What do you think of the Daewoo Nubira vs Mondeo - John Glasspool
I need a large family estate car. I see I can get a Mondeo GhiaX auto from Trade Sales for about £16k-which is £5k below book price. A Daewoo Nubira is about £13k. Does anyone feel they can offer an opinion as to whether the Daewoo is anywhere near as good as the Ford, or is the price difference just a reflection of "you pay for what you get"?

Ta

John
Re: What do you think of the Daewoo Nubira vs Mon - Moosh
Don't even think of the Daewoo !

Although its much cheaper than the Ford the depreciation is dire. The Ford would work out much cheaper in the long run.
Re: What do you think of the Daewoo Nubira vs Mon - Honest John
Moosh is right. Only buy a Nubira at auction where they go for buttons (well, not quite buttons) when they're a few years old.

HJ
Re: What do you think of the Daewoo Nubira vs Mon - T lucas
Dont even think about the depreciation,the Nubira is dire.The only way to consider one of those sheds is if you can buy a new one for about 2 grand-they really are that bad.They make a Vectra look like a good car.
Re: What do you think of the Daewoo Nubira vs Mon - Dai Woo
The Vectra is a good car!
Re: What do you think of the Daewoo Nubira vs Mon - Grandpa
T Lucas.
As usual your posts make a great deal of sense. Your last post was accurate as usual until the last sentence ruined your reputation. Makes a Vectra look good indeed!!!!
Re: What do you think of the Daewoo Nubira vs Mon - ladas are slow
the only time a vectra looks good is when its in a crusher :-)
Re: What do you think of the Daewoo Nubira vs Mon - Andy Bairsto
Have you ever owned one over long period of time ,I think not
Re: What do you think of the Daewoo Nubira vs Mon - ladas are slow
go away you nazi.
Re: What do you think of the Daewoo Nubira vs Mon - alvin booth
After learning that an Audi headlamp can cost £800 it makes the Vectra look absolutely brilliant.... Imagine the scene at an Audi dealer, "That will be £800 + vat Sir" "come on don't make jokes like that" "Its not a joke Sir, be careful you don't drop it"
Alvin
Re: What do you think of the Daewoo Nubira vs Mon - David W
Alvin,

We're looking to find another car for SWMBO.

So we can afford a whole high mileage Vectra for under a grand (see HJ auction report) or just the headlamp for an Audi.

Nicely defines social standing I suppose.

David
Re: What do you think of the Daewoo Nubira vs Mon - alvin booth
David,
Its a tough decision to make....
Go for the headlamp is my advice.
Low running costs, no MOT or insurance.
Of course there are a few trivial disadvantages.
Alvin
Re: What do you think of the Daewoo Nubira vs Mon - ladas are slow
at least you would have the prestige of having an audi headlamp.
Re: What do you think of the Daewoo Nubira vs Mon - markymarkn
ladas are slow wrote:
>
> at least you would have the prestige of having an audi
> headlamp.

??????????????????????????????????????????????.
Re: What do you think of the Daewoo Nubira vs Mon - Honest John
Hilarious thread, lads. Off-thread, has bin Lada done a deal with Tracy for her Colt and binned the Lada?

HJ
Re: What do you think of the Daewoo Nubira vs Mon - ladas are slow
i hope to buy the colt for my sister, but i might be keeping it for myself, as the lada is just too slow (0-60 in 16.4 seconds)
Re: What do you think of the Daewoo Nubira vs Mon - Mark (Brazil)
Really, so I guess you will have to sell the Reliant Robin, the Jag you were buying over Christmas, the Pink Tank etc. etc.

Prat.

The sad thing is that the rest of us have to repeatedly apologise for you since new people come on the site and aren`t aware of what a sad, mindless, pointless individual that you are.
i am not a prat. - ladas are slow
if you look at the original post about the pink tank, you will see that it was a mate of mine who had it, not me. the guy about the reliant didnt want to sell it, it was a family member of his who put his car on here. and the fuel economy of the jag put me off.

please dont call me a prat, and also dont call me sad mindless pointless.
Re: i am not a prat. - Mark (Brazil)
if it looks like a duck...............
Re: i am not a prat. - Matt
call it a duck.........
Re: i am not a prat. - Nigel N
I don't normally contribute to the forum, just read others pearls of wisdom.. but why can't LAS or LAC or whatever his latest name is, just shut up?
Re: i am not a prat. - ladas are slow
i am not a prat, but i think you might be nigel.
Re: i am not a prat. - David W
Yep I think he might be Nigel.

David
Re: i am not a prat. - Mark (Brazil)
Actually, I'm fairly sure he's Nigel.

On a slight tangent..

David - are you familiar with the writings of Douglas Adams of Hitchhikers Guide Fame ? If you are, and enjoy him, find a book called "Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency". Read the first part about the Monk and tell me you don't immediately think of the pink prat !!
Re: i am not a prat. - David W
>"Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency".

No I don't know it Mark but have noted and may check it out at the library.

Did read much of the Asimov and Van Vogt (spellings?) stuff in late teens and enjoyed it.

David
Re: i am not a prat. - KB.
May I be permitted to quote you LAS?............



Author: ladas are slow (---.cache.pol.co.uk)
Date: 28-01-02 23:20
"thanks, i am glad you see sense in letting me reply instead of you".



I think the cultural and intellectual standards of the site remain safe in your hands..................or not as the case may be!

KB
Re: i am not a prat. - Mark (Brazil)
oh, its worth it just for the two chapters about the Monk. Read it, you will understand my point.
Re: i am not a prat. - Mark (Brazil)
David,

I found the bit I was talking about, to save you the trip to the library.....(its a bit long)

Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency (extract)

High on a rocky promontory sat an Electric Monk on a bored horse. From under its rough woven cowl the Monk gazed unblinkingly down into another valley, with which it was having a problem.

