Flash In The Pan
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Not to mention that a few weeks ago, before the new scheme was announced, when Vauxhall were doing their own similar £1000 deal, the price before trade in was only £6995



Its a right con. I had a look round too in order to get rid of my old Rover. At Fords they wanted an extra 4k on a focus with a diesel lump compared to a petrol with exactly the same on the rest of the spec! ( just because it was a diesel!)
Diesel is the way forward, car companies are now realising this and cashing in on that. Look around for good bargains. Ive now got a 1.5dci Clio. £35 a year tax 68 to the gallon! cheap insurance!
Quite funny really how diesel (the fuel from the dark ages!) has led the development and innovation of the most technologically advanced fuel economical engines!
Or you could just save way more than £2000 by buying a nearly new, rather than brand new car. I bought a Focus 1.8 Zetec last year, 18 months old with only 2,500 miles on the clock, for £8995 from a Ford dealer. The brand new list price of this car is over £15,000. You do the maths...
Depreciation is only important if you intend to sell the car, personally I'd be keeping it as long as possible. With a second hand car there's always that nagging question, "why did the last owner sell it?"
I've seen reports recently where new cars have been selling cheaper than nearly new.Or you could just save way more than £2000 by buying a nearly new, rather than brand new car. I bought a Focus 1.8 Zetec last year, 18 months old with only 2,500 miles on the clock, for £8995 from a Ford dealer. The brand new list price of this car is over £15,000. You do the maths...
I've seen reports recently where new cars have been selling cheaper than nearly new.
As far as the scrappage system is concerned, I'd be haggling the best possible price first before letting on I had a car to trade in under the scrappage scheme.
Not sure about now but Ford dealers, but years ago we (Ford Employees) used to negotiate the best deal we could get before announcing we were employees and claiming our discount. If the dealer wasn't prepared to honour the deal with the discount, we'd find one who would. It usually paid to find one further from the factories that wouldn't normally have employees living nearby. Dealers nearer the factories sell more cars due to proximity of employees so can afford to knock back sales, where as those further afield welcomed the sales.That doesn't work, when I sold new stuff we used to get people trying that all the time, it's one or t'other, not both![]()
Not sure about now but Ford dealers, but years ago we (Ford Employees) used to negotiate the best deal we could get before announcing we were employees and claiming our discount. If the dealer wasn't prepared to honour the deal with the discount, we'd find one who would. It usually paid to find one further from the factories that wouldn't normally have employees living nearby. Dealers nearer the factories sell more cars due to proximity of employees so can afford to knock back sales, where as those further afield welcomed the sales.
Dealers used to make out they didn't get reimbursed. They would even try to offer less on trade ins too.I'd imagine in your case Ford probably reimbursed the dealer for any extra discount given...
Dealers used to make out they didn't get reimbursed. They would even try to offer less on trade ins too.
Now our discount scheme is different. Instead of 18%-25% depending on the model it is now a set figure depending on the model. Starts at £250 on a basic Ka, which as a new model won't be heavily discounted by the dealer, so on that we'd lose out as it wouldn't even equate to any where near the 18% we would have got previously.
Galaxy is a good bet these have been heavily discounted plus we get a much better discount on top. Ford were advertising £5,000 off inclusive of the scrappage scheme on the Galaxy Edge. That's a public discount too not the Ford employee price.
With regards to the scrappage scheme being run in other countries, is anyone aware if this is funded jointly by the governments and manufacturers or is it just our government being tight and only stumping up half.
No cars, just engines, gearboxes, radiators, steel wheels, car panels where I work, Transit vans and chassis at the moment but soon only the chassis.Btw, do Ford build cars in the UK nowadays, or is it just engines for Transit vans now?
Of course, you could just go to the scrappy, buy a £50-100 pound junker that still has a bit of MOT left n trade it in for the £2k discount...
You have to own the car a minimum of 12 months to qualify.Of course, you could just go to the scrappy, buy a £50-100 pound junker that still has a bit of MOT left n trade it in for the £2k discount...
No cars, just engines, gearboxes, radiators, steel wheels, car panels where I work, Transit vans and chassis at the moment but soon only the chassis.
When they closed the car production at Dagenham, Ford said that car production could return to Britain some day in the future, but I think the current economic climate has put paid to that ever happening. Even if Transit production were to cease, I don't think they would be replacing it with cars as it would require too much money for investment.I wondered, there was a programme on BBC3 about Ford and that's what it said, I just couldn't believe it :shake:
Interesting thread. Now here is why I wouldn't have a diesel engined new car.
Assuming £2000 difference between a petrol cost and diesel cost, and a difference of mpg of about 18mpg, (45 petrol, 63 diesel), and an average mileage of 20000p.a., difference in fuel costs 96p/litre petrol, 1.07p/litre diesel, it would take 5 years to recoup the difference in purchase costs. 5 years of tractor driving just to break even, no thanks.
The Fiat guy said that they (Fiat) had slowed production right down over the last few months because of the downturn, now the extra sales are stacking up and it will take about six weeks for delivery. My neighbour is having to wait ten weeks for his Nissan.
The Fiat guy said that they (Fiat) had slowed production right down over the last few months because of the downturn, now the extra sales are stacking up and it will take about six weeks for delivery. My neighbour is having to wait ten weeks for his Nissan.
I've got a 3 year old Panda, that I got converted to LPG - 51p a litre and 45mpg on gas. About a 1/3 cheaper than my old diesel Corsa by my reckoning!![]()
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