Tag Archives: mazda

My car history part 4: Exotic car threesome

In the autumn of 2009, 6 months into driving her, the MR2 tried to kill me.

Several times.

In the wet, she was a devil. If you lost grip, she was very unpredictable and hard to control. I was now driving 110 miles to Chester/North Wales regularly, and I felt like I was going to die soon, and at the tender age of 31 and recently single again, decided I wanted to live a little longer.

I traded her in for a 2003 Honda Civic Type-R in red (believe it was around £7500 and they gave me £3500 for the MR2). Now, I’ve never been keen on red cars, but in this sporty guise with white alloys, it worked. This was a pretty damn awesome car. The 2 litre VTEC engine felt more powerful than the 197bhp official figure; whether the aftermarket huge and noisy exhaust (sounded amazing through tunnels – Annie loved this at the age of 3 and STILL asks me why I got rid of the “noisy red car” now at the age of 6) helped I don’t know, or whether it was just that VTEC surge – you got a lovely kick in the back at high revs, similar to the Elise. I loved the power, and the comfort and colour of the interior with the red stitching and white dials was lovely.

However, she was a pig to park. The turning circle was pathetic, the steering incredibly heavy, and visibility was awful – where I was stopping overnight a few nights a week in Chester I had to parallel park her in tiny spaces with high curbs, and I made a right mess of the alloys. The constant noise of the exhaust gave me a headache on the regular 2 hour journey.

Overall though, I was still enjoying the Type-R at this point but I was missing the ‘feel of the wind in my hair’ (theoretically – I have no hair) that I got from a convertible. It was the summer of 2009 and I needed that sunshine back in my life…

'Holly' - the Honda Civic, and 'Maggy 2' - my 2nd MX-5
‘Holly’ – the Honda Civic, and ‘Maggy 2’ – my 2nd MX-5
'Maggy 2' - my second MX-5, with BBS alloys
‘Maggy 2’ – my second MX-5, with BBS alloys

I remembered how much I’d enjoyed my MX-5, but I still needed a sensible family car. I checked and realised I could get an MX-5 for around £1500 but wasn’t sure how I’d be able to insure both… however, my friend Stan at work has a car obsession worse than me and owns multiple cars, and he was able to recommend a few insurance companies that specialised in multi-car insurance (before it was a common thing). Next thing you know, I’d bought ‘Maggy 2‘ – another Eunos Roadster AKA Jap Import Mazda MX-5 in black with BBS alloys – great. This was a 1.8 as opposed to my previous 1.6 but they are slightly heavier and less torquey; I couldn’t really tell the difference to be honest – I just loved its nippy smallness and having the roof down gave me an enormous sense of freedom. You couldn’t help but smile driving this car.

I’d had enough of the Type-R by January 2011 – 18 months ownership not being a bad effort though with the cars I’d owned recently! I’d also wanted a Porsche Boxster for many years (had test drove a few before buying the Elise) and realised that they’d come down significantly in price over the years. I didn’t really want to get rid of the MX-5, but having two 2-seater cars wasn’t practical. However, I’d managed to get a very good ‘cherished’ car insurance on the MX-5 and checking around the insurance realised I could get a third cheap ‘practical’ car, at least in the short term…

So I could have 3 cars! A Porsche Boxster, an MX-5, and a cheap hatchback – why not?!?

'Cecilia' - the Toyota Celica
‘Cecilia’ – the Toyota Celica

I test drove both a 2001 Toyota Celica 1.8 VVTI (140bhp) and a 2003 Hyundai Coupe 2.0 (S3 – I’d owned an S1 before). I much prefered the former, and purchased one for £2000. Ok, it’s a small coupe, rather than a more practical hatchback, but it had a decent hatchback style boot anyway, and back seats, so met my needs! It felt a bit ‘basic’ in some ways but was very chuckable and enjoyable to drive; had a happy pull to it and a great character.

I managed to get £6000 in a private sale of the Type-R and then found a year 2000 2.5l Silver Boxster in London that I liked the look of for the same price, and went down on the train and purchased it and drove back in her (Polly).

'Polly', my Porsche Boxster 2.5
‘Polly’, my Porsche Boxster 2.5

I was disappointed. I’d drove both the 3.2 and 2.5’s before and had enjoyed both, but it had been a newer 2.5, and I think this one was just a little old/worn out – it just didn’t feel very quick at all. It was also rather dull inside with grey leather seats that were surprisingly uncomfortable. It felt significantly slower than the Type-R. Technically, it was slightly more powerful (204bhp vs 197bhp) although a tiny bit heavier; pretty much the same power per weight ratio – but the ‘flat’ power delivery (as opposed to the Type-R’s ‘snappy’ VTEC) and the ‘civilised’ ride just meant it was no fun!

