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WEBMASTER'S CORNER...
Tirade of the week.
Are the great cars of today the great used cars
of tomorrow?
I read a lot of car magazines and been lucky to
have driven a fair many cars that I could never
hope to
own personally, under test track conditions. I enjoyed
the experiences immensely and continue to admire
the work of skilled designers and manufacturing
engineers,
but never fail to think of the wider practicalities
of technology on car ownership.
Granted, this may make me a deeply unexciting person
and I may never be admitted to the afterlife petrolhead
club. However, I think I can rest safe in the knowledge
that whatever else I do with my money, I do not waste
too much of it on cars.
There are a number of car ownership philosophies
that drive the market for cars, but given the cost
and engineering
complexity of modern cars I often wonder how this
might change in the future.
A punter enters a dealership, and walks out with
a brand new £35k car, fully loaded, electronic
everything, sat-nav, and 20" wheels. This might
be a company car, personal contract purchase or an
outright purchase. Whatever the finer points you
can pretty much guarantee that the car will be looked
after
and repaired for the warranty period, and in the
case of the company car or PCP be traded in at either
year
2 or 3.
Now depending on what the car was it may be worth
as much as 60% of it's purchase price or as little
as
30% on resale- a spread of £10.5-21k.
A dealer will advertise this sort of car as "prestige", "pre-owned", "cherished" or
whatever euphemisms they might employ. This pitches
what is still a highly desirable car in terms of
image, into a new car price bracket that is occupied
by such
worthies as Skoda, Citroen, Ford, Vauxhall, and Seat
etc.
...... "Now then sir, will that be a 'pre-loved
Audi A6' or a shiny new Vectra?" ......
tempted?
Punter number two duly becomes the second registered
owner of that car, reassured by additional warranty
cover for the first year. Whilst it is not necessarily
100% correct to say that punter number two is not
the financial equal of punter one, although one could
argue
that in buying used they would certainly be the more
astute in not losing 60% of their cash, they will
in many cases be less well heeled than the new car
buyer.
As a private buyer, will be by definition somewhat
less insulated from the cost of servicing and tyres
than a company car driver.
The months pass, the miles go on and the car nears
the end of its warranty. The owner’s enthusiasm
is suddenly dented by the cost of 4 new tyres and
a major service at the dealer. Wary of the potential
for additional cost and not wanting to face big bills
in the coming year he sells on privately to buyer
number
3.
At £6k for a 4 year-old exec with a full service
history it seems like a bargain - new tyres, no service
due for another 6k miles and all the toys still working,
how can they lose? The fun starts about 3 months in
when the climate control starts to blow hot air. OK,
no problem they figure, £200 for a re-charge
and clean at the local air-con specialist spied in
the local rag. The UV indicator die they routinely
add into the system when they re-fill it reveals a
crack in the system. This will cost £1500 to
replace.
Owner 3 is then caught in a dilemma, drive
with a broken car, sell at a thumping loss, or pay
the money just to maintain the value of the car and
pray that nothing else goes wrong. Eventually the
car will be sold again and again as successive owners
grapple
with the bills and maintenance issues until it becomes
effectively worthless - not because it mechanically
worn out, but because of over complicated electrical
gadgetry. This is a typical trajectory for car ownership.
Seduced by the potential of technology, carmakers
are packing more and more technology into their cars
even
at a low price level. Electrical systems are increasingly
integrated and computerised. Even the smallest fault
cannot be corrected without major work and big costs.
This means increased reliance on highly specialised
dealers and less opportunity for the DIY motorist
to repair their own car. More recent cars will become
a risky purchase far sooner in their lives than before
and as yet the non-franchise garage trade has not
fully
caught up with the need for cost-effective servicing
and repairs.
My point is amply illustrated by a quick search on
Autotrader for cars at £3500 within 10 miles
of my postcode. A choose between a 1998 Jeep Grand
Cherokee, 3 owners, all the kit and 80k miles (Original
Cost - £30,500) and a 1999 Renault Clio 1.9 Diesel,
also 80k up but a little more modestly specified (Original
Cost - £10,830). Which one do you think makes
the better ownership proposition? How much cheaper
and how many more garages are able to work on all
aspects of a Clio than the Cherokee?
So to bring it back to the beginning - the older
the car, then the more modest are the tasks required
maintaining
it. OK, so the lure of a BMW 7 series for the same
money as a Clio may be strong, but think very carefully
about what it is you are getting into.
As I say,
I may love cars, but not to the exclusion of common
sense.
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