The day was hot, the sun stood in an empty hazy sky and beat down upon the gray rocks and the scrubby, parched grass. Nothing moved, not even the Monk. The horse's tail moved a little, swishing slightly to try and move a little air, but that was all. Otherwise, nothing moved.

The Electric Monk was a labour-saving device, like a dishwasher or a video recorder. Dishwashers washed tedious dishes for you, thus saving you the bother of washing them yourself, video recorders watched tedious television for you, thus saving you the bother of looking at it yourself; Electric Monks believed things for you, thus saving you what was becoming an increasingly onerous task, that of believing all the things the world expected you to believe.

Unfortunately this Electric Monk had developed a fault, and had started to believe all kinds of things, more or less at random. It was even beginning to believe things they'd have difficulty believing in Salt Lake City. It had never heard of Salt Lake City, of course. Nor had it ever heard of a quingigillion, which was roughly the number of miles between this valley and the Great Salt Lake of Utah.

The problem with the valley was this. The Monk currently believed that the valley and everything in the valley and arround it, including the Monk itself and the Monk's horse, was a uniform shade of pale pink. This made for a certain difficulty in distinguishing any one thing from any other thing, and therefore made doing anything or going anywhere impossible, or at least difficult and dangereus. Hence the immobility of the Monk and the boredom of the horse, which had had to put up with a lot of silly things in its time but was secretly of the opinion that this was one of the silliest.

How long did the Monk believe these things?

Well, as far as the Monk was concerned, forever. The faith which moves mountains, or at least believes them against all the available evidence to be pink, was a solid and abiding faith, a great rock against which the world could hurl whatever it would, yet it would not be shaken. In practice, the horse knew, twenty-four hours was usually about its lot.

So what of this horse, then, that actually held opinions, and was sceptical about things? Unusual behaviour for a horse, wasn't it? An unusual horse perhaps?

No. Although it was certainly a handsome and well-built example of its species, it was none the less a perfectly ordinary horse, such as convergent evolution has produced in many of the places that life is to be found. They have always understood a great deal more than they let on. It is difficult to be sat on all day, every day, by some other creature, without forming an opinion on them.

On the other hand, it is perfectly possible to sit all day, every day, on top of another creature and not have the slightest thought about them whatsoever.

When the early models of these Monks were built, it was felt to be important that they be instantly recognisable as artificial objects. There must be no danger of their looking at all like real people. You wouldn't want your video recorder lounging around on the sofa all day while it was watching TV. You wouldn't want it picking its nose, drinking beer and sending out for pizzas.

So the Monks were built with an eye for originality of design and also for practical horse-riding ability. This was important. People, and indeed things, looked more sincere on a horse. So two legs were held to be both more suitable and cheaper than the more normal primes of seventeen, nineteen or twenty-three; the skin the Monks were given was pinkish-looking instead of purple, soft and smooth instead of crenellated. They were also restricted to just one mouth and nose, but were given instead an additional eye, making for a grand total of two. A strange looking creature indeed. But truly excellent at believing the most preposterous things.

This Monk had first gone wrong when it was simply given too much to believe in one day. It was, by mistake, cross-connected to a video recorder that was watching eleven TV channels simultaneously, and this caused it to blow a bank of illogic circuits. The video recorder only had to watch them, of course. It didn't have to believe them as well. This is why instruction manuals are so important.

So after a hectic week of believing that war was peace, that good was bad, that the moon was made of blue cheese, and that God needed a lot of money sent to a certain box number, the Monk started to believe that thirty-five percent of all tables were hermaphrodites, and then broke down. The man from the Monk shop said that it needed a whole new motherboard, but then pointed out that the new improved Monk Plus models were twice as powerful, had an entirely new multi-tasking Negative Capability feature that allowed them to hold up to sixteen entirely different and contradictory ideas in memory simultaneously without generating any irritating system errors, were twice as fast and at least three times as glib, and you could have a whole new one for less than the cost of replacing the motherboard of the old model.

That was it. Done.

The faulty Monk was turned out into the desert where it could believe what it liked, including the idea that it had been hard done by. It was allowed to keep its horse, since horses were so cheap to make.

For a number of days and nights, which it variously believed to be three, forty-three, and five hundred and ninety-eight thousand seven hundred and three, it roamed the desert, putting its simple Electric trust in rocks, birds, clouds, and a form of non-existent elephant-asparagus, until at least it fetched up here, on this high rock, overlooking a valley that was not, despite the deep fervour of the Monk's belief, pink. Not even a little bit.

Time passed.
Re: PP - David W
Mark,

"What's that Dad?", asked the four year old as the old man laughed out loud in front of the computer screen.

"Nothing for you to worry about darling", says the wise old fellow, "just something Mark from Brazil has posted.

Excellent. Very much like the Van Vogt style I mentioned.

David
Re: Electric Monk. - markymarkn
Well done chaps. Top thread, yet again at Lada's expense.

PMSL.

M.
Re: PP - Mark (Brazil)
So, hereinafter he'll be referred to as the Pink Prat or the Electric Monk.
The Division Bell ... - ian (cape town)
Gentlemen,
The motion on the floor is:
"Is LAS a prat?"
I think the "ayes" have it ...
Electric Monk. - David W
Mark,

I feel kindly disposed to all living things this year so "Electric Monk" seem fine.

If Martyn has wandered back here he'll be looking at the address bar to check he really is still at HJ!

David