Daughters looking for her first car
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Daughters looking for her first car
Anyone know of a small 1.0 litre car around the £1,000 mark for sale as my daughter is learning to drive and has her test at the end of July so wants more practice than just the driving instructor. Something like a Toyota Aygo. Thanks. Andy
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Yup - my daughter (and son) used an old 1.3 KA .. ideal for 1st car .. but sills do rust and need welding etc for MOTs so don't pay too much for one .. and get it with as much MOT as possible, as you might find cost of getting it thru the next MOT too much and more worthwhile to scrap.
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Have it in your name with wife and her as named drivers. If she lives away from home then declare that too.
Do this for as long as you can until she is old enough to get a sensible quote for insurance in her name.
Don't believe it if people say it can't be done as I've done it for years.
And a 206 btw. Petrol, or diesel if she plans high miles.
Or a boring Fiesta.
dl
Do this for as long as you can until she is old enough to get a sensible quote for insurance in her name.
Don't believe it if people say it can't be done as I've done it for years.
And a 206 btw. Petrol, or diesel if she plans high miles.
Or a boring Fiesta.
dl
#12
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I dont think you will go too far wrong with a micra, yaris, fiesta or a toyota starlet, just don't fall in to the trap of letting HER chose on the basis of looks and colour.
Buy the best looked after lowest miles car you can find, type in £1000 budget and 60,000 miles into auto trader and see what pops up.
Buy the best looked after lowest miles car you can find, type in £1000 budget and 60,000 miles into auto trader and see what pops up.
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Have it in your name with wife and her as named drivers. If she lives away from home then declare that too.
Do this for as long as you can until she is old enough to get a sensible quote for insurance in her name.
Don't believe it if people say it can't be done as I've done it for years.
And a 206 btw. Petrol, or diesel if she plans high miles.
Or a boring Fiesta.
dl
Do this for as long as you can until she is old enough to get a sensible quote for insurance in her name.
Don't believe it if people say it can't be done as I've done it for years.
And a 206 btw. Petrol, or diesel if she plans high miles.
Or a boring Fiesta.
dl
#14
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VW Polo 1.0
Daewoo/Chevrolet Matiz 0.9
Fiat Seicento/Cinquecento 0.9
Fiesta 1.25
Ka 1.3
Corsa 1.0/1.2
Are all also relatively low insurance groups.
As mentioned, don't go near cheap French motors...
Clio's are prone to head gasket failures, 206's eat back axles... The list goes on.
Good luck with the search.
Daewoo/Chevrolet Matiz 0.9
Fiat Seicento/Cinquecento 0.9
Fiesta 1.25
Ka 1.3
Corsa 1.0/1.2
Are all also relatively low insurance groups.
As mentioned, don't go near cheap French motors...
Clio's are prone to head gasket failures, 206's eat back axles... The list goes on.
Good luck with the search.
#15
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Bought a 206 as a first car last year - I was outvoted....
A random electrical fault has appeared where the engine cuts out while driving, happened half a dozen times now. I've googled it and it seems to be a common problem, but no-one has found a common reason - suspect it's a dodgy wire in the loom somewhere.
Then the brakes failed completely dumping all the fluid on the road. Turned out to be a build up of corrosion between the aluminium hydraulic brake cylinder and the backplate that then misaligns the cylinder pistons to the brake shoes allowing the pistons to pop out completely. A definite design problem caused by accelerated corrosion between dissimilar metals.
Only good thing is that no-one in our family will ever consider buying anything French unless it's wine or cheese.
Jap or German for reliability, or possibly Ford.
A random electrical fault has appeared where the engine cuts out while driving, happened half a dozen times now. I've googled it and it seems to be a common problem, but no-one has found a common reason - suspect it's a dodgy wire in the loom somewhere.
Then the brakes failed completely dumping all the fluid on the road. Turned out to be a build up of corrosion between the aluminium hydraulic brake cylinder and the backplate that then misaligns the cylinder pistons to the brake shoes allowing the pistons to pop out completely. A definite design problem caused by accelerated corrosion between dissimilar metals.
Only good thing is that no-one in our family will ever consider buying anything French unless it's wine or cheese.
Jap or German for reliability, or possibly Ford.
