Volvo XC90 - Updating Volvo XC90 - JohnCC

Hi-


We bought an 04 plate XC90 in Feb 2012 with 65000 miles for £10k. It's been a great car and fairly trouble-free apart from suspension work (bushes, arms, ARB links, etc) which I suspect are down to a combination of age and the godawful roads around these parts.

It's now on nearly 120k miles. It's tatty but probably nothing that a massive valet wouldn't fix. I think it shows its age in the ride though - it feels a bit vague, a bit ponderous, a bit wandery, so thinking of replacing it.

The requirement is for a 7 seat 4x4. I looked at alternatives like Kia Sorento (new ones nice but too and heard bad things about build quality regarding older ones), BMW X5 (back row seats too small). I hate Discoveries, and the Land Cruisers are crazy expensive. That seems to leave the XC90 as the best choice.

Looking in our target price (£10-11k) I found one that is 58 plate with 81k miles for £11k. Has a towbar and right size wheels to fit my snow tyres.

But just having a moment of thinking is it crazy to pay £7.5k difference to get a car that is 4 years and 40k miles younger? Would I be better taking the risk on the one we have? Or would I be better trying to find a bit more money and going slightly newer?

I guess the answer is that the that cost of nearly 2k per year depreciation is just the cost of owning a big 4x4 like that and you have to suck it up. Would love to know others' thoughts!

Thanks.

Volvo XC90 - Updating Volvo XC90 - madf

We tend to run our cars until they drop. (Our Yaris is 13years old, our Peugeot 107 was 17).

it shows its age in the ride though - it feels a bit vague, a bit ