Avant is quite right, but sometimes with these known problems the vehicles become so cheap used that the risk can be worth taking, but the car must be bought for a song, test driven extensively to be certain it's all good at present, and generally otherwise it wants to be well looked after.
If it gives you 2 years and dies but cost you less to buy than the depreciation alone of an equivalent manual Auris over the same period, you're well in pocket.
Some canny buyers have been enjoying cheap motoring due to poor reputations no longer valid, ie much improved Laguna 3's could be bought for next to nothing almost new, due entirely to the awful reliability of the previous model...generally this doesn't apply to vehicles with the right badges, especially German cars, where they can be barge pole jobs yet still command quite ridiculous used values due to very invalid premium desirability image.
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