I Am Supposed To To What I Am Told
Body & Soul2 mins ago
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I think the best way is to actually drive some of them before you buy because you need to feel comfortable in the car. Your instructors car is prob a brand new model and your looking to buy something older im guessing and the two will feel very different.
I started out in a Fiesta and it was ok but it did have high mileage so try to avoid that!
I just passed my test (1st time! woo hoo!!!) i learned in a focus which was a real smooth drive...i now have a n reg fiesta, it's a good drive, but it doesn't have power steering - which took a bit of getting used to, (on the plus side its probaby the equivalent of 1hour at the gym performing my miraculous 12 point turns ;) fiesta's tho in my experience are pretty good, but most of them have a funny sound on the engine on the models upto p'reg. i did a few lessons in a polo a few years ago, i'd have to say that was on par with a fiesta, maybe even better.
I have some friends that have clio's - based on their experience, steer clear! they seem to have a tendancy to blow the head gasket on a regular basis which could be pretty costly!
I have a 5 year old Micra and it's my first car. It's cheap to run and very reliable. It only needs servicing once a year and needs very little done to it. My mechanic says micras are great cars but he wouldn't be seen dead in one (they're too girly)!
I agree that you need to try a few cars to see what feels right. I know loads of people who adore fiestas, but I loathe driving them. They just don't seem to 'fit' me at all.