Mycroft H wrote: » Averaged 50mpg from Kildare to Wexford and back and a few spins in and out of work. Not too shabby for a big estate. Cheap motoring.
challengemaster wrote: » :pac: Last time I filled the tank was August 2013 :eek: That said, I track everything using Road Trip, so I know exactly how many litres of fuel was used since then (19,500 miles). It's like the most accurate fill to fill ever :pac: 42.3 MPG over 2 years isn't too bad, particularly as I don't exactly have a light foot Also fuel is the best price it's been in the last 4 years. (The massive spike was when I was in the UK)
CrowdedHouse wrote: » After over 2.5 years of ownership I discovered my car has a dipstick for the oil- cool
CIP4 wrote: » I just read the oil level of the computer and then maybe dip it every month- two months.
CrowdedHouse wrote: » Me: must check oil- press button Computer: BONG! Engine must be warmed up, no check Me: week(s) later with warm engine, must check oil Computer: BONG! Car must be on level surface, no check Me: feck that for a game of cowboys, if it's that clever it will tell me if it wants oil!
GvidoR wrote: » You and your fancy car computers...
quadrifoglio verde wrote: » You've done 19500 miles in the last two years? That's perfect big engine petrol territory Try 20000 a year in a petrol getting 26 mpg....
challengemaster wrote: » You see, theres a small problem with that 'logic' - I like having money Thats €2k saved in fuel costs in 2 years by not driving a petrol. €3k if you include the difference in tax to a 2.5L.
CrowdedHouse wrote: » Me: must check oil- press button Computer: BONG! Engine must be warmed up, no check Me: week(s) later with warm engine, must check oil...
jimgoose wrote: » Why on earth would you need to be warm to check the oil, unless it's one of these funny dry-sump setups like an Aprilia/Rotax? It's not the pressure it's reporting, is it??
challengemaster wrote: » Every car/manufacturer has something different in their user manual for how to check the oil. For the E46 it's get the car to full operating temp, turn off the engine and then check the level ~10 minutes later. All to do with physics, things expanding when hot and whatnot
Mc Love wrote: Cant find the thread about the car sales people, or I'm not even sure there was one, but i called about two cars last week, two different garages and the sales people I dealt with were probably the two worst in the industry! One is a reputable dealer in Limerick, who was the grumpiest fecker ever, asked about a car and just got a NO and dropped the phone, was there a reason he didnt offer me something else or enquire what I was looking at to see if they could source one?
Noccy_Mondy wrote: » Are you upgrading?
CIP4 wrote: » That's the way I would think. I'd like a petrol weekend car but wouldn't see the sense in covering massive miles in an older uneconomical petrol because it revs higher than a diesel and sounds quieter when idling I mean what difference does that make on a day to day basis. Don't get me wrong I'm sure 2.5 v6 petrol and 335i bmw petrols etc are really nice cars but standard petrol cars are nothing to get excited about. I drove 6 or 7 standard mid size petrol cars when last changing and the only one I liked was a mk5 1.6 fsi golf 6 speed which was a lovely car and id of probably bought that only for it was 3dr which I simply didn't want. I mean I drove a 1.4 petrol Astra which was quite frankly horrible i30 was ok to drive but I don't like them. My point is comparing them to there equivalent diesel versions in a lot of cases the diesel is nicer to drive.
166man wrote: » Covering massive miles in an older big engined petrol is illogical alright. Plenty of standard petrol cars out there to get excited about, you just haven't driven any...a 1.4 petrol Astra isn't going to compare to a 1.8t car......