main goal should be to find a car that is cheap than your pcchoose something which is cheap to insure as well. stick with it a year or 2 then you can upgrade to something a bit nicer once insurance has come down. leave the diesels and bmw's for when you are an old man who cares about fuel economy over longer trips and need comfy old man seats and suspension.
Well apparently McDonalds with 14 year old girls is my scene
Seems thats all thats associated with Corsa's now...
IC3's 3 series 2.5L 218bhp and I will have a lot more fun in the long run![]()
if you want a base city car it would most likely be a lot cheaper, and insurance would be cheaper than an old car in many cases
He said he wanted a lease, that's the main reason I said go for it.
Insurance tends to be cheaper on newer cars also which would also help him.
I'm sorry but what on earth are you talking about?
Insurance isn't cheaper on newer cars (newer equivalent models), if you're an insurance company and a 17/18 year old wants to insure a 1.2 corsa, do you think the £10k corsa or the £2k corsa will be cheaper?
Also lease doesn't make sense if it's his first car, the chances of crashing are high, hopefully he doesn't crash, but the likelihood of hitting a bollard or lamppost or scraping a body panel against a wall or post are high.
Imagine doing that on a lease car...
Generally I'd expect, and have seen rates for newer cars to be higher when changing cars in the past. Of course I've never gone from the same car older to newer, but IMO it stands to reason. If a £10k car is involved in an accident and the car written off the insurance company is in the bag for £10k. Even if it's not written off they could be looking at £3k+ in repairs whereas if a £1.5k car needs £3k repairs, it's written off and then the insurance company is only out £1.5k. The prices SHOULD be different, but if they're not then the drivers of older cars are being ripped off.
Leasing and financing are literally the most expensive ways to own a car. Don't get me wrong - I have done it before and am doing it on my current car for similar reasons to yourself. However I'm under no illusions that the convenience costs extra, and would certainly not recommend either to someone as being a 'cheap' way of owning a car.I am skewed towards leasing/ financing. Done it for 10 years, chalked it up as an outgoing, cheap motoring.
I'm sorry but what on earth are you talking about?
Insurance isn't cheaper on newer cars (newer equivalent models), if you're an insurance company and a 17/18 year old wants to insure a 1.2 corsa, do you think the £10k corsa or the £2k corsa will be cheaper?
Also lease doesn't make sense if it's his first car, the chances of crashing are high, hopefully he doesn't crash, but the likelihood of hitting a bollard or lamppost or scraping a body panel against a wall or post are high.
Imagine doing that on a lease car...
Leasing and financing are literally the most expensive ways to own a car. Don't get me wrong - I have done it before and am doing it on my current car for similar reasons to yourself. However I'm under no illusions that the convenience costs extra, and would certainly not recommend either to someone as being a 'cheap' way of owning a car.
Generally I'd expect, and have seen rates for newer cars to be higher when changing cars in the past.