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Hi Scott,
I'm sure Avant will be along soon.
In the meantime, I can add my personal experience of the A180 CDi.
Now, mine is the CVT and very good it is too.
When people talk about the droning a CVT makes, it's when you put your foot down to make it accelerate.
With a petrol engine coupled to a CVT, there's not a huge amount of torque (pulling power) available low down, so the engine needs to rev to find that torque higher up the rev range.
With the diesel engines, torque is available from about 1600 RPM, and the engine therefore does not have to rev high to gain momentum. In fact, you could argue that a CVT coupled with a diesel engine is the ideal combination, as it's always in the correct "gear". You can certainly make good progress in the A180 Cdi without causing the revs to soar.
However, if you are dead against CVTs, then there are a few manual versions around. Avoid the A 160 CDi - it has the same 2.0 litre engine as the A180 and A200 but with a detuned 82 BHP and less torque, it will be sluggish!
The A and B Class of the vintage you are looking at had fairly poor petrol engines, not particularly strong or smooth.
I think Avant had a B180 CDi and his main complaint was engine noise. Certainly after a cold start it's quite vocal in my car but settles down once warm and is virtually silent at motorway speeds. (70 MPH = 1800 RPM).
If you've found a car you like the look of, why not ask for a proper extended test drive for the day? If they refuse, move on to another dealer.
In terms of the mileage of the 2011 one, I would not consider that excessively low.
Finally, the post 2009 A/B Class diesels did have a partical filter (my 2007 model doesn't) so you will need to make sure that your journeys are sufficiently long to avoid the problems you've had with your C30.
I've had my A Class for over two years, and despite lots of short journeys daily, I've had none of the problems associated with modern diesels.
Edited by 72 dudes on 07/04/2016 at 18:29
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