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Cheap to run cars







Fergus96

Member
Oct 20, 2004
332
Hove
Seat Leon 1.6 TDI Ecomotive - 60mpg, £35 to tax, half price on street parking in Brighton and Hove (annual permit) as below the 120 gram CO2 limit so I pay £40 per year. I get around 800 miles out of the tank which costs around £70 to fill up - so all in all, pretty economical, except it costs £20k new :) but hey the company paid for that too
 


simon swagbag

Member
Jul 8, 2003
489
Eastbourne
100% genuine offer this mate.

I have a 1.7 SXI DTI Corsa that gets between 50 - 70mpg depending on how you drive it that you can have FOR FREE!

Only thing is it needs a new Alternator (which is about £250 if fitted at a garage) and therefore it doesn't start. Also the paintwork is faded (as it is red) but honestly if you come and get it the car is yours.

I am only gonna scrap it otherwise. Great runner and superb mileage, its jut the alternator and I cannot be bothered to get it fixed as I ride my motorbike and only use the car once a month at a push.

Interested?
I'll come & get it Snook. I'll PM you my number.
 








terryberry1

Well-known member
Jul 9, 2011
5,023
Patcham
My girlfriend has a clio 1.5tdi. It does on average 52mpg, i recently drove to Newcastle, put £60 in it and got 600 miles out of it. Only £30 a year tax too
 


00snook

Active member
Aug 20, 2007
2,357
Southsea
Don't always work, my bike does at best 35 mpg and the car (diesel) 45 mpg.
Love riding the bike but not as economical as the car.

I get about 45mpg out of a VFR 800.

If you get a 125cc bike you will easily get 130mpg.

A happy medium is a 250cc which would probably get 80mpg, and be quick enough for most commuting
 






Garage_Doors

Originally the Swankers
Jun 28, 2008
11,790
Brighton
I get about 45mpg out of a VFR 800.

If you get a 125cc bike you will easily get 130mpg.

A happy medium is a 250cc which would probably get 80mpg, and be quick enough for most commuting

I know, but I was quoting my GSX1400 :lol:

My Hornet I only get 40 at best.
 


gazingdown

Well-known member
Feb 26, 2011
1,072
TBH, at £500, whatever you buy could easily have one thing go wrong that will cost a few hundred to fix, need new tyres, brakes, MOT, service etc.. If your current car, despite the economy, is reliable and doesn't need any imminent work, I would say better the devil you know than the one you don't! You could end up with a car costing more rather than less.

What sort of mileage are you doing? e.g. 5000 miles at 25mpg will cost you about £1225 a year in petrol. At 35mpg the cost will be £871. Is £354 a year saved really worth the risk of getting a dodgy replacement car?
 
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Lychpole

New member
Mar 2, 2009
67
We've just got a Peugeot 206 (for £1695) which is 51.4 mpg (urban) and is only £30 a year to tax, my old car was £118 to tax for 6 months!
Forgot - it's diesel.

What size engine ? I've got a 206 sport 2 litre hdi diesel and that's 136 for a year - get 50 to the gallon on average .
 


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