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Jaguar X-Type 2.0d 175k - The Adventure Continues - joegrundy

Following a service, MOT (passed, no problems) and a valet (as a reward) the adventure continues.

Off next week to Newmarket to visit daughter and family (300 miles) and then - on a whim following a phone conversation witha mate - to Andorra via Calais (1200 miles). Only one way booked - return when/where subject to future whims.

Think I've got everything I need, except perhaps the carte blanche air sticker - but I've got no intentionof going anywhere near big cities.

Hopefully, no need this year to put my breakdown insurance to the test. I will smile wryly as I pass Pierre the Pirate Mechanic's establishment! (see previous thread),

Bon voyage to all travellers!

Jaguar X-Type 2.0d 175k - The Adventure Continues - SLO76
Many smiles to the mile as you coast by the flock in their flash new motors worrying about their £300 a month payment. I’ll be joining you shortly when our leased CRV is returned and I get back into bangernomics. I’m looking forward to the search.
Jaguar X-Type 2.0d 175k - The Adventure Continues - joegrundy

I bought this car (unseen) via an online site 5 years ago (£2700) All instincts would have said 'no'. It had done 132k, no credible service history, When I collected it, there was a blizzard and so my inspection was limited to whether there were 4 doors.

It was an impractical purchase - I am on my own in the car 99% of the time - but in no small part thanks to my trusted indy - it has proved to be a good buy.. Around 50 mpg in general use. Reasonable insurance and £12 a month to tax. A wash and polish and it served well as my daughter's wedding car (saved a few hundred quid!)..

What I lke about this car is that a trip to my daughter (300 miles) is no big deal, and the drive from there down to Andorra is something to look forward to rather than something to dread..

Jaguar X-Type 2.0d 175k - The Adventure Continues - SLO76
“SLO, looking forward to seeing what you buy. Have you a short list yet? In Autocar magazine last week James Ruppert had a feature about the 20 best buys for under £1000. Some misguided folk think this price point is money pit territory. The best way to buy a money pit is to buy new and then repeat the process every three years.”


I’ve had several cars in James Rupperts readers cars section over the years. Cars I’ve bought privately then ran on buttons and sold on for a profit or zero loss. Motoring can be done very cheaply if you’re careful. I don’t head out with anything particular on the shopping list beyond one eye on parts prices instead I focus on condition and history over anything else. Gadgets, image and performance shouldn’t be considerations when shopping on a tight budget.

This time however I am looking for an estate car or large hatch that will be retained longterm as a workhorse and dog wagon. I’ve missed having a cheap car on the drive in the last year, it’s handy for trips to the dump, abandoning at the pub or train station and I hate seeing a new scuff or scrape on our more valuable cars after a trip to the shops.

It needs to be petrol as I have a very short commute, in fact I should really be walking but I’m not that energetic at 5 in the morning these days. Must have isofix rear seats and a decent level of crash protection and I do enjoy driving so I’d like a bit of steering feel. All of which points me in the direction of a Mk II Ford Focus or a Mk IV Mondeo. But I’ll also be looking at Honda Accord Estate, Toyota Avensis and Mazda 6. Budget, well I want something I’m not bothered about if it gets a parking ding or the dog scuffs the interior so sub £3k is where I want to be.

I love nothing more than turning up at a private sellers door and watching as the one elderly owner reversed it out a well kept garage. It’s cars that’ve been owned longterm by older well funded owners that’ve served me best both personally and as stock while I was trading. I’d sooner have a 12yr old low mileage car than a 3yr old with patchy history.

Edited by SLO76 on 29/03/2018 at 21:55

Jaguar X-Type 2.0d 175k - The Adventure Continues - craig-pd130

Happy trails, sir. I'm sure the car will benefit from a decent run, with a little Italian tune-up on the way.

At least you now know what the symptoms of a split / loose boost hose are!