Plus driving a Porsche means that everything thinks you’re a twat. Nobody would let me in at junctions. I lived in fear of my car being keyed.

Every time I stepped out of the Porsche I had a gloomy expression; I got in the MX-5 and started to grin like a village idiot – a quarter of the price, 2/3s of the power, but 10 times the fun factor.

3 months later, the Porsche was sold.

Busy driveway - the Celica, Porsche and MX-5
Busy driveway – the Celica, Porsche and MX-5

Next part of the story: The power years

My car history part 2: The love affair begins

In 2003 the fun began!

I’d managed to get rid of my third car, an unreliable and costly Peugeot 306. I’d been out of Uni a couple of years and had managed to save some cash up. I started looking for a ‘sports car’…

My first MX-5/Roadster - 'Maggy'
My first MX-5/Roadster – ‘Maggy’

After much research and playing with spreadsheets and checking insurance costs, I purchased a 1990 Jap Import Eunos Roadster (i.e. a Mazda MX-5) 1.6 V-Special in British Racing Green (H872ATV), imported into the UK in 1999. What a brilliant little car! I kept it for 3 years; and did my first work ever on a car including taking the door apart and fixing the electric window. I replaced the worn black soft-top with a new tan hood to match the interior and fitted white alloys. I started browsing Halfords, eBay and MX5Parts daily looking for new shiny accessories, and fitted a wood effect interior (in hindsight – yuk).

I kept her for 3 years and drove everywhere in her. It was the first car I truly named: Maggy.

I almost cried the day I sold her. And I still regret to this day selling her… although she was starting to get a bit tatty (rust on the window surround, paint peeling) she was mechanically perfect and I think the only thing I had to fix in those three years of ownership was the electric window.

But she wasn’t to be my last MX-5… a few years would pass, but I would go on to own 4 more. But more about that in future posts.

I only sold her because it had been 3 years and I fancied a change and something flashier and newer – and I had cash burning a hole in my pocket. I’d moved house and I had some money free which I intended to put back into the mortgage later, but decided to purchase a fancy car for 3 months, just to experience it, then sell it and put the money back into the house and get something cheaper.

My Lotus Elise - 'Ellie' - and 'Maggy' in the background
My Lotus Elise – ‘Ellie’ – and ‘Maggy’ in the background

So, in the spring of 2006, I bought a 2004 Lotus Elise S2, a S111R which had the high revving VTEC Toyota engine with a huge kick. The engine produced 190bhp which isn’t much compared to some of the other options out there (250-300bhp Suburas etc) but the car weighed less than 900kg so it leaped from 0 to 60mph in 4.9 seconds – amazing. And the handling was astonishing; she was glued to the road around corners. I used to go for a blast on country roads and the adrenaline surge was fantastic.

Amazing machine… but a terrible car!

My Lotus Elise - 'Ellie'
My Lotus Elise – ‘Ellie’

The single windscreen wiper was practically useless, the aircon was like an asthmatic coughing at you through a straw (to borrow a quote from Jeremy Clarkson). The seats were very uncomfortable; I could last a max of 35 mins before screaming in agony. Shame I had a 40 minute drive to work. I’d be writhing around the cabin for the last 5 minutes of the journey and practically fall out of the car – if I could, you couldn’t get out of the car if you couldn’t open the door fully – which I couldn’t in the tight parking spaces at work – due to the wide sill and low door.

Which started falling off… fortunately, I managed to sell it back to another dealer for £1000 less than I’d bought it for. £333 a month to have had the experience of that car seemed worth it – you’d pay more a month for a new Ford Mondeo and be tied in for 2 years.

Around that time I also bought my girlfriend at the time a £150 (I think it was only that much) purple Vauxhall Cavalier 1.6 (’92/’93 plate I recall) to learn to drive in. Great fun, it was pretty pokey! It used to slide all over the road even more than the old Astra though. We managed to get a year out of it before the fuel lines rotted and we decided to scrap it, replacing it around 2005 with a ’98 (was it an S reg?) red Audi A4 1.6 for around 2K. Somewhat more luxurious, it was heavier than the Cavalier and a bit disappointing and dull to drive, but it served its purpose for a couple of years.

Around 2004, my 2 year bike CBT had expired. Since I’d bought the MX-5 I’d hardly used the bike, and living in Cotgrave as opposed to the original idea of Beeston (bad traffic) meant that I didn’t really gain any rush hour advantages. Seeing as it would be expensive and time consuming to do the full test (would have to take a week off work), I decided to sell the bike.

It would be 9 years before I hopped back on that (mechanical) horse…

Next part of the story: Financial crisis strikes