provisional doesnt let you got above 1.6... get pulled in a car your insured on above that you get done by the company for false details ( even though they didnt double check and insured you anyways ) and the police will lift the car, then you've another fine to pay.
Geth a diathsu charade...
on 20 quid, you'll get around for a month, Fact. Ultra light, turbo versions ( gti without the badge so even i can insure one... ) and a cult icon.
Luke needs to stop this little Kia obsession of his
XaidOn - I got quoted something like £4000 for a 1.4 Fiesta with my Grandad as the main driver, then got quoted 2300 on a 1.9 VW Bora WTF even 1.6 A3's, Focus's are only 1900, its a joke.
EDIT: Direct line only £2000 for Fiesta, didn't ask if it had any modifications, didn't ask too many questions...
Well with the KA (Which is soon to be my car), my mum is going down as the main driver,
so that quote will really be £850 or so, and I've done quotes on several companies and
comparison sites and none are below £1000, really peeves me off, but I know if I drive
without incident for the first year it'll be cheaper.... plus a KA isn't really a boy racers car :P
so it's a wee bit cheaper than a 1.1 Fiesta or equivalent Corsa xD
E: lol £2000 on a fiesta? I got that quote on a 2008 Vauxhall Astra 1.8 Auto lol.
I think you really have to do some shopping for insurance.. I need to think of something odd ball but still something id like for a first car, thinking
Utter bollocks... I took my test in a 2 litre car.
Insurance companies also always ask what type of license you have when you take out insurance...
Try getting a quote on something that isn't such a commonly crashed car by young drivers, whilst Corsas may be chavved up and crashed by those wanting a 'wicked sub install' Kas and Micras are crashed lots by incompetent young drivers, more typically the types who just can't drive and have somehow managed to pass their test on the third attempt. My Dad's 1.6 Focus was only £800 comprehensive with Tesco with me as a named driver.
buy a shitbox, then save for something decent. my experience is u wont listen to this advice, even though its about the best ull ever get.
cars are money pits, only pour money into something u like, the more u pour into some shitty first car, the longer it will be until u buy something decent. and no one likes a modified shitbox, ur just a laughing stock to anyone on the side of the road.
Popped into my head too, my big brother sat his test and drove around in a 2.0 turbo diesle audi, actually made me laugh reading his comment.
My mates parents have a 1.6 focus LX and he's insured on that untill he gets his own car, they're only group 5 insurance which is quite low for such a fun car which is relatively fast.
I was going to downgrade from my 1.4 golf to a 1.4 polo, but upon checking the stats on it I found it was group 10 insurance for the standard model which is crazy, but it does have 100bhp and is quite fast, but still, 1.8 astra sports can be insured for less.
Agree with the last 2 posts and that you wont listen.
You'll buy a heap, blow way too much cash on it by sticking loads of pointless, laughable mods to it that will make it look like an even more of a heap.
Get the cheapest car to insure you can, doesn't matter what it is, and save for a better car after you've been driving a year.....which is about how long you have to wait till you can even do anything about it.
You can drive ANYTHING you can afford to insure. So if you have the pockets you could pass your test in a Koenigsegg CCXR. No one would recommend it given it'd be a nightmare to manoeuvre, but if you can insure it, you can drive it.
The cars I am going to be choosing from are:
106 Quicksilver
Golf
Astra 1.4 3 door
Astra 1.7 CDTI
Corsa C 1.3 CDTI
Corsa C 1.2
Saxo (Wouldn't mind a VTS or VTR - will most likely be through the roof to insure though)
Clio
Punto
You have just listed the bog standard rice crispies so insurance will bust your balls. Pick something original. Go carb'd, go 1970's classic, it'll be a real head turner. More so if you buy a car that should have chrome bumpers and remove them, always makes them look more aggressive and sporty. If I had 10k I'd buy a Moggie Traveller and strip the bumpers, it'll be phat.
What about an Original mini, I'd imagine they wouldn't be very expensive to insure and as long as you keep it rust free it'd be worth something when you went to trade it in..
You'd also learn more about car control in 3 months in a mini that you would in 2 years in another car. Fit some "phat" wheels and some strips and away you go!
I don't think you can get classic insurance until you are 21, so no lol.
I was thinking of an original mini, the thing that put me off getting one is motorway driving. I wouldn't mind getting one that needs a respray so it would be cheap. Get is resprayed, strip it out and put a multipoint roll cage in lol and also to add a few more tuning parts to the engine.
If you go to a specialist insurer, they will set a 25 limit as they have lower quotes than normal insurers.
Insurance doesn't start being cheap until you're 25, stay away from BMW's until then. You can't predict what will happen between then and now, but for sure do Pass Plus, it saved me ~50% on my insurance and for £120 (well £100 as I got a discount for being sexy) you can't go wrong.
A friend of mine was looking at getting classic insurance, but he's got to wait another year until he's 25 before they would insure him, although in fairness this was for a TVR.
Anyway, spending nearly £2k on a car when you're just 17 sounds like a bad idea to me. If you don't crash it, you'll likely at least bash it up a bit, and you'll want a car you don't care about too much. You'll learn all the silly things you really shouldn't do - some of my examples: dragging a bowl of water across the bonnet while cleaning (hello scratches), taking that unexpectedly greasy 90 degree corner at normal pace (hello bush), trying to push a wheelie bin out of the way with your car when parallel parking (hello broken bumper), forgetting to check both sides of the car when driving between two very close brick walls (almost goodbye wing mirror, hello scratched passenger door), etc.
For insurance, i fully recommend adrian flux. My rover was costing me about £850 tpft, the reason mine is so high at the age of 25 is that i got banned for dangerous driving in 2003 but thats a whole different story.
Anyway, Co-op were charging about £850 a year, and refused to cover any of my modifications that i was planning, they even classed my 15" alloys as a mod due to them being 1" larger than the original wheels on the car.
Adrian Flux are charging me about £340, and that includes all mods that are now done, (wheels, induction kit, sports exhaust system, big brakes) i also get home start, free recovery in the UK and most of the rest of europe and i got to keep my 4 years no claims as well!
Give em a look mate, could well save you a packet.