Jaguar X-Type 2.0d 175k - The Adventure Continues - RaineMan

Running an older 2.1 petrol X-Type I do enjoy your threads Joe. :)

Jaguar X-Type 2.0d 175k - The Adventure Continues - Alby Back
Well done Joe ! I ran a Mondeo TDCi estate up to 190,000 trouble free miles, sold it late 2010, but when I checked recently, it's still soldiering on, last MOT shows 279,000. Someone is obviously still looking after it.

I'm quite pleased actually, I liked that car.
Jaguar X-Type 2.0d 175k - The Adventure Continues - Avant

That was good old Betsy, wasn't It, Alby? Glad to hear it's still flourishing. I remember you being very sorry to see it go, even when it wsa being replaced by a company Mercedes.

It sounds from this thread that the Ford 2.0 TDCI is one to recommend to people who come on here asking us to recommend a used diesel. For many of them the best advice is not ot have a diesel, but for those whose high mileage merits it, this engine seems to have fewer tales of woe than most.

Good luck wirth the trip, Joe: here's hoping that you don't need the dubious services of a French mechanic again!

Jaguar X-Type 2.0d 175k - The Adventure Continues - Alby Back
In fairness, most cars of recent decades seem pretty reliable in the main, I've put lots of miles on lots of cars and only two of them gave me any real grief.
Jaguar X-Type 2.0d 175k - The Adventure Continues - joegrundy

Back home safely - a brief trip report. (Figures are from car computer).

Mileage Newmarket to Andorra to home (Pembs): 2185 (car now near 178k). Average mpg: 52.3, average speed 60 mph.

Trip included motorways at 130 km/h, climbing Pyrenees in nose to tail with 5 feet of snow on verges, many miles on French D roads, etc.

No problems whatsoever. Didn't discernibly use any oil. Car was able to produce 007 type black smoke when required to discourage French tail-gaters (why do so many of them do that?). Weather from +20 to -3 blizzard.

One highlight was Shell V-power at €1.00 a litre in Andorra (standard diesel €0.90 a litre).

Jaguar X-Type 2.0d 175k - The Adventure Continues - John F

Back home safely - a brief trip report. (Figures are from car computer).

Mileage Newmarket to Andorra to home (Pembs): 2185 (car now near 178k). Average mpg: 52.3, average speed 60 mph.

I just don't believe your overall average was 60mph unless you seriously exceeded the speed limits and excluded the UK part of your journey! Even the A10 (or A20) at 80mph would have been offset by the Pyrenees and the inevitable frequent slowing by folk overtaking HGVs, and the toll booths. But well done, and thanks for keeping us informed. I wonder if you were aware of this.........

? TIP : Ways to save on motorway tolls when driving to southwest France
Though it is usually easiest and in the end worth it to take direct motorways and pay the tolls, there is one journey where you can make an appreciable saving for just a few extra kilometres.
If driving from Paris to Bordeaux and southwest France, do not follow the A 10 motorway all the way. Leave the A10 at Orleans, following A71 > A20 Toulouse. At Limoges, follow N141 > Angoulême. At Angoulême, follow the N10 for Bordeaux. All but about 60 km. of this alternative route to Bordeaux is on autoroutes or dual carriageway, but after Vierzon, it's all free. Saving: about 36 €uros less in tolls, for a distance of about 15 miles extra.... and cheaper off-motorway petrol if you need it.

Jaguar X-Type 2.0d 175k - The Adventure Continues - joegrundy

As I said, I'm just reporting what the car computer said. Most of the run to Dover was on 70mph limit roads, so running at about 72 ish. French motorways at 130 kmh limits run at about 85 ish. Of course, many roads were much slower, but 1100 kms to Foix at motorway speeds does bump up the average. The roads were fairly quiet overnight and I found that using anticipation overtaking HGVs didn't make much difference. The run from Calais to Andorra was more or less non-stop apart from pees and coffee.

Interesting point about the tolls to SW France, but I was heading due south past Toulouse and beyond. (A66/N20). I haven't calculated the toll charges yet (nor other expenses of the trip I lashed out on with gay abandon, e.g. steaks and bottles of wine) but that's the beauty of using cards - you only come down to earth after you come home and check statements!