Well he is fairly local. Reading the other posts on here, I don't get the feeling he's making it up.
No I'm not saying he is, its a valid thing to say. Its just the usual go to saying when getting clutch quote and doesn't necessarily need doing.
Well he is fairly local. Reading the other posts on here, I don't get the feeling he's making it up.
Well he is fairly local. Reading the other posts on here, I don't get the feeling he's making it up.
I have absolutely no idea how someone can enjoy driving.
Certainly not someone living in the south east of England.
Well done you, (not being sarcastic) I wish I could see it as anything other than a completely unnecessary yet necessary evil.
No, just the clutch I'm afraidThank you. When Mr Clutch did yours, do you know if he also had to do the flywheel?
I've just looked up at the sky and I saw a vision - it was a vision of your car lasting another year with clutch intact.[MENTION=4019]Triggaaar[/MENTION] you have now got me worried that my clutch is going to fall out. I've done 80k but it's going to be a year or so until I get a new car so 20k+ and my wife is learning to drive in it.
my Verso does 0-60 in about 2 1/2 hours
The garage where the car is at have quoted £1100, for the clutch and flywheel. I asked if they knew the flywheel needed replacing and he said he wouldn't know until the gearbox was out (as we know), but he'd advise replacing it anyway, because if it wasn't the flywheel, and the flywheel then goes in a year, we'll need to do both again.
Thoughts?
Thanks. The new quote is £100 less (£1100 vs £1200). It's about £570 more than just the clutch. If the flywheel is the sort of thing that is likely to go wrong at some point (if it hasn't already), then it makes sense to do it now.My car has just ticked over 100k miles and I'm budgeting for both the clutch and flywheel needing to be done. It's a bit like having the water pump done at the same time as the cam belt, the the biggest issue is normally the labour so you might as well get both done.
Although £700 is a fair chunk for just in case.
That depends on the price.Way forward these days is leasing...
I'm confused by the contract length - going from 2 years to 4 years, I assumed the price would come down (as I thought you'd be committing to having the same car for longer), but it went up. Does 'contract length' mean something else?https://www.vehiclesavers.com/car-leasing/vauxhall/grandland-x-hatchback/1.2t-se-5dr.html
Something like the above ticks many boxes!
That depends on the price.
I'm confused by the contract length - going from 2 years to 4 years, I assumed the price would come down (as I thought you'd be committing to having the same car for longer), but it went up. Does 'contract length' mean something else?
That depends on the price.
I'm confused by the contract length - going from 2 years to 4 years, I assumed the price would come down (as I thought you'd be committing to having the same car for longer), but it went up. Does 'contract length' mean something else?
I’m no mathematician but I reckon it’ll cost over 4k plus any deposit and at the end of two years you own....zilch. May be wrong
The neighbours will be impressed though
He now owns a car that is worth.... zilch
And unlikely to cost him over 4k in the next two years unless he’s hacking up and down a motorway every day
.
Makes sense, thanks.All about the residuals. There will be a tipping point where the car will suddenly drop in value on the second hand market.
Ok, so the only extra costs you get are servicing (which presumably has to be with the manufacturer?), tyres and insurance (and fuel, obvs). They cover road tax for you? And that's the case if you lease for 2 or 3 years.I have a car on lease at the moment and they would only do a 2 year lease, as in year 3 they think it will take a significant drop. Also worth noting 4 year leases are a bad idea ; generally warranty is 2 or 3 years, from my experience in year 4 you start seeing some issues, expensive leasing.
I'll only ever lease now; hassle free motoring. Always in a new car covered by warranty, tax is covered. You can get good deals on 'maintenance' which also includes servicing, tyres etc.
Well if £15k lasts you 12 years, then it's only £1,250 a year (plus the cost of the money). £100 a month doesn't get you much of a lease.Can't understand people that spend £10k-£15k of cash lump sum on something that will probably be worthless when they finish with it.
Makes sense, thanks.
Ok, so the only extra costs you get are servicing (which presumably has to be with the manufacturer?), tyres and insurance (and fuel, obvs). They cover road tax for you? And that's the case if you lease for 2 or 3 years.
Well if £15k lasts you 12 years, then it's only £1,250 a year (plus the cost of the money). £100 a month doesn't get you much of a lease.