Currently reading: Buy them before we do: second-hand picks for 28 June

Purists will baulk at the idea of an automatic M3, but that could be the best value version of the legendary E46

BMW M3s, the E46 variety of 2000 to 2006, are becoming expensive, and if you want to get into a good one for under £10,000, you better act soon. 

BMW M3 Coupé, £9700: Clean convertibles begin at around £8000 and coupés closer to £9000. There are always cheaper examples, such as the well-maintained 2002-reg manual convertible with 124,000 miles at £5200 that we saw and a same-age automatic coupé with 100,000 for £6500, although its engine had recently started knocking… 

Elsewhere, we found a 2003-reg manual coupé, again with 100,000 miles, for £7800. All the services, including the much-championed 1000-mile oil change, were recorded in the ad. The bodywork was described as being very good for the age but the seller admitted the interior needed refurbishing, which is never cheap. 

So back to the more expensive cars. We came across a 2003 manual coupé with 119,000 miles – more than the aforementioned cars but it had full service history and looked bright. Price? A highish-sounding £9700. 

Bmw m3

The manual gearbox is the one to have but turning your back on automatic versions and narrowing the field means you might miss a car that has had things such as the rear subframe reinforced and big end bearings replaced under a BMW recall. We found an £8950 2002-reg auto coupé with 107,000 miles that had benefited from this work and had full service history. 

Aside from a weak floor and a noisy big end, other things to check when picking over M3 E46s include clutch wear on manuals, pump and clutch on autos, broken rear springs, rusting brake pipes, exhaust pipe and rear quarter panels, and a worn interior. 

Volvo v50 t5

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You’d imagine that a higher roofline and four doors would hinder the BMW M3 saloon’s capabilities compared to the M4, but you'd be wrong

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Volvo V50 T5 SE, £2208: Workaday estates with four-wheel drive and a punchy motor are always fun – such as this 113,000-mile V50 T5 of 2004. It uses a detuned version of the turbo five-pot in the Ford Focus ST and shares that car’s chassis, so it handles well but is brisk, not quick.

Bentley brooklands

Bentley Brooklands, £10,950: Seeing a motor described as the seller’s everyday car is always reassuring, which is how this 100,000-mile 1997 Brooklands caught our eye. It has full service history plus new brake spheres and reconditioned brake pumps.

Ssangyong rodius

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Ssangyong Rodius 2.7 TD S, £2495: Who needs a pretty face when you’re as practical as a Rodius? The seven-seat MPV is that rare breed: a people-carrier with space for people. All seats swivel, slide, fold and come out. This example is a 2006-reg car with 77,000 miles.

Citroen ds5

Citroen DS5 2.0 HDI Style, £5627: Yes, it has a rock-hard ride and visibility is woeful but the DS5 of 2012-15 is such a good-looking thing that we forgive it. Even this luxury-focused Style version looks genuinely sporty. It’s a 2013-reg model that has done 90,000 miles

Auction watch

Smart Crossblade: Just 2000 of these roof, door and windscreen-less Smart Fortwos, launched as a concept at the 2001 Geneva motor show, were made. Tuned by Brabus, the special edition’s uprated 600cc motor produced 70bhp, ample in a car weighing 740kg. This one, number 0063 with 4600 miles on the clock, achieved £12,880 at auction, or around half what it cost new. 

Smart crossblade 0

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Singer Robbie Williams owned a Crossblade for a while. He took delivery of his car, numbered 0008, in 2002 and called it “innovative and unconventional”, but by 2007, it was being advertised for sale at £14,995.

Get it while you can

Jaguar F-Type 2.0 Coupé, price new - £52,310, price now - £42,329: As Autocar reported recently, a revamped F-Type is on the cards for next year. Judging by the generous deals available on the current model, it can’t come soon enough.

170814 F type media drive 08

You can get £2600 off the price of a brand-new, entry-level 2.0-litre coupé for cash, or a whopping £5800 if you take out finance. Alternatively, try your luck with a pre-reg such as the 2019/19-reg example with 100 miles on the clock that we found. It’s priced at £42,329 from a Jaguar dealer – around £10,000 less than it cost new.

Clash of the classifieds

Brief: Find me a performance diesel saloon for £10,000, please.

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BMW 330d M Sport, £8995: If we’re talking about quick diesel saloon cars, then you’ll want power, efficiency and plenty of top tech; so I present to you the BMW 3 Series. I’ve specifically gone for the mighty 330d with a 245bhp 3.0-litre straight six diesel engine because it covers 0-60mph in 6.2sec, does 155mph and is still capable of high-40s to the gallon. The example here is a 2011 car with a full BMW service history and it comes loaded with leather, the professional media iDrive system and heated sports seats with adjustable thigh support in the front. The price? A mere snip at £8995. Max Adams

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Mercedes-Benz S350 CDI, £9995: Really pleasing diesel cars are few and far between but there’s no doubting the indomitable S-Class – the truly, deeply and unbelievably wafty S-Class, the best all-round car in the real world and the default luxury limo for the well-heeled. This purveyor of high-class motoring is at once great to drive and wonderfully comfortable to travel in. Despite such outstanding refinement, this 255bhp saloon has to be reined in to 155mph and its combined fuel consumption figure is a meritorious 46mpg. To top it all, this is a 2011 car with a barely run-in 78,000 miles on the clock, and it’s in immaculate condition. Mark Pearson

Verdict: The big S goes straight to the top of the class.

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si73 30 June 2019

I've driven a couple of E46

I've driven a couple of E46 M3s, a coupe and a convertible, both manuals, they were awesome especially when the revs hit around 5k. Thing is they are proper performance cars and the running costs reflect that which is why I'd go for a 325 or 330 as a coupe as I think the E46 is the best looking 3 series and the straight six engines are fantastic.

Boris9119 30 June 2019

Great Advice

I think that's sound advice si73, real world public highway performance is not disimilar and as you rightly point out, E46 M3's are expensive to maintain compared to boggo 330's.

Peter Cavellini 28 June 2019

Re the M3.....

About twelve years ago I had one with a manual box, I managed to find one that avoided the big Oil service, I knew about the possible problems so I only kept it six months, it only cost me two rear tires, ran it on £25.00 for fuel...a week! , it never missed a beat ,put it a huge grin on my face, I, and this is just me, wouldn’t consider a car with a stellar mileage no matter how thick the service History was.

Takeitslowly 30 June 2019

Peter Cavellini wrote:

Peter Cavellini wrote:

About twelve years ago I had one with a manual box, I managed to find one that avoided the big Oil service, I knew about the possible problems so I only kept it six months, it only cost me two rear tires, ran it on £25.00 for fuel...a week! , it never missed a beat ,put it a huge grin on my face, I, and this is just me, wouldn’t consider a car with a stellar mileage no matter how thick the service History was.

 

12 years on, ie now, what do you drive?.