• Looking for a smarter way to manage your heating this winter? We’ve been testing the new Aqara Radiator Thermostat W600 to see how quiet, accurate and easy it is to use around the home. Click here read our review.

What van to buy.

Thanks everyone. This is helping me to decide what to buy or rent.


Keep it coming
 
As always, the make and model of the car or van is irrelevant - it's the specific year, engine, gearbox and specification that makes it worth buying.

Many vehicles have fundamental flaws - in engines, gearboxes and electrical systems that are well documented when a few years old - eg ford wet belts, any number of VW diesels, anything with electronic gearboxes etc. Plus the VED for some combinations can be punative.

I can't advise on Vans, but with cars I never buy newer than 5 years old - easy to identify the lemons - even if you have bad luck with what is a generally reliable model and the engine goes bang, the scrapyards will be piled high with cheap replacements.

Currently have a 15 year old VW 1.9Tdi owned for 6 years and engine runs like new - owes us nothing if it blew up tomorrow.

Other car is an Infinity - a bastardised Merc A class - which does have some minor documented faults eg heated seats fail (ours has but I don't really care), fancy led headlights on some models - cost up to £1,000 to fix (ours had £3.99 halogen bulbs - but you still need to take the wheel off to replace) etc.
The engine is a Renault 1.5 diesel as fitted to Dacia dustbins, Nissan Quashqai etc - fairly bulletproof proof for a modern diesel but £400 quid for a replacement from a scrappy if not.

There's a myth around transporters - people run them as a hobby and (fortunately) love spending money on them.
I owned two cars in 30 years on the same premise then thought sod it I’ll go new. It is a sweet experience
 
I owned two cars in 30 years on the same premise then thought sod it I’ll go new. It is a sweet experience
An old second hand van that needs time and money can be way more expensive than a new or nearly new 1 that is earning its keep.

A runabout is a totally different kettle of fish.
 
An old second hand van that needs time and money can be way more expensive than a new or nearly new 1 that is earning its keep.

A runabout is a totally different kettle of fish.
I think the OP wanted it for domestic and business. The far east vans look reliable but people have incredible brand loyalty to transit or Land Rover
 
I think the OP wanted it for domestic and business. The far east vans look reliable but people have incredible brand loyalty to transit or Land Rover
In an ideal world
 
I think the OP wanted it for domestic and business. The far east vans look reliable but people have incredible brand loyalty to transit or Land Rover
I'm fully aware of brand loyalty. But I also know it cloud's the judgement, and therefore the choice.

i think the OP needs to identify what he actually wants from any van, in priority order and then look at the market accordingly.

Long term van and family vehicle. High or low mileage. Capacity and useage. Longevity, etc.
 
I'm fully aware of brand loyalty. But I also know it cloud's the judgement, and therefore the choice.

i think the OP needs to identify what he actually wants from any van, in priority order and then look at the market accordingly.

Long term van and family vehicle. High or low mileage. Capacity and useage. Longevity, etc.


Thats exactly .... with everyone helping Ill get tye best van for my needs
 
If you can get all the tools you'd need in a double cab type of vehicle, surely a small cheap van would suit your needs?
 
Back
Top