Any Rennlisters from New Zealand?
Rennlist Member
Having done the Ferrari Festival of Speed in the regularity trials I'm well aware how much time is invested for little actual track time. Playday and the Arrive and Drive are far better value per lap, if that's the measure you use. Of course the Festival has lots of other things to do. Maybe RSG racing need to buy a Porsche Race car and enter in the Endurance race?
From the Maserati review on Stuff for instance:
"As it's the heaviest of the bunch, its steel brakes have the most work to do, and some fade reminds that these are road cars, after all. But it's surprising just how well they perform on track, especially with their exquisite hydraulic steering."
gets interpreted - rightly or wrongly - as:
"Unfortunately this lardy behemoth has brakes not fit for a Mini and I was lucky not to come off track on a stretcher. It did have great steering though."
Just a random example mind. Lest I'm mugged in a dark alley by a band of Sicilians with tridents on their keyrings, I do confess to knowing of at least one owner who took their Quattroporte to track and survived to tell the tale.
Rennlist Member
Because things are slow around here I thought of a question Id like all your help on answering:
If you were going to the UK for a holiday this year and you had 30K GBP )approx 65K NZD) to spend on a used car which you could drive while holidaying there then export to New Zealand (assume VAT exempt) what vehicle would you choose? It can be sporty or otherwise but ideally something thats a bit different, a bit of fun, not common in NZ and which would be economically viable to buy, export and use in NZ without massive depreciation over a a few years useage as a fun daily driver?
Im curious to what people recommend. Pistonheads.co.uk classifieds provides a handy market resource tool.
Any thoughts?
If you were going to the UK for a holiday this year and you had 30K GBP )approx 65K NZD) to spend on a used car which you could drive while holidaying there then export to New Zealand (assume VAT exempt) what vehicle would you choose? It can be sporty or otherwise but ideally something thats a bit different, a bit of fun, not common in NZ and which would be economically viable to buy, export and use in NZ without massive depreciation over a a few years useage as a fun daily driver?
Im curious to what people recommend. Pistonheads.co.uk classifieds provides a handy market resource tool.
Any thoughts?
Rennlist Member
Also a fan of Chris's stuff but he's not enough of an idiot for TG and might ruin it by saying something factual. Like with 99% of car reviewers, if I have any criticism of Chris it is that he loves all the cars he drives. That said, the lucky (and hard-working) sod does get to drive just about all the hottest ones on the planet so it's hard to blame him. I've long since learned to adjust the dial on car reviews so that anything less than effusive praise gets read as utter condemnation.
From the Maserati review on Stuff for instance:
"As it's the heaviest of the bunch, its steel brakes have the most work to do, and some fade reminds that these are road cars, after all. But it's surprising just how well they perform on track, especially with their exquisite hydraulic steering."
gets interpreted - rightly or wrongly - as:
"Unfortunately this lardy behemoth has brakes not fit for a Mini and I was lucky not to come off track on a stretcher. It did have great steering though."
Just a random example mind. Lest I'm mugged in a dark alley by a band of Sicilians with tridents on their keyrings, I do confess to knowing of at least one owner who took their Quattroporte to track and survived to tell the tale.
From the Maserati review on Stuff for instance:
"As it's the heaviest of the bunch, its steel brakes have the most work to do, and some fade reminds that these are road cars, after all. But it's surprising just how well they perform on track, especially with their exquisite hydraulic steering."
gets interpreted - rightly or wrongly - as:
"Unfortunately this lardy behemoth has brakes not fit for a Mini and I was lucky not to come off track on a stretcher. It did have great steering though."
Just a random example mind. Lest I'm mugged in a dark alley by a band of Sicilians with tridents on their keyrings, I do confess to knowing of at least one owner who took their Quattroporte to track and survived to tell the tale.
I just looked up Chris Evans. Not impressed. Is he a Queer?
Because things are slow around here I thought of a question Id like all your help on answering:
If you were going to the UK for a holiday this year and you had 30K GBP )approx 65K NZD) to spend on a used car which you could drive while holidaying there then export to New Zealand (assume VAT exempt) what vehicle would you choose? It can be sporty or otherwise but ideally something thats a bit different, a bit of fun, not common in NZ and which would be economically viable to buy, export and use in NZ without massive depreciation over a a few years useage as a fun daily driver?
Im curious to what people recommend. Pistonheads.co.uk classifieds provides a handy market resource tool.
Any thoughts?
If you were going to the UK for a holiday this year and you had 30K GBP )approx 65K NZD) to spend on a used car which you could drive while holidaying there then export to New Zealand (assume VAT exempt) what vehicle would you choose? It can be sporty or otherwise but ideally something thats a bit different, a bit of fun, not common in NZ and which would be economically viable to buy, export and use in NZ without massive depreciation over a a few years useage as a fun daily driver?
