jonny.rainbow
Well-known member
- Oct 29, 2005
- 6,850
This sort of thing you mean?
REDLAND said:and while they are at it prehaps an extra 1-2p per litre could contribute to providing cheeper public trasnport and better cycling lanes in city centers !!
Voroshilov said:Those Mitsubishi L200 have been about in Cyprus for years before they become popular in Britain as people used them for busines as a van and as a car.
Not actually true. They only became popular in the UK when Mitsubishi started marketing them as leisure vehicles.
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Sorry but you are talking absolute rubbish. I was going to buy a bar in Cyprus in 1993 and at the time probably, excluding taxis which are nearly all Mercedes, OVER 50% of the other vehicles used by everyday people who had a small business were these Mitsubishis so much so that we were going to buy one and drive it back to England. This was long berfore they became popular in the UK as I said in my original post. My boys talked me out of it saying it looked like a 'pikey' van for them to do their tarmac.
One of my sons bosses was going to buy them as company vehicles and found that they were much too expensive for what they are and settled for Mercedes Vito with crewcabs cheaper and a lot better.
Nor should it.Rangdo said:If they used all the money they made from taxing fuel and vehicles and used it ALL to improve public transport then buses and trains would be free. Unfortunately most of the money goes nowhere near roads or transport.
Lord Bracknell said:Nor should it.
Fuel tax and vehicle taxes need to make a reasonable (ie enormous) contribution to the NHS to cover the costs of transport-derived illnesses such as asthma and accident treatment.
Albaman said:Taxing larger engine sizes will be inevitable if we are ever serious about reducing carbon emissions.
BensGrandad said:Voroshilov said:Those Mitsubishi L200 have been about in Cyprus for years before they become popular in Britain as people used them for busines as a van and as a car.
Not actually true. They only became popular in the UK when Mitsubishi started marketing them as leisure vehicles.
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Sorry but you are talking absolute rubbish. I was going to buy a bar in Cyprus in 1993 and at the time probably, excluding taxis which are nearly all Mercedes, OVER 50% of the other vehicles used by everyday people who had a small business were these Mitsubishis so much so that we were going to buy one and drive it back to England. This was long berfore they became popular in the UK as I said in my original post. My boys talked me out of it saying it looked like a 'pikey' van for them to do their tarmac.
One of my sons bosses was going to buy them as company vehicles and found that they were much too expensive for what they are and settled for Mercedes Vito with crewcabs cheaper and a lot better.
You really don't have a f***ing clue do you. I'm not talking about the Cypriut market,I'm talking about the UK. And I know what I've said is true because the UK marketing director for Mitsubishi told me himself.
The L200 warrior is specifically marketed at the sort of person who would buy a 4x4, other models in the range are aimed at small business users.
Interestingly most of the dealers I spoke to reckoned you're better off getting a van for a business, as they're not really that practicle.