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Mid-life crisis?

I’ve bought a sports car. :)

This sort of thing happens to gents of my age, apparently. We’re trying to recapture our youth, and demonstrate a last gasp of vigour before we trail down the slope to retirement, golf and whist drives. It’s supposed to indicate we’re insecure about our increasing age and terrified of the future…

Well, that’s a load of old cobblers I’m afraid. Yes, I’ve got a few grey hairs, but at 38 I’m hardly over the hill and picking up speed. Why have I bought a sports car? Simple, because I want one and I can afford it. I don’t need a long distance cruising car anymore, and we’ve got a practical car already.

So the next accusation that gets levelled is that you’re trying to compensate for some kind of Freudian deficiency. Sorry, that doesn’t stack up either. My little car isn’t incredibly fast, in fact most modern hot hatches will completely outrun it. It’s not very big, it has tiny little wheels and it’s not full of gadgets either. What would Freud have made of that then? :)

Then you get told it’s a ‘hairdresser’s car’. Well, I don’t know many hairdressers who have a RWD drive car, with a limited slip differential and no traction control. It doesn’t cosset you, it’s not particularly comfortable and it mucks up your hair good and proper if you drive it with the roof down!

To be fair 95% of people are really enthusiastic about it, but some can’t seem to help but be disparaging, troting out these hoary old cliches. I reckon Freud would have them nailed down though… jealousy perhaps? :)

More pics on facebook btw!

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Vroom vroom!

Haven’t updated the ol’ blog in a while – usual pathetic excuses etc. Thought I’d better though otherwise this website will end up as one of these!

So – the government is planning to give us a £5,000 subsidy to buy an electric car with. Woo hoo. I’ll admit to being in a quandary on this one, because on one hand I hate internal combustion engines and on the other I love them…

Hate : Noisy, smelly, clutter up streets, ruin otherwise nice places, traffic jams, too many of them, mostly mundane and functional junk, 4×4s, appalling driving from most, boy racers ’round estates, buses and lorries,  motorways, tool booths, traffic jams, company car drivers, reps, white vans, did I mention traffic jams?

Love : Noise (we’re talking a full moo on a track day in something fruity), POWER!, speed, exhilaration, oversteer, freedom, cool looks, more oversteer, twitching curtains, elegance and class (in something special), modifying/tweaking, an empty B-Road, rear wheel drive, my own little private domain, decent stereo and time to enjoy it, did I mention oversteer?

So what difference is an electric car going to make?

I’m not sold on the whole Co2 debate, and all an electric car is doing is moving the Co2 emissions from the exhaust pipe back to the coal station (unless by some miracle our country gets off its backside, stops faffing about with wind and wave energy and sorts out a series of decent nuclear power stations). So lets forget the ‘environmental’ agenda.

The biggest plus I see is less noise. Having cars go past at low speed in eerie silence actually sounds quite nice with my pipe, slippers and dog walking persona in full swing. At higher speed tyre roar becomes more significant, nullifying the effects of the engine. On the negative side, driving a car that doesn’t go BBBBUURRRRRRRIIIIIIIIINNNNNNZZZZZZZZVVVVVVFFSSSSTTTT through the gears will be utterly dull. No score draw then.

Economy? Well, my diesel Audi TDI does 55mpg and has a 600mile range. Can’t see any electric car managing both of those in the near future. Maybe higher mpg, but that’s useless without range. Points to the internal combustion engine (ICE).

Fill up time? I can fill up the ol’ TDI in about 5 minutes. Not likely to match that with a 3 pin plug. Points to the ICE.

Numbers on the road? Can’t see it making any difference. Until a decent alternative is provided in the form of cheap, reliable public transport (i.e. never) we’ll continue having far too many cars on the road. No score draw.

Style, sophistication, elegance? Well, the vast majority of electric cars look absolutely pants, however there is cautious optimism in the form of the Tesla, which I would definitely not say no to, but it’s the exception rather than the rule right now. Lets be fair though, the drivetrain shouldn’t ultimately affect aethestics too badly, it may even improve them given we won’t need some of the under bonnet gubbins. Cautious nod to electric here then.

Fun. The Achilles heel of electric cars? Maybe, maybe not. Sure an electric car is not going to make the same noises, but I’ve had loads of fun in bumper cars and battery powered go-karts. The Tesla outran a Lotus Elise on Topgear, so there’s definitely hope. All the tyres, suspension, wheel etc remains as before, so it’s not like the modification side of the house will disappear. No score draw.

