Ford Focus - Selling an older car/buying a newer car - branditx

Hello I am hoping for some advice!

I recently purchased a 2006 Ford Focus Ghia 95,000 from a car auction and it seems like it has turned into a very stupid mistake!

The day after purchase the Engine Systems Failure light has come on and despite taking it to 2 different garages no one can find the system fault code so we cannot figure out what is wrong with the car. It passed it's MOT this month so it has a full 12 months left on it but this light won't go out. The car drives perfectly fine except sometimes it won't rev over 2000/3000 (forgive me I'm me I'm not very technical with my terms!) The interior of the car is amazing and the outside has some dings and rust in 2 places but we have cleaned it up as best as we can.

Given the light that is on I think we are going to find it difficult to sell. We have been to a few places to look at new cars and it looks like we would get about 750 for a trade in but we already have 1300 invested so this would be quite a loss.

Any suggestions on how we should handle this or what our best bet would be to getting a new car and not taking such a big loss on the old one?

Ford Focus - Selling an older car/buying a newer car - chriswales

Normally if a car won’t rev over 2 to 3k its likely to have gone into ‘limp home mode’ where the car’s computer has seen something it’s not happy with. This can often be reset by switching off engine and restarting it. The car dropping into limp home mode could be linked to engine warning light.

To work out what is wrong you would need to take the car to a garage that specialises in fault code reading. You would be looking at a charge for finding the fault code and then another for fixing the problem. This could be a £20 sensor or a major engine component and maybe the reason why the car was sold at an auction.

As for keeping or selling the car, personally if the car was in reasonable condition with plenty of life left in the consumables (tyres, brakes etc) then I would spent another £100 or so trying to find the problem. If it was fixable for a reasonable amount then I would keep it.

If you’ve lost confidence in the car then you’re best off selling it as is. Selling the car privately with the engine light on would be difficult but most dealers wouldn’t be that concerned. Given the value of the car it’s likely you won’t get all of the money back if you try to fix the engine light before selling.

Ford Focus - Selling an older car/buying a newer car - branditx

Thank you, I sincerely appreciate your reply.

The garage we took it to yesterday that couldn't find the fault said there were several new components in the engine that looked like the previous owners had tried to also figure out the problem but never did.

I've booked it into one more garage tomorrow who again is going to look over it for free but if they can't narrow down the issue we may pay to take it to the ford garage.

The car is in reasonable condition and we just fixed the rear suspensions, 2 new tyres, etc. so if we could manage to sort out the engine light realatively cheap then we should probably keep the car which seems like that would be our best bet financially.

If it can't be fixed looks like we may just need to trade it in and take a loss or go the auction route again but likely it would just go for what we paid for it.

I'm new to the country so I have zero experiences buying cars from a dealership here but what are the odds a dealership would give me the quoted trade in value plus knock some off the sticker price of a car we would want to buy?

Ford Focus - Selling an older car/buying a newer car - RobJP

If it's the engine management light (a yellow light) then you can just keep on running it until it goes terminally wrong. Which could be several years away.

Ford Focus - Selling an older car/buying a newer car - Gibbo_Wirral

If it's the engine management light (a yellow light) then you can just keep on running it until it goes terminally wrong. Which could be several years away.

Its going into limp mode though. Not very reliable or safe.

Sounds to me like the OP has bought a problem car, one someone's tried to have a go at fixing and failed, they always go to auctions as the buyer doesn't get a chance to test it. That's why they're cheap.

First thing I'd do is get a proper Ford diagnostic from a Ford specialist (not a dealer or "fix anything" garage with a generic code reader). Or cut your losses and get rid like the previous owner did.

Ford Focus - Selling an older car/buying a newer car - FoxyJukebox

If an engine management light is on--isn't that an MOT failure?

Ford Focus - Selling an older car/buying a newer car - RobJP

No, it is only an advisory.

As long as the car passes the emissions test, then it's good to go.

Ford Focus - Selling an older car/buying a newer car - slkfanboy

If an engine management light is on--isn't that an MOT failure?

Thats what I think and the light only comes on if it's import (some faults don't trigger it) and if it's on there must be a code.

I suspect the issue might be outside of the ECU and often basic test kit only checks the ECU. So maybe a proper Ford dealer is your best bet.

Ford Focus - Selling an older car/buying a newer car - elekie&a/c doctor

Is there any indication as to whether this is a petrol or diesel engine??