 Slide of Slide of  - There have been many great British cars.- We believe these cars are hard to beat, and this is our guide to tracking down the best example: 
 Slide of Slide of  - RANGE ROVER MK3 (2001 -12)- The Range Rover has been Britain’s unofficial ambassador for more than 50 years. Our favourite is this third-generation version. It was developed by BMW and offers a fine blend of performance, luxury and off-road ability, and prices for this model are fair. - WHAT TO LOOK FOR: Check it is mechanically quiet, it sits right and rust isn’t an MOT issue - WE FOUND: Range Rover 4.4 TD V8 Vogue, 2011/61, 72,000 miles, £14,500 
 Slide of Slide of  - RANGE ROVER EVOQUE MK1 (2011-18)- The compact SUV was an instant hit, which is why today’s classifieds are awash with them at prices starting from £5000. Diesels are economical and Euro 6 from 2015; petrols are smooth and less prone to particulate filter issues. - WHAT TO LOOK FOR: Any rust is likely to be accident repair-related; DPF problems - WE FOUND: Range Rover Evoque 2.0 SD4 Autobiography auto, 2017/67, 54,000 miles, £16,495 
 Slide of Slide of  - BENTLEY CONTINENTAL GT MK1 (2003-11)- New Bentley owner Volkswagen was determined to get its high-performance, four-seat coupé right, sweetening the deal with a ‘low’ £110,000 sticker price. The GTC convertible arrived soon after, while 2008 heralded the introduction of key updates. - WHAT TO LOOK FOR: Well-maintained high-milers are best; check for mechanical and suspension issues and paint damage - WE FOUND: Bentley Continental GT Speed, 2009/09, 63,000 miles, £22,000 
 Slide of Slide of  - LOTUS ELISE S1 (1996 -2001)- Rear-wheel drive and weighing just 725kg, even the least powerful Elise cracks 0-62mph in 5.5sec. There are quicker ones, but the basic 118bhp model is the sweetest. - WHAT TO LOOK FOR: Wayward panel gaps, rusty rear subframe, track-day accident damage, paint crazing, head gasket leaks - WE FOUND: Lotus Elise 1.8, 1999/T, 48,000 miles, £15,500 
 Slide of Slide of  - MINI MK1 (2001-06)- Size-wise, the first-gen Mini hatch is the closest to BMC’s original. The One is slow, the Cooper a little quicker and diesels are economical, but the supercharged petrol Cooper S is the one you want. - WHAT TO LOOK FOR: Cabin damp, gearbox and supercharger noises, irregular maintenance - WE FOUND: Mini 1.6 Cooper S, 2006/56, 42,000 miles, £4500 
 Slide of Slide of  - MINI PACEMAN (2013-16)- The Paceman had big ambitions, with hatchbacks, coupés and even SUVs in its crosshairs. Buyers were confused, though, and with sales falling, BMW dropped it after just three years. It’s a heavy car and at its best in Cooper S form. - WHAT TO LOOK FOR: Missed oil changes, worn brakes, peeling decals - WE FOUND: Mini Paceman Cooper S, 2014/14, 70,000 miles, £6450 
 Slide of Slide of  - RANGE ROVER EVOQUE CONVERTIBLE (2016-18)- Heavier, more expensive and less practical than its five-door sibling, the two-door Evoque convertible was a bonkers derivative that was binned after just three years. Used ones are rare today, but they are at least reasonably priced. - WHAT TO LOOK FOR: Check for cabin damp, creaks and groans and DPF issues on diesels - WE FOUND: Range Rover Evoque 2.0 TD4 HSE Dynamic convertible, 2016/16, 53,000 miles, £17,990 
 Slide of Slide of  - LOTUS ELAN SE (1989-92)- With its front-wheel-drive layout, the Elan SE was, in the context of Lotus, almost wilfully perverse. A thrash in the 163bhp turbo version usually won over sceptics. The model returned in S2 form from 1994-95. - WHAT TO LOOK FOR: Mechanicals are strong but composite body and interior can be tired - WE FOUND: Lotus Elan 1.6 SE, 1990/H, 86,000 miles, £5975 
 Slide of Slide of  - INEOS GRENADIER (2023 -)- Sir Jim Ratcliffe’s take on the original Defender is no rich man’s vanity project. Used Grenadiers are now more sensible although options-sensitive. - WHAT TO LOOK FOR: Desirable options; check the underside and that everything works - WE FOUND: Ineos Grenadier Fieldmaster, 2023/23, 4000 miles, £49,995 
 Slide of Slide of  - LAND ROVER FREELANDER 2 (2006-15)- The second-generation Freelander was well built, powerful, practical and comfortable. It’s good to drive on road and off and has high-tech chassis systems including on-demand four-wheel drive and Terrain Response. Cars from 2012 are the best. - WHAT TO LOOK FOR: Underside damage and oil and coolant leaks, wonky steering, transmission noises - WE FOUND: Land Rover Freelander 2.2 TD4 GS, 2013/13, 56,000 miles, £8500 