Last edited by Skoobie Dhu; 18 June 2013 at 05:59 PM.
#16
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Bought a 206 as a first car last year - I was outvoted....
A random electrical fault has appeared where the engine cuts out while driving, happened half a dozen times now. I've googled it and it seems to be a common problem, but no-one has found a common reason - suspect it's a dodgy wire in the loom somewhere.
Then the brakes failed completely dumping all the fluid on the road. Turned out to be a build up of corrosion between the aluminium hydraulic brake cylinder and the backplate that then misaligns the cylinder pistons to the brake shoes allowing the pistons to pop out completely. A definite design problem caused by accelerated corrosion between dissimilar metals.
Only good thing is that no-one in our family will ever consider buying anything French unless it's wine or cheese.
Jap or German for reliability, or possibly Ford.
A random electrical fault has appeared where the engine cuts out while driving, happened half a dozen times now. I've googled it and it seems to be a common problem, but no-one has found a common reason - suspect it's a dodgy wire in the loom somewhere.
Then the brakes failed completely dumping all the fluid on the road. Turned out to be a build up of corrosion between the aluminium hydraulic brake cylinder and the backplate that then misaligns the cylinder pistons to the brake shoes allowing the pistons to pop out completely. A definite design problem caused by accelerated corrosion between dissimilar metals.
Only good thing is that no-one in our family will ever consider buying anything French unless it's wine or cheese.
Jap or German for reliability, or possibly Ford.
To be fair to the French car manufacturers, Italian cars can be just as bad and spawn random electrical faults, although mechanically the seem much better than their French counterparts!
Cheap parts on French are usually to blame, especially when the electrical faults are untraceable. Although the suspension is usually the first give!
#17
Vastly overlooked are Daihatsu.
Can have a 1.0 litre Cuore or Charade. Different trims including electric windows, mirrors and even air-con
And Daihatsu are vastly owned by Toyota and made the Toyota small engine range not the other way round very reliable.
Can have a 1.0 litre Cuore or Charade. Different trims including electric windows, mirrors and even air-con
And Daihatsu are vastly owned by Toyota and made the Toyota small engine range not the other way round very reliable.
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I declared daughter as main driver and even got it insured for her business use. I was completely honest with insurers so I didn't have any problems.
dl
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VW Polo 1.0
Daewoo/Chevrolet Matiz 0.9
Fiat Seicento/Cinquecento 0.9
Fiesta 1.25
Ka 1.3
Corsa 1.0/1.2
Are all also relatively low insurance groups.
As mentioned, don't go near cheap French motors...
Clio's are prone to head gasket failures, 206's eat back axles... The list goes on.
Good luck with the search.
Daewoo/Chevrolet Matiz 0.9
Fiat Seicento/Cinquecento 0.9
Fiesta 1.25
Ka 1.3
Corsa 1.0/1.2
Are all also relatively low insurance groups.
As mentioned, don't go near cheap French motors...
Clio's are prone to head gasket failures, 206's eat back axles... The list goes on.
Good luck with the search.
You say stay away from French cars and THEN suggest an Italian car!! Especially a dump of a Fiat
Andy, ignore the usual rubbish that French cars are crap.
I've had 4 Peugeots (two 106's, 205GTi and 406), and apart from the admittedly 22 year old 205 being a pain, the others were brilliant cars. No mechanical or electrical issues at all and cheap to service/fix yourself if necessary.
I also found the insurance cheaper than other marquee too.
Look at late 106's
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It's the insurance that's gona make ur decision. Lad I worked with has a 19 year old son who passed his test and couldn't get insurance for his r reg 1.0l corsa for under 5k. My mate swapped all his no claims on to his policy with his son as a named driver and got it down to £1900. For a £400 car. Crazy how are young people supposed to afford that kind of premiums.
#23
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The thing is for cars like corsa, fiesta, polos for the just passed driver you get stung on insurance as that's what all the new drivers buy including chavs and pimp them up and they are the most common cars that have claims within the first year of driving so insurance see it as that. And it's right what the guy says above, a corsa will cost around 5k to insure in first year to a 17-21 year old new driver.
