Z4M-2006 said:Both of the cars can be incredibly efficient when needed..
I had 33mpg out of my M coupe, had 39mpg on a very steady run out of my 35is..
Both brilliant figures considering the performance of the engines

jimmybell said:Also - not 'everyone can afford these cars'
I think the rough rule for car purchase is 20% salary, or up to 50% salary for an enthusiast, a brief look at UK average salaries suggests that most cant, or most that do - use some sort of finance. i'd happily spend 50% salary on a car, but I'd be concerned about spending 20% of salary via car finance.
With borrowing, I think it comes down to some sort of equation around 'if something goes wrong, can i afford to fix my situation before i go bankrupt', and not 'i worked hard after uni'. Remember, there will be examples of uni/no uni, worked harder, worked less hard, earnt more than you, earnt less than you etc. A decent barman will work hard, doesn't mean he can afford a car equal to his salary. So as someone said, it could be quite easy to offend someone by belittling purchase of what is a reasonably high end sportscar.
But what is can't afford it, can't buy it out-right this moment?ronk said:I think attitudes to borrowing or financing a car seems to have changed.
PCP etc seems to be the rage now but I've still got my foot in the "if I can't afford it I don't buy it" camp.
TitanTim said:I'm the opposite I just couldn't buy a car outright with cash, probably the worst thing you could do. Much better to invest it more wisely. For me a PCP is a smarter way to get you in a new car on a regular basis on a fixed monthly sum. I tend to seek out models which are on special deals at the time with a high dealer and manufacturer deposit contribution which gets you into a higher specced model. It's just a wiser way of paying for a high value item.
Tim.
Z4M-2006 said:See I can't understand that ...
I would save up and when I had the money I would buy it..I could wait, I wouldn't need it NOW!!
That said I would never buy a new car if that's what you mean?
To buy something for 40k and lose 40% of its value over a few years seems crazy to me,just to say I've got a new car?
To pay for finance ,and to get walloped for depreciation for the Sake of a car seems like getting kicked in both bollocks at the same time.
Z4M-2006 said:See I can't understand that ...
I would save up and when I had the money I would buy it..I could wait, I wouldn't need it NOW!!
That said I would never buy a new car if that's what you mean?
To buy something for 40k and lose 40% of its value over a few years seems crazy to me,just to say I've got a new car?
To pay for finance ,and to get walloped for depreciation for the Sake of a car seems like getting kicked in both bollocks at the same time.