My motoring life started well after I'd passed my test whilst in Sixth form, cobbling together enough money a year after graduating to buy a two year old 96N Nissan Micra 1.0 S 3rd in dark (not British racing) metallic green.
Paid the princely sum of £6.3k for it back in 1998, which was quite a bit back then for a car with no A/C, electric windows, etc, though it did have a Blaupunkt radio/cassette player (actually not that bad) and a nice tilt or slide sunroof with a nice louvred sunshade to allow ventilation.
Not exactly quick, but perfectly ok to drive generally, and aside from it's last few months in my ownership, very reliable and cheap as chips to run, getting an average of 52-53mpg, more than the official 47-48 despite mostly using it on mixed mileage journeys. No power steeriing, but never needed it as it was so light and combined with the great visibility all around, thus was dead easy to park.
My Mazda3 is superior across the board, but there are times I still miss the Micra, especially when manouvring in tight spots or driving down some very narrow country lanes on holiday.
I remember when I was originally looking for my first car, I also considered:
- A Mitsubishi Colt 1.3 or 1.6. Expensive (I would've had to get one a year or two older than the Micra of the same money), but very nice to drive, especially the 1.6 GLXi, and great visibility (lots of window area) - before cars' windows started shrinking generally.
- A Honda Civic - the mid 90s car was rather expensive to buy and run even back then, plus the service intervals (at least what I was told) was only 6000 miles, compared to the Micra's 9k and far cheaper main dealer servicing/maintenance (parts) costs.
- A Citroen AX - the final run-out version. Cheap as chips - I could've got a brand new one with the 1L engine, essentially the same trim level & kit as the Micra, for the same price as I paid for it as a 2yo car.
I almost took the plunge on the AX, then thought better of it after hearing stories about French build quality. I liked the styling and drive (for what it was), having learned in a Pug 205 and so wasn't averse to French cars on principle.
In the end, I was with my parents in Watford on some shopping trip and just 'popped into' the local Nissan dealership, and it all went from there. Them giving insurance for a first time driver at £350 helped seal the deal, given how expensive insurance was for new, young-ish drivers even back then.
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