 Slide of Slide of  - JAGUAR XF MK2 (2015-24)- The Mk1 XF is cheap but long in the tooth, so check out this, its good-value Mk2 successor: a prettier and better-finished car with new underpinnings and engines. There are even versions with four-wheel drive, but the regular rear-drive cars go well enough. - WHAT TO LOOK FOR: Oil dilution in diesels, infotainment glitches, water leaks into the cabin - WE FOUND: Jaguar XF 2.0 R-Sport auto, 2019/68, 52,000 miles, £15,490 
 Slide of Slide of  - JAGUAR XE (2015-24)- The XE has a class-leading blend of comfort and agility. There’s a wide choice of petrol and diesel engines, too. With good build quality, fair prices and an interior brimming with nice touches as standard, what ’s not to like? - WHAT TO LOOK FOR: DPF issues on diesels, infotainment gremlins, irregular tyre wear - WE FOUND: Jaguar XE 2.0i R-Sport 200 auto, 2019/19, 39,000 miles, £15,750 
 Slide of Slide of  - JAGUAR I -PACE (2018 -)- Used EVs have nosedived in price in recent months, and few have done so more steeply than the handsome, comfortable and tech-rich I-Pace. Four-year-old cars with fewer than 30,000 miles start at £17,000; SE trim is the sweet spot. - WHAT TO LOOK FOR: Check charge cables are present, that the battery and brakes are in good condition and that all the updates have been carried out - WE FOUND: Jaguar I-Pace 400 90kWh SE, 2021/71, 15,000 miles, £23,800 
 Slide of Slide of  - MGF (1995 -2002)- The MGF was an affordable, mid-engined, rear-drive roadster with engaging handling and a supple ride. It was facelifted in 1999 and offered in 110bhp, 118bhp and 145bhp outputs, and it went on to become Britain’s best-selling rag-top. - WHAT TO LOOK FOR: Hydragas suspension and head gasket leaks, underbody corrosion, steering issues - WE FOUND: MGF 1.8i, 1999/S, 61,000 miles, £1250 
 Slide of Slide of  - LOTUS EXIGE S2 (2004-11)- Buoyed by the success of the Elise, Lotus followed up with the more powerful Exige two-seat coupé in 2000 and the Exige 2 four years after that. Its 1.8-litre Toyota/Yamaha engine produces from 187bhp in standard form to 256bhp in the supercharged 2011 S. - WHAT TO LOOK FOR: Unblemished service history, coolant leaks, gearbox wear, signs of tracking, tired body - WE FOUND: Lotus Exige 190 S2 2006/06, 51,000 miles, £25,000 
 Slide of Slide of  - JAGUAR F-TYPE COUPE (2013-24)- More than 10 years since it was launched, Jaguar’s homage to the E-Type continues to thrill in terms of both performance and value for money. Good 5.0-litre V8-engined cars start at around £28,000, 3.0 -litre V6s cost from £18,000 and the sweet (2018-on) 2.0-litre four-pot model is around £25,000. - LOOK OUT FOR: Interior rattles, seized centre air vent and door handles, faulty active exhaust, leaky rear differential - WE FOUND: Jaguar F-Type 3.0 V6 S, 2015/64, 46,000 miles, £23,995 
 Slide of Slide of  - ASTON MARTIN V8 VANTAGE (2005-17)- The baby in Aston Martin’s range when it was launched proved to be one of the brand’s finer offspring, possessed of a charismatic and reliable 4.3-litre V8 (increased to 4.7 litres from 2008), an aluminium body and a well-designed cabin. Prices from just £18,000. - WHAT TO LOOK FOR: Full service history, worn clutch, suspension and alignment issues, oxidation on early cars - WE FOUND: Aston Martin V8 Vantage 4.3, 2007/56, 54,000 miles, £25,000 
 Slide of Slide of  - JAGUAR XK (2006-14)- Like its predecessor the XK8, the XK is a pretty 2+2 coupé powered by a choice of V8 petrol engines. Some of those are supercharged, which means the XK is quick but also comfortable. If you can, buy the better, post-2009 facelift version. - WHAT TO LOOK FOR: Bulletproof service history, supercharger leaks and noises, warped wheels, faulty parking brake, aluminium oxidation - WE FOUND: Jaguar XK 5.0 V8 Portfolio, 2010/60, 73,000 miles, £12,995 
 Slide of Slide of  - MINI 2.0 COOPER S (2013-24)- Most models improve over the generations, and the third-gen Mini Cooper S is no exception: it’s quicker, usefully roomier, more refined and more ‘grown-up’ than its predecessors. Prices are very colour- and option-sensitive. - WHAT TO LOOK FOR: Heated seats and the larger sat-nav and upgraded stereo, peeling decals, budget tyres suggesting penny-pinching - WE FOUND: Mini 2.0 Cooper S, 2018/68, 43,000 miles, £11,995 