As for the rest, not much change, and I can’t see electric engines getting into Vans, buses and LGVs any time soon, so we’ll still have that to put up with.

So how much are we talking then? Brand new, a full loaded Toyota Prius is £21,210, take off the £5,000 we we have £16,210, and you can only buy a new car with that. Even new you can buy a much nicer car than a Prius, and factor in 1-2 year old cars and the point is rammed home further.

Another daft scheme from the government, wasting money which ought to be spent on everyone, on those who have cash to spare to indulge.

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New cars….

Having been swanning around in a swanky new VW Eos for the last week and a bit courtesy of my local VW Dealer in lieu of my ancient Mk1 Golf GTI, I’ve had time to reflect on the pros and cons of owning a new car.

Comparing the Eos to the Mk1 Golf is a bit pointless, 25 years of age and 35 of design separate the two cars, and they have virtually nothing in common. I will mention the power-to-weight thing though. The Mk1 has a mere 112bhp from its normally aspirated 1.8 litre engine, the Eos 200bhp from a 2 litre turbo-charged engine, almost twice as much. Performance? The Golf manages 0-60 in 8.2secs, the Eos? 7.8. Not as much as you might suspect. Weight is the issue! The Eos is a convertible, so it’s heavily weighted down with extra strengthening, not to mention the satnav, mechanics, air-con, huge wheels etc.

Comparing the Eos to my 9 year old Audi A4 is more realistic. The Audi still feels modern, though having covered 160,000 miles, it’s close to the ‘old-banger’ stage of its life. However, it shares many of the same features. It’s got air-con, power steering, a modern dashboard design, airbags all over the place, high intensity lighting, large alloy wheels, excellent brakes. In fact the Audi has cruise control and a better stereo over and above the Eos. The Audi feels a little sloppier, but not much given its age and mileage.

A week with a brand new car was fun, but given that the Eos represents £24,000 and my Audi is worth about £2,400 I can’t quite understand what I would be paying £21,400 for. Even if I forego the fun of the Eos and get a sensible shoes new Audi A4 I’d be paying the same sort of money.

So, it was fun while it lasted, but having a new car for a week has only re-inforced to me how much money you can save by getting a decent solid example of a premium marque like Audi or VW and keeping it for as long as you can…

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35 Years of ‘Golf’…

I took my Mk1 Golf GTI down to the local VW Dealership over the weekend, at VW’s request, so they could use it as part of their display whilst launching the Mk6 Golf. They had arranged a display of all the Golfs from 1 to 6.

Obviously not the best time to be launching a new Golf, but I suspect the Golf will sell well anyway, as it has a loyal following and many many customers who will always move to the last model from their previous Golfs.

The Mk1 looked slightly odd inside the showroom. I imagine it’s been a while since one was there, given that the car was launched in 1974 and went out of production in 1983!

The thing that strikes you the most is how small it is. The Mk6 is huge by comparison (even the mk3 dwarfs it).

Apparently it has been drawing bigger crowds than the Mk6, but I guess it’s a pretty rare car now, and people have fond memories of it.

VW is keeping it for a week, as it is going up another dealer in Medway for next weekend.

In return, VW has given me a VW Eos (a hard top Cabriolet) to play with. This is an interesting car, with the mechanical folding roof, heated leather seats, and last (but definitely not least) a 200bhp 2-litre turbo-charged engine.

A big hit with the kids, and definitely a fun car, but at £24,000 in this spec, it’s not a car I would buy. It’s almost as long as our Passat Estate, but you can barely get two adults and two kids in it, and forget any luggage, particularly if you fancy lowering the roof – a lifestyle car.

Trouble is, I’ve not got the right lifestyle! Maybe in another decade! :)

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1 2 3 4 5 6 Golf!

I had a call from Volkswagen today. Apparently, in January, they are launching the ‘Mk6 Golf’ which apparently looks something like this…

Mk6 VW Golf

They are getting together examples of the previous generations of ‘Golf’, all the way back to the original Mk1. Apparently, they have got everything but a mk1 and it just so happens I have one – which looks like this…

Mk1 VW Golf

So they rang me up to see if they could borrow it in January for the Mk6 launch… should be interesting in a VW sort of a way. I’m hoping I might be able to wangle an R32 or a nice convertible EOS as a swap!

Will keep you posted!

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