Im curious to what people recommend. Pistonheads.co.uk classifieds provides a handy market resource tool.
Any thoughts?
Because things are slow around here I thought of a question Id like all your help on answering:
If you were going to the UK for a holiday this year and you had 30K GBP )approx 65K NZD) to spend on a used car which you could drive while holidaying there then export to New Zealand (assume VAT exempt) what vehicle would you choose? It can be sporty or otherwise but ideally something thats a bit different, a bit of fun, not common in NZ and which would be economically viable to buy, export and use in NZ without massive depreciation over a a few years useage as a fun daily driver?
Im curious to what people recommend. Pistonheads.co.uk classifieds provides a handy market resource tool.
Any thoughts?
If you were going to the UK for a holiday this year and you had 30K GBP )approx 65K NZD) to spend on a used car which you could drive while holidaying there then export to New Zealand (assume VAT exempt) what vehicle would you choose? It can be sporty or otherwise but ideally something thats a bit different, a bit of fun, not common in NZ and which would be economically viable to buy, export and use in NZ without massive depreciation over a a few years useage as a fun daily driver?
Im curious to what people recommend. Pistonheads.co.uk classifieds provides a handy market resource tool.
Any thoughts?
Any Rennlisters from New Zealand?
Because things are slow around here I thought of a question Id like all your help on answering:
If you were going to the UK for a holiday this year and you had 30K GBP )approx 65K NZD) to spend on a used car which you could drive while holidaying there then export to New Zealand (assume VAT exempt) what vehicle would you choose? It can be sporty or otherwise but ideally something thats a bit different, a bit of fun, not common in NZ and which would be economically viable to buy, export and use in NZ without massive depreciation over a a few years useage as a fun daily driver?
Im curious to what people recommend. Pistonheads.co.uk classifieds provides a handy market resource tool.
Any thoughts?
If you were going to the UK for a holiday this year and you had 30K GBP )approx 65K NZD) to spend on a used car which you could drive while holidaying there then export to New Zealand (assume VAT exempt) what vehicle would you choose? It can be sporty or otherwise but ideally something thats a bit different, a bit of fun, not common in NZ and which would be economically viable to buy, export and use in NZ without massive depreciation over a a few years useage as a fun daily driver?
Im curious to what people recommend. Pistonheads.co.uk classifieds provides a handy market resource tool.
Any thoughts?
Rennlist Member
Warwick, Walter, Pel.
Thanks for the suggestions so far - will need to look up prices on a few of those so will start listing them, do some research and append price data as I find it:
RS4 (B5)
Bentley GTC
e30 M3 (pretty sure prices well over 30K GBP for these now?)
C63 AMG
My own suggestions was very late model C63AMG - but again so many coming being imported and the depreciate so fast I think a 2 door coupe and something a bit different is the ticket (remember the Opel Roadster or VX220, or some of the French gear?
Thanks for the suggestions so far - will need to look up prices on a few of those so will start listing them, do some research and append price data as I find it:
RS4 (B5)
Bentley GTC
e30 M3 (pretty sure prices well over 30K GBP for these now?)
C63 AMG
My own suggestions was very late model C63AMG - but again so many coming being imported and the depreciate so fast I think a 2 door coupe and something a bit different is the ticket (remember the Opel Roadster or VX220, or some of the French gear?
not sure how new you want to go or how much they go for but what about a B5 RS4 Estate? they have a cult following, have only seen 2 for sale in the past 12 months on TM.
New Audi RS4, Old Audi RS4s, New RS4 v C63. Phew. - /CHRIS HARRIS ON CARS - YouTube
New Audi RS4, Old Audi RS4s, New RS4 v C63. Phew. - /CHRIS HARRIS ON CARS - YouTube
That C63, as the last of the naturally aspirated 6.2s should hold its value better than most Mercs but you'd probably still want to move it on smartly as it would be expensive to hold IMO. Fantastic sound though.
Rennlist Member
B5 RS4 seems to sit around 10-15K GBP and Ive been told have been selling on TM, 35K NZD NZ new?
Not much point bringing in something that old which is already available locally for similar money?
Not much point bringing in something that old which is already available locally for similar money?
Problem is with basically all AMG's is they look dated once the new shape rolls in, theres also a heap of them round and not really a staunch following.
You could do something vanilla like a BMW 3 series diesel wagon? Is there a margin in that?
What does 30k GBP get you in the Porsche range?
Rennlist Member
Any Rennlisters from New Zealand?
Panamera maybe?