Been a while since I had a thirsty V8 but took the car into the dealers for an annoying rattle from the drivers door. Only loaner they had was the dealer principals Range Rover SVR. Probably 30 years too late for me to really appreciate it, but even tootling around with the odd squirt here and there it drank like a '70s prop forward, and sounded like an angry bear. If I'm given a loaner I normally put something back in the tank to cover my mileage, suffice to say getting it back to full was interesting. I think it was on a par with my '76 Pontiac Trans Am 6.6!
Started out with nothing. Still have most of it left.
A common or garden A7 for me.
Just the 2 litre as I'm happy with 40+MPG.
Nice car, just an A6 with a slopey boot. Actually preferred the A6 Avant but got the A7 as a change.
Could not afford at the time they were either new, or then a good buy. Certainly not now, but god I love this car so much.
Z4C and a Z4MR were my closest, but this still holds a sweet spot for me, it’s just such a no compromise M car.
And despite this as my car now, I still really miss the ones above. Just so raw & old school whereas this just rewards without any skill.
That said, I love it still.
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Those BMWs are cool Matt, but that GTS is something special.
My friend had one of those and we used to call it "the bread van" .
He now owns a 1M which he's had since nearly new so he has good taste in M cars.
Got myself an M2 Comp last week as I've been driving a Kia for a couple of months which whilst entirely functional didn't give much sense of occasion.
I'm getting used to the sub 30mpg work runs at the moment and that's me being very light on the pedal.
Best colour BMW ever did and the weirdest M car they ever did....
Great combination!!
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Just bought a new daily a Forester XT
Joins my weekend M4
That is the problem ‘what next’ !
I’ve been obsessed with 911’s for years but agree they are getting
too big.
I sold my 991 GT2RS a few months back, the speed was truly intoxicating
but I haven’t once regretted selling it.
I have a 718 GT4 on order, in pts Irish Green- November build slot for December collection , I’ve already
been waiting 4 months since placing the order!
GT4 is the natural step, but not sure as a fully road car, especially the lower lip for car parks. Not that mine goes in them, that’s the Smart’s job!
Father in law sold his 991.2 and gets his GTS in the next few weeks. That was the fastest thing I’ve ever driven on the road and almost too quick / easy if there is such a thing.
I often come back after driving my wife’s 2.7 boxster and loving the fact I can string it out a little more in the gears. But then the experience in mine is so much nicer.
Not sure I’d want the GTS in 981 as a soft top as the exhaust is a bit loud. With the filter changes required for new exhausts, they are a lot more muted. Sometimes good, sometimes bad.
Got mine from Ashgood, they have some amazing toys in there, was a dream to walk about all the new and proper old school Porsches. Like a bedroom poster for a teen!
Continuing the M theme
Had the 3 previous generations of M3s so decided to try smaller-the F80 was constantly trying to kill you but after a week with this it behaves much better.
Last edited by Hood; 12th March 2024 at 05:11.
That is the one I wished I’d done. The F82 I had is still the only car I thought I’d write off. As you say, it always wanted to kill you - I never felt safe pushing on.
Yes I can show boat whenever I wanted on a roundabout but on any undulating surface it was the scariest thing ever.
I doubted people who said how bad it was, and then I left the brand entirely after experience of something else. Glad the 2 isn’t as mental, so many fans of the 3/4 but it’s just not balanced enough.
Whoever does not know how to hit the nail on the head should be asked not to hit it at all.
Friedrich Nietzsche
Can you post a pic of your 964?
Have you had it long?
Agreed- I think it’s fair to say a GT3RS or Sport Classic are in another league to most cars, just a shame you’ve got more chance of wandering past Selfridges and seeing a steel Daytona in the window for sale than getting a Sport Classic build slot. I see ‘911 Spy’ on Instagram has just collected a nice one.
A 992 GT3 Touring would be my pick of the modern stuff but that sure ain’t gonna happen.
This is my 993 Carrera 2 manual - I love it, it’s been a great car in the 9 yrs I’ve had it, I’ll never part with it - but I’ll never stop thinking I should of got a 964 instead when they were affordable…
Fun little Type R, wife hates it
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Picked this up yesterday for a bit of (hopefully) fun driving as and when.
2009 Boxster 2.9 PDK but with quite a few extras, 66k miles, FSH and in tidy condition for 13 years old I think.
Used it for a run to the tip today...:)
That is amazing & probably why the cayman feels right for me from a size perspective. It’s amazing how much cars have bloated and parking spaces have not!
Hood, completely agree on the F80 comments, chasing power and not finesse. I am yet to try the latest M versions, but the front has put me off entirely.
Just wish I had car play in the 981 without spending many hundreds to get it sorted. My only gripe, well aside from having to take half the rear of the car apart to get to air filters!
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Really liking all the BMW content, especially the clown shoe, very nice indeed.
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Here’s mine.
Hope it works as it’s my first attempt posting a pic on tapatalk
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IMG_7753.JPG
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I still have the Golf GTI and traded my Scirocco for the Cupra Born. I have also sold the VW T5 Campervan I built a few years ago along with the VW T4 Motorhome to fund the Karmann.
The Karmann is a 2007 RHD Colorado 550 with 18k, 1 of 3 RHD in the UK, made a few changes like new upholstery plus a few other tweaks.
The Born is a V2 eboost with tech L pack.
It is an interesting development in the market that's for sure and you are welcome to not like it or understand it but it clearly works for a lot of people.
From Audi's Nardo grey to BMW's Brooklyn grey and Porsche's Crayon and even Skoda's meteor grey that contrast from a flat grey paint job with dark grey and black trim does look good and just works.
If you are going to criticise it then you probably need to balance the argument by stating why the hugely popular but very boring and derivative metallic grey looks better?
Each to their own - as I made clear it is *my* opinion and *my* view and as I also made very clear, it's the buyer's money and their choice. Just one that still baffles me.
;-)
Re: the comparison with Silver / Metallic Grey - there are many objects finished in those colours and cars are no exception. Imagine painting your watch collection in matt grey/beige? :-)
It is strange, I think crayon seems to work better on the larger cars. When I saw a cayman in it, I was a little underwhelmed compared to how good I thought it would look.
Almost has to be larger than 911 size to carry it off IMHO. Not sure how I got to that, but love it with the larger ones.
I'm a big fan of primer
Had a Nardo car ,Crayon,Kemora grey and Hockenheim silver
All flat colours and look great when it's overcast which is much of the time up here.
Smokey have you"bonded" with the Macan?
Read your thread on Macan forum that you were undecided.
It’s a great car and I’m maybe expecting too much from it. Beautifully built and handles very well but just lacks a little personality.
If I wanted more excitement probably should have gone for an M3 or C63 but then they’d both have comprises.
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It's not really a new development - James Bond reportedly had a Bentley "in rough, not gloss, battleship grey" in the Thunderball novel, set in the 1960s:
Bond had the most selfish car in England. It was a Mark II Continental Bentley that some rich idiot had married to a telegraph pole on the Great West Road. Bond had bought the bits for £1,500 and Rolls had straightened the bend in the chassis and fitted new clockwork—the Mark IV engine with 9.5 compression. Then Bond had gone to Mulliners with £3,000, which was half his total capital, and they had sawn off the old cramped sports saloon body and had fitted a trim, rather square convertible two-seater affair, power-operated, with only two large armed bucket seats in black leather. The rest of the blunt end was all knife-edged, rather ugly, boot. The car was painted in rough, not gloss, battleship grey and the upholstery was black morocco. She went like a bird and a bomb and Bond loved her more than all the women at present in his life rolled, if that were feasible, together.