photo_ed
ClioTrophy Club Member
- Joined
- Jul 22, 2018
- Messages
- 1,410
- Reaction score
- 2,487
- Location
- Yorkshire/Lancashire
- Trophy No.
- 407
So, it's Saturday morning again, having completed the weekly trip to our excellent local butcher and a quick dash round Tesco's with a trolly, it's time to put the feet up for five minutes and enjoy a nice cup of coffee. As with anyone with a passion for the automotive in many shapes and forms I often find myself musing over various questions, conundrums and of course cars - last night it was Lotus Elise's particularly the Mk2 variety - but I'm digressing...
One thing that has been on my mind this week , and admittedly brought into sharper focus by the revelation of a 231k mile Trophy on this very forum, is mileage when it comes to cars and at what point it begins to become immaterial really. I've always been one to judge a car on condition and in the case of rarer, more collectable stuff - provenance/history. I was visiting another forum recently, I won't say which but you can probably all make an educated guess, and there was a thread about buying something with over 100k miles on the clock and what folk thought about that, would they buy one? Would they find it off-putting? Would they not see it as such a big issue? What really hit me was the general reaction of clutching of pearls and handbags at the very notion of being seen in or purchasing anything with a odometer reading anywhere near that figure. But then the demographic of that particular forum hasn't half altered since I joined up back in the early 00's.
It didn't half make me laugh, with the engineering in more modern vehicles, not to mention the advances in quality of consumables such as oils, 100k is in my mind really not that big a deal and the Trophy on here is the perfect illustration of that. So long as the cars are maintained well, that number on the odometer somehow becomes less and less important. In the collectors car market for proper historically important classics, mileage is rarely mentioned, as I think we all know, these cars have been rebuilt/restorted innumerable times now, so it doesn't really matter anymore, but then we have the more modern stuff which folk seem to really get off on having as little miles as possible, to be treated like some sort of objets d'art. As someone whose former life revolved around Art, I find the notion of a car just as a display object a little bit odd, the beauty of these machines for me is when you see, experience or drive them in motion - they come alive in that state. But I'm getting away from myself here on another tangent.
The nub of my ramble is; if a car has over 100k on the clock, does it put you off or in some cases stop you buying it? It does seem to be a psycological sticking point when it comes to selling and buying a car from what I can see. Thoughts and contributions welcome, as always...
One thing that has been on my mind this week , and admittedly brought into sharper focus by the revelation of a 231k mile Trophy on this very forum, is mileage when it comes to cars and at what point it begins to become immaterial really. I've always been one to judge a car on condition and in the case of rarer, more collectable stuff - provenance/history. I was visiting another forum recently, I won't say which but you can probably all make an educated guess, and there was a thread about buying something with over 100k miles on the clock and what folk thought about that, would they buy one? Would they find it off-putting? Would they not see it as such a big issue? What really hit me was the general reaction of clutching of pearls and handbags at the very notion of being seen in or purchasing anything with a odometer reading anywhere near that figure. But then the demographic of that particular forum hasn't half altered since I joined up back in the early 00's.
It didn't half make me laugh, with the engineering in more modern vehicles, not to mention the advances in quality of consumables such as oils, 100k is in my mind really not that big a deal and the Trophy on here is the perfect illustration of that. So long as the cars are maintained well, that number on the odometer somehow becomes less and less important. In the collectors car market for proper historically important classics, mileage is rarely mentioned, as I think we all know, these cars have been rebuilt/restorted innumerable times now, so it doesn't really matter anymore, but then we have the more modern stuff which folk seem to really get off on having as little miles as possible, to be treated like some sort of objets d'art. As someone whose former life revolved around Art, I find the notion of a car just as a display object a little bit odd, the beauty of these machines for me is when you see, experience or drive them in motion - they come alive in that state. But I'm getting away from myself here on another tangent.
The nub of my ramble is; if a car has over 100k on the clock, does it put you off or in some cases stop you buying it? It does seem to be a psycological sticking point when it comes to selling and buying a car from what I can see. Thoughts and contributions welcome, as always...