 Slide of Slide of  - McLAREN 570S (2015 -19)- Autocar’s road testers awarded McLaren’s rival to the Porsche 911 Turbo S the full five stars. Today, with prices for 2016-reg examples starting from £70,000, or half their price before extras when new, perhaps a bonus sixth star for ‘good used buy’ is now due. - WHAT TO LOOK FOR: A trickle charger, broken suspension springs, leaky dampers and coolant hoses, wayward panel gaps and bubbling on panel edges - WE FOUND: McLaren 570S, 2016/65, 27,000 miles, £69,990 
 Slide of Slide of  - JAGUAR S-TYPE R (2002-07)- Prices for this cool-looking, rear-wheel-drive 395bhp V8 super-saloon now span from around £7000 to £15,000. In a head-to-head with like-minded rivals, Autocar rated it not far behind t he E39 BMW M5, the prices of which start where the Jaguar ’s leave off. - WHAT TO LOOK FOR: Rotting sills, supercharger rattles, missed oil changes, hunting transmission, baggy suspension, faulty electrics - WE FOUND: Jaguar S-Type 4.2 V8 R, 2002/02, 70,000 miles, £8795 
 Slide of Slide of  - TVR GRIFFITH 500 (1993-2002)- Prices have risen for this 5.0 -litre, 340bhp version of the original hairy-chest express, with the cheapest cars now around £15,000 and the most expensive double that. TVRs have a poor reputation but, fortunately, by now the few Griffiths for sale have had most issues sorted. - WHAT TO LOOK FOR: Electrical problems, mechanical noises and cooling issues, quiet reverse gear engagement, suspension and bodywork faults, rotting chassis outriggers - WE FOUND: TVR Griffith 5.0 500, 1994/S, 54,000 miles, £16,500 
 Slide of Slide of  - RANGE ROVER SPORT 5.0 SUPERCHARGED (2009-13)- With 503bhp and 416lb ft, this most powerful of the first-generation Sport can sprint from 0 - 62mph in just 5.9sec. Thanks to adaptive suspension and active anti-roll bars, it rides and corners comfortably and securely too. - WHAT TO LOOK FOR: Supercharger noises, failed water pump, weak battery, sitting oddly at rest, irregular tyre wear, underbody damage - WE FOUND: Range Rover Sport 5.0 V8 Supercharged, 2011/61, 66,000 miles, £9990 
 Slide of Slide of  - JAGUAR XFR (2 009 -15)- Son of S -Type R also has a supercharged V8, but in this case it produces 503bhp to give 0 - 62mph in 4.7sec. In its road test, Autocar awarded the 2012-facelift version the full five stars. There’s an even more powerful and dramatic XFR-S with 542bhp, but they’re hard to find and prices for them are high. - WHAT TO LOOK FOR: A failing timing chain (the engine might sound like a diesel tractor on start-up), fuel and coolant leaks, perished pipework - WE FOUND: Jaguar 5.0 V8 XFR, 2013/63, 65,000 miles, £17,995 
 Slide of Slide of  - BENTLEY ARNAGE (1999-2010)- New owner Volkswagen’s first stab at a Bentley was a bit wobbly, with the company ditching the car’s modern 4.4-litre BMW V8 in favour of the old Bentley Turbo R’s 6.75. Cabin is a bit plasticky, but a tidy car cuts a dash. - WHAT TO LOOK FOR: Full Bentley or specialist service history, correct batteries, galvanic corrosion, weak interior trim - WE FOUND: Bentley Arnage 4.4 V8, 1998/S, 68,000 miles, £18,999 
 Slide of Slide of  - JAGUAR XJ (2009 -19)- The XJ’s last hurrah is a stylish and capable saloon worthy of the name and, as a used car, good value. Ride and handling, performance and refinement are top-drawer, and prices begin at just £5000. - WHAT TO LOOK FOR: DPF issues on diesel cars, six-speed gearbox issues on pre-2012 update cars, sagging suspension, infotainment gremlins - WE FOUND: Jaguar XJ 3.0 V6 R-Sport, 2017/66, 47,000 miles, £18,995 
 Slide of Slide of  - RANGE ROVER (2012 -21)- The fourth-generation Range Rover again demonstrates the model’s uncanny ability to combine workhorse and luxury limo in one. JLR is updating models from 2018 with better security and has relaunched a dedicated insurance scheme. - WHAT TO LOOK FOR: A solid gold warranty and courtesy car provision – some problems can be fixed in a day while others take months - WE FOUND: Range Rover 3.0 TD V6 Vogue, 2016/16, 66,000 miles, £21,750 
 Slide of Slide of  - ROLLS-ROYCE GHOST S1 (2009-14)- It may be the ‘baby’ Rolls-Royce, but when it comes to satisfying expectations, the Ghost is a grown-up: see its twin-turbo, 6.6 -litre V12 for evidence. It’s a car for the owner rather than their chauffeur, and that, as the Ghost ages and becomes cheaper, can only be good news. - WHAT TO LOOK FOR: Idling problems possibly caused by faulty injectors, gearbox oil leaks, tired suspension, signs of clocking - WE FOUND: Rolls-Royce Ghost, 2010/10, 41 ,000 miles, £62 ,999 
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