Well, each to their own I guess. The car I'm currently driving to work requires me to wear ear protection.
Altho winter is coming and I have to prepare my more boring car for the daily commute.
I kinda understand why you swapped, maybe I wouldn't done it, but I also wouldn't have the "hobby car" and daily driver combined in one car.
It is a costly mistake to have a hobby car and daily driver as one vehicle. When I finally get to save some money I'll get a new daily driver so I can save my truck for special events. My monthly fuel bills are killer. D:
Not necessarily/that's an area hatchbacks excel at. Before my first 2.5L swap into the MX-3 died, (loose conrod endcap = bad choice of used engines), that's how I rolled - hobby/daily in one. I had a really fun, zippy car that could do it all & achieve 35mpg+ if I stuck to cruise control etc. Then that engine kicked the bucket while loping down the interstate one day & I had to get a replacement, while I revived her. Now look @ my sig.. :cookiemon Before long I'll likely return to one car, as it'd be nice to spread the money I do have around to other areas.
I am trying to avoid taking out loans to buy vehicles, the company I work for is still on shaky ground so I'm not completely confident I'll have a job for long enough to service any loan.
The main thing is time to fix it after you break it. Whenever I go green laning I live in fear of breaking something and then having to get to work on the Monday. Last time something broke I had to get a rental car as the garage I used didn't have a courtesy car ready.
Quite a collection you have there. Insurance would rape me if I had that many vehicles.
What is "green laning"? So far that one catastrophic failure is the only time I've had a real problem with a hobby/DD mix, and it was a freak occurrence that had nothing to do with how the car was treated. (at least not while I owned the engine) That said, I wasn't talking about a highly tuned track car as a DD or anything either. You've gotta choose wisely if you want to try going down that road & yes, it may bite you in the @ss.
And insurance does rape me, a little bit, but I've rarely got all three insured @ once either. Not being a young punk in the insurance co's eyes helps as well, haha.
Green laning is a hobby of driving 4x4s down unpaved roads around the UK. I think it is called trailing in the US. Some are very gentle dirt tracks others are vehicle breakers. After moving from the middle of nowhere it is the only offroad action my truck sees these days.
I'm a dirty old man to the insurers but they still like to stick it balls deep.
Well duhh, of course you wouldn't necessarily want your offroad toy to also be your DD, (unless you had a Wrangler/something pretty reliable & versatile). I wasn't under the impression we were talking about mud holes, rock climbing and/or rally/trail type driving though. He went from a RWD, (that definitely couldn't go far off-pavement), to a peppy FWD with lots of room to haul stuff. All that being said, if I wanted a trail vehicle that could also be a sporty DD, I'd probably buy a Subaru of sorts. FWIW, my first MX-3 saw plenty of offroad action though! (and my first Miata surprised a lot of people who go "green laning" in the mountains behind my house, lol) Oh, and figure this one out.. insurance on the RX is a few bucks cheaper than the Miata?!
EDIT - not mine & but here's a silly vid of my buddy thrashing his beater Legacy, in an area behind my house. (usually dominated by loud 4wd's & cheap beer) please no hate, we were just messing around one sloppy weekend! it's a bone stock automatic with about 260k on the clock & cheap, worn out tires. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7xMBWGbl22I he'd do that one weekend, then drive it 400 miles back to college Monday after only washing the windows
My main problem with having a combined daily driver and hobby car was that you can't really build it properly. I used to have that problem, but not for some time anymore. Like P5YcHoM4N said weekend isn't just enough to do any big jobs (like building and tuning a decent engine).
Tho many people define hobby car differently so big jobs may not be required. I just never enjoyed doing stuff to the car I had to rely to be my transportation soon again.
I'd say a naturally aspirated engine is better for drifting. The engine is more balanced, it's got a more predictable power curve. You don't need 400 whp to get your car sideways so save the money for something else.
Oh, I forgot to mention. It's for my daily 318i lol.
Unless the M3 engine dies, there won't be anything done to it . But I still have my bulletproof 325i engine and those can handle turbo's really well..