As said insure on mummy and daddy's name with daughter as named driver but unsure if she can build up her ncd by doing so (only some insurers do it)
And you've got to ask yourself will my daughter be seen dead in a dihatsu, matiz etc
As to why I said Yaris as it wins in all corners of the op's situation, try look for a sr spec as they look kind of sporty or go for the t-sport but they are 1.5s
Good luck yo!
As said insure on mummy and daddy's name with daughter as named driver but unsure if she can build up her ncd by doing so (only some insurers do it)
And you've got to ask yourself will my daughter be seen dead in a dihatsu, matiz etc
As to why I said Yaris as it wins in all corners of the op's situation, try look for a sr spec as they look kind of sporty or go for the t-sport but they are 1.5s
Good luck yo!
#24
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You say stay away from French cars and THEN suggest an Italian car!! Especially a dump of a Fiat
Andy, ignore the usual rubbish that French cars are crap.
I've had 4 Peugeots (two 106's, 205GTi and 406), and apart from the admittedly 22 year old 205 being a pain, the others were brilliant cars. No mechanical or electrical issues at all and cheap to service/fix yourself if necessary.
I also found the insurance cheaper than other marquee too.
Look at late 106's
Had 2 x 205GTi's, and a Laguna, and all 3 of them had to have almost all the suspension replaced during ownership. 1 205GTi, well I got out of it one evening, went back to it the following day and the ECU had died. Never started again. Lifted the engine into another (much newer) shell, fired up first time. 3 months later, lost rear electrics altogether (lights, rear wiper). Fixed that, and then lost front electrics a couple of weeks later. Not to mention that it leaked like a sieve! Lol. Laguna was ok when I got it, but as it aged random electrical items simply stopped working, until it died!
Had a Fiat Cinquecento Sporting and the only issue I had was that the lambda sensor was crap and kept failing emissions. Got through 2 OEM ones before a fiat mechanic told me to put one off a punto 1.2 on it. Never had another issue with it after that! And sold it on for twice what I paid for it.
My experiences with French cars have been poor, and I have a few other friends that have similar stories. I posted on another thread all my French cars have almost shook themselves to pieces. Rattles galore! Lol.
Also, I've replaced rear axles on 3 206's. the bearings give way, and it's an expensive job... Not an economical fix. Nor one you want to have to do on a first car. 106's are just saxos in disguise... And as a plus there's tons of parts, but I think I've had that much crap luck with French cars that I just can't bring myself to recommend one! Lol.
I think with me it's more personal preference!
#25
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The thing is for cars like corsa, fiesta, polos for the just passed driver you get stung on insurance as that's what all the new drivers buy including chavs and pimp them up and they are the most common cars that have claims within the first year of driving so insurance see it as that. And it's right what the guy says above, a corsa will cost around 5k to insure in first year to a 17-21 year old new driver.
As said insure on mummy and daddy's name with daughter as named driver but unsure if she can build up her ncd by doing so (only some insurers do it)
And you've got to ask yourself will my daughter be seen dead in a dihatsu, matiz etc
As to why I said Yaris as it wins in all corners of the op's situation, try look for a sr spec as they look kind of sporty or go for the t-sport but they are 1.5s
Good luck yo!
As said insure on mummy and daddy's name with daughter as named driver but unsure if she can build up her ncd by doing so (only some insurers do it)
And you've got to ask yourself will my daughter be seen dead in a dihatsu, matiz etc
As to why I said Yaris as it wins in all corners of the op's situation, try look for a sr spec as they look kind of sporty or go for the t-sport but they are 1.5s
Good luck yo!
The polo is a (new) group 5,
106 1.1 is around group 7
The fiats are around a group 2/3
Matiz is around group 5
So the fiats or the corsa *should* be the cheaper if you can find a good example!
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#28
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Yes but all the chavs buy them and put alloys and body kits on them etc and drive them like loons and crash them as to why they have more claims than a non Chav type car, insurance groups don't make much of a difference for a 'new' driver, it's the same risk IMO.
Insurance groups only make a difference to an experienced driver who has ncd
And women drivers don't get discount anymore.
Insurance groups only make a difference to an experienced driver who has ncd
And women drivers don't get discount anymore.
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Depends what you call expensive. I know of a nice Yaris for sale in Nottingham which belongs to a member on here.