Bad back? You’re not alone according to my research, accrued from 30-plus years of helping motorists with their used car conundrums. If I had a quid for every time someone asked me to suggest a car to help cope with their back issues, I’d have a brand new Porsche 911 GT3.
So here’s a fairly typical query, and I hope it proves that these medical issues can be tackled in a frugal fashion. The latest patient was the survivor of three serious operations and who suffered from middle and lower back pain. She had sold her Lexus because the seat was positioned too low down. She found she could eliminate the pain in the middle of her back using the Japanese car’s electronic adjustments, but her lower back pain wouldn't go away.
We love a Lexus, even if it only half-cures a problem, and buying an LS is always great thing to do. Fixing one can potentially cost you dear, but a tidy 2001 LS430 with a solid sixfigure mileage is less than £1500. She was advised, and I don’t think it was me, to buy an SUV, which is the default back cure position. Getting in and out is easier and that highrise driving position is supposed to help. Well, the Nissan Qashqai she bought didn’t help at all. Indeed, she regretted saying goodbye to the Lexus, because the Qashqai’s seat was of only average quality.
That is the point: luxury cars tend to have decent, or at least very adjustable, seats as standard. We’ve mentioned Lexus, but what else could we buy with a posh badge and multi-adjustable electric seats? I have always rated the seats of a Mercedes S-Class and we could consider a 2004 350L with quite a few miles and fancy programmable chairs for £3795.
Another option would be to find an orthopaedic seat and bolt that in place if possible. Recaro make such seats, but they aren’t cheap. I saw a ‘Topline’ model for £2500. A cursory look around the interweb turned up some quite weird covers which cost only £100 but which look like someone has gaffer-taped a Puffa jacket to the seat. Otherwise a few hundred quid can get a second-hand example from a breaker’s yard, or you could scour one of those sites where people are selling off granny’s old stuff before she's moved into a home.
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I think you should keep fit.
I think you should keep fit.
Rover 75
Rover’s designers cleverly built the 75 for comfort not sporty handling, the seats are like armchairs and very comfortable. The ride is also impressive.
You realize that it is
You realize that it is important to look in a car not only at beauty and fashion with age. I also have back problems and it is important for me to take into account all the nuances inside the cabin of the proposed model. 3800 pounds is not quite a big price for super top brands with a high probability of getting back support, but you can find not a new model, but the sale of old ones left at the factory. If there is not enough money, then I would advise you to buy a salon that is less safe for the body, but to get special compression belts.
1,500 for an LS430?
Shut up and take my money!!!