Hello!
Posted: Thu Jan 30, 2014 12:46 pm
Hello everyone. I thought I'd raise my hand and join in here, and perhaps also ask for some help/advice, if that's ok.
I suppose I should say I've never owned a Citroen myself, although my granddad, an aerospace engineer, used to take me on lots of trips in his BX TZD. He was very proud of that car, and from what I remember it was a very comfortable cruiser. I always remember him laughing at the petrol cars we would pass on the relatively steep hills on the motorways around Winchester/Chandlers Ford.
Anyway... We are looking to start an extension, and I, the car enthusiast, saw an opportunity to try out a different car. We, or rather my wife has a nice car these days, but its not one I really want to shove a load of old rubbish in on a regular basis. This got me thinking, rather than paying for skips all the time, I may buy a cheapish old estate, use it for a bit, and then sell it on.
I'm not sure what the largest estate car in the UK is, but the mighty XM estate must be up there. I remember them from family holidays in France, and I always thought they were a good looking car. So my plan, over the next couple of months is to seek out a suitable car. The difficulty is that I need to find one that fits a few criteria - it must be MOT'd or cheaply MOT-able, it must be relatively local to London/Essex, and must not be in too good a condition cosmetically! As much as I love cars, I tend to get too attached to them. I need one that will be a bit too rough to warrant too much money/time. I'd also feel a bit guilty taking a nice one and abusing it with too many tip runs. I really don't want to ruin a good example of a dying breed, so i'd prefer to find one that is close to being scrapped - but still working of course! I'd aim to sell the car back to an enthusiast after six months or so.
So, the question is, am I being daft or is this a realistic plan? I've seen a few advertised, but I'd really need something around the £500 mark before head starts to overrule heart...It would be great to hear people's views.
I'm really enjoying reading the forum by the way, its a nice little community here.
I suppose I should say I've never owned a Citroen myself, although my granddad, an aerospace engineer, used to take me on lots of trips in his BX TZD. He was very proud of that car, and from what I remember it was a very comfortable cruiser. I always remember him laughing at the petrol cars we would pass on the relatively steep hills on the motorways around Winchester/Chandlers Ford.
Anyway... We are looking to start an extension, and I, the car enthusiast, saw an opportunity to try out a different car. We, or rather my wife has a nice car these days, but its not one I really want to shove a load of old rubbish in on a regular basis. This got me thinking, rather than paying for skips all the time, I may buy a cheapish old estate, use it for a bit, and then sell it on.
I'm not sure what the largest estate car in the UK is, but the mighty XM estate must be up there. I remember them from family holidays in France, and I always thought they were a good looking car. So my plan, over the next couple of months is to seek out a suitable car. The difficulty is that I need to find one that fits a few criteria - it must be MOT'd or cheaply MOT-able, it must be relatively local to London/Essex, and must not be in too good a condition cosmetically! As much as I love cars, I tend to get too attached to them. I need one that will be a bit too rough to warrant too much money/time. I'd also feel a bit guilty taking a nice one and abusing it with too many tip runs. I really don't want to ruin a good example of a dying breed, so i'd prefer to find one that is close to being scrapped - but still working of course! I'd aim to sell the car back to an enthusiast after six months or so.
So, the question is, am I being daft or is this a realistic plan? I've seen a few advertised, but I'd really need something around the £500 mark before head starts to overrule heart...It would be great to hear people's views.
I'm really enjoying reading the forum by the way, its a nice little community here.