




A mate of mine has a rev 4 n/a import,53k some may even be km,he imported it 10 years ago and most years it does less than 1k dry miles,the car is mint but whats ite worth? Depends who buys it really.

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madbasshunter wrote:Its a shame that mr2 owners seem to down value mr2's which mean really nice cars get broken sadly.I saw on facebook a really nice v6 is possibly about to be broken.
This is a real shame but the only option financially when a tidy rev4 goes for
£700 and a nice rev3
£1500 having just had half that spent on it before selling, Alex's rev2 had nearly two grand spent on it having engine conversion etc done and then the best offer he gets is
£250 or Richard gets the chance to buy his 200bhp rev3 na back from insurance company
(light frontal corner damage) for
£350 and finds that people would only give him
£450 for it
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Surely as enthusiasts knowing what time and money can go into these cars we should be doing the opposite
RyanRs wrote:Skywalker wrote:explain how the coolant leaves the expansion tank and goes back into the coolant system?
Seriously, you don't know the answer to this? and you call yourself a car mechanic
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Race Idiot wrote:Thats very true seeing as most people here are like'OH YOU CAN GET A REV3 TUBBY FOR 2GRAND!' and everything else is too expensive.
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I wish I was able to find one of these mystic 2grand tubbies, at the time everything in that pricerange looked like an absolute sh1tter.
Even then when I found a car that I liked it still needed a fair amount doing to get it how I wanted.
The fact that the car isnt worth much just makes it easier for me to hold on to it, although mine will probably never be worth megabux due to it not being standard and fairly high mileage.
2mad wrote:If you want a car as an investment(to wrap in cotton wool and garage).
You want a mint, 1 owner with full history, stock factory original, low milage.
Wait many years and then cash in![]()
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If I had done this with my ford escort rs turbo s1 non custom, my£2500 investment would be worth 8 to 10 grand now.
.
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Try getting that sort of interest from a bank over 11 years![]()
2mad wrote:
I watch alot of wheeler dealers lol, they circumvent the hole waiting part by buying$hiters and doing them up
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Gazza_DJ wrote:
Who said anything about a 2k Rev3 Turbo? We all know that would be seriously underpriced or a rolling disaster.
Race Idiot wrote:Gazza_DJ wrote:
Who said anything about a 2k Rev3 Turbo? We all know that would be seriously underpriced or a rolling disaster.
Not exactly in this situation, but i'm sure i've seen that mentioned several times before in other threads.It has come up when people have mentioned highly priced na's before.
Mind you I remember paying about 4k for my first 2 which was a low mileage rev4 na.But that was ages ago, or it seems like it anyway.
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glen n wrote:It's hard to put a price on these cars now,they may be worth a lot more to a enthusiast who wants a stock classic sports car to use now and again and keep garages.They may be worth less to the person who wants a car to thrash about
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A mate of mine has a rev 4 n/a import,53k some may even be km,he imported it 10 years ago and most years it does less than 1k dry miles,the car is mint but whats ite worth? Depends who buys it really.
RedMR² wrote:I agree to some extent that£5K for a rev3/4 NA is a fair amount, but the things it has going for it:
- 1 owner from new in 1995
- Full history/MOTs etc
- all keys
- looks like a new car
- original
- mint interior, look at the drivers seat, no bolster wear
- 84,000 miles in 19 years
Opinions on the car/price will always differ, and ultimately, it's the seller's prerogative as to what he prices the car at.Don't like the price, don't buy it etc.