This is immaculate: http://www.pistonheads.com/sales/1597565.htm
[TW]Fox;16271549 said:Genuine question - does this sort of motoring not bother you? Do you ask yourself if its worth the hassle of driving around in an old Proton wondering when it will be time to throw it in the bin and buy something equally horrid?
If you just wanted 'some wheels' then you can lease a rubbishy 107 or something for £99 a month and forget about it, without the worry of driving around in a decrepid Proton.
I've nothing against old cars, heck mine is rapidly becoming one, but I'm really not sure £100 cars are worth the faff.
[TW]Fox;16271873 said:So if you are the second owner of a 1 year old car it is shed?
OK - maybe not 10p but broken down there's no way there is 35k in parts there.
[TW]Fox;16271549 said:Genuine question - does this sort of motoring not bother you? Do you ask yourself if its worth the hassle of driving around in an old Proton wondering when it will be time to throw it in the bin and buy something equally horrid?
If you just wanted 'some wheels' then you can lease a rubbishy 107 or something for £99 a month and forget about it, without the worry of driving around in a decrepid Proton.
I've nothing against old cars, heck mine is rapidly becoming one, but I'm really not sure £100 cars are worth the faff.
I'd rather spend £500 on a car that lasts a year though. That makes more sense.
Way over my spend threshold
[TW]Fox;16271549 said:Genuine question - does this sort of motoring not bother you? Do you ask yourself if its worth the hassle of driving around in an old Proton wondering when it will be time to throw it in the bin and buy something equally horrid?
If you just wanted 'some wheels' then you can lease a rubbishy 107 or something for £99 a month and forget about it, without the worry of driving around in a decrepid Proton.
I've nothing against old cars, heck mine is rapidly becoming one, but I'm really not sure £100 cars are worth the faff.
Personally I do not see the point in spending several thousands pounds on a runabout when something older can do the job just as well for a fraction of the money.
[TW]Fox;16274140 said:I presume you sit in your front room on a deckchair, watch a 14" portable television, wear jeans from a charity shop and holiday in Bognor Regis as well?
No?
So why the different thinking with cars? The term 'runabout' is odd. It suggests a car used for driving to work and going to town and visiting friends is somehow different from a normal car.
I have a 'runabout'. It's called.. my car.
Thats where the term "runabout" comes from. Runabout to ues mon - fri to drive about it in, then an elise or something very focused to go out and drive on a weekend for no other reason than to enjoy the drive.