So I'm bored and jetlagged and was awake at 5am.
After several of you have been mentioning about factoring mileage in I was trying to think of the best way to do this.
SteveH72 had a go by using pence per mile, and although that makes Coupe's look even better (which they are) it is going at it the wrong way round as of course, So I thought you have to multiply the price with the mileage, and throw in a few other factors to get figures that can be applied to Roadsters and Coupes fairly.
(Still awake at the back?) :?
I messed around for a while trying to combine mileages and prices to try and get a Mileage x = price Y formula, but basically couldn't without assuming a figure on mileage affecting price ( I guessed at £1200 per 10k which seemed to work out somewhere near what we might expect)
However I'd now also have to assume a starting price for a 10k car and realised that I was on a hiding to nothing, as I was assuming a starting point and an increment which both may or may not be true.
So I chucked my toys out of the pram, started again and just chucked all the data in to an excel chart and it came out like this....
I think it shows that -
a) Coupes are more mileage sensitive - possibly because of a perceived opportunity to keep as long term investments
b) The asking price difference for similar mileage coupes and roadsters is in the £3-5000 range.
This - as someone stated earlier does not take condition, service history, colour, options in to account at all.
Not at all scientific, but then again, what is on here
