You may well be able to get an E39 5 series for a grand, but that definately does not mean you should. Ask yourself, what kind of owners would such a car have had? (probably young, male, heavy right foot, lots of showing off), how will the car have been driven?(hard, all the time, no warming up period, absolutely no mechanical symathy), will it have been serviced as it should?(unlikely), will it have been in an accident?(probably).
Assuming you are asking this through a genuine interest in (modern) classics (as opposed to siply trying to find an insurance loophole which will allow you to drive a car more powerful than you'd otherwise be able to), then good luck to you. But you should be looking at cars which wouldn't have been considered desirable in their day as they will have a much greater chance of being in reasonably fine fettle and not have been thrashed to within an inch of their lives!. Something like this,
www.ebay.co.uk/itm/VOLVO-440-52k-MILES/22362592511...Z
The reason i used the Volvo as an example is because back in the early-mid nineties, i was visiting a family fiend on the Orkney Islands. On the driveway in front of the house was a Volvo 440 with L plates. The car was for a son who was learnig to drive and when i queried the insurance costs, was told that, despite being a 1.8, was cheaper to insure than a 1.0 Corsa!. Also much safer were the lad to get a bit over ambitious and crash!.
But on the specifics of insurance, i have another bit of info regarding the Skoda Fabia. Last year my nephew turned 17 and wanted to start driving immediately. He did the rounds on the phone to insurance companies getting some horrific quotes for a 1.4 Fiesta. Next thing i heard, he had bought a Skoda Fabia VRS (130bhp 1.9 turbo diesel), and this was way cheaper to insure than the quotes he got for the Fiesta. Apparently, the Fabia is considered a 'family car', and as such (despite the specific model, and power) cheaper to insure!. Couldn't figure that one out for the life of me!.
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