It was good to hear from Damon. Damon owns a 2008 Jaguar XKR 4.2, which he is “very reluctant” to let go of. “It does everything I need,” he says. “The only reason I’m looking to change is peer pressure and the fact it’s a 2008 model with 60,000 miles.”
In the spirit of Bangernomics, I would be inclined to stick with the old Jag and just invest a few bob in it. Job done. But we have more space to fill here, so Damon’s next car needs to be quick, it needs to be comfortable and it basically needs to be a good all-rounder. But it can’t be German.
Sticking with Jaguar is a sound idea because Damon has a very good specialist and, he told me, is full of confidence for the marque. It is possible to upgrade to a relatively recent 2014 Jaguar F-Type 5.0 V8 R with the Quickshift option, which has just 27,800 miles and retails for £36,990. It has a panoramic roof, too, and this one is finished in a rather fetching Italian red paintwork. It’s a tidy two-owner car on sale at a specialist, so will come with all the proper checks and balances, including a warranty.
Ford Mustang. That never actually came up in the conversation, but here’s a growling, snarling slice of Americana. These are right-hand drive and around in enough numbers to be bought easily and safely, and they come with a great big V8. I randomly plumped for a 5.0 GT from 2017 on a 67-plate. The asking price is a reasonable £29,925 and it comes with all mod cons, like smartphone integration, reversing camera and Bluetooth things. The 41k mileage is marginally above average but at least proves that it has been exercised properly over the past few years. It’s a dealer car, so there’s plenty of comeback if there is an issue.
I rather like this American diversion, and my only worry is that it could all get a bit too muscle car. Never mind, because for just £23,900 a 5.7-litre Chevrolet Camaro from 2012 could be on the drive. It’s an import and privately sold, but it is a one-owner, 60,000-mile example. Looked great to me, but I’m not the one buying it.
Join the debate
Add your comment
I had to get rid of my XK due to electrical and mechanical gremlins and severe chassis rust. It was simply too much trouble and expense to keep going with, despite its outward beauty. The persistent problems and costs eroded my initial love for it.
An F-Type is not an all-rounder like the XK, being a strict two-seater, with a small boot and it is still a Jaguar, with the same chassis rust and electrical issues.
I think Damon is missing a huge selection of enjoyable all-rounders by dismissing German cars. They are generally better built, better engineered and more reliable than British and American cars of similar age/mileage. A Porsche 911 for example, is a great all-rounder, with only a few well-known weaknesses.
Used Bentley and Aston models, while very attractive, are hugely expensive to own and run, so don't make sense, in my view.
I remember the advert tag line: 16 into 19 does go referring to the R19/16v, it was a very well honed chassis from what I can remember, that's Renaults' stomping ground, it was then and it still is. The RSI models were also very good too, can't remember any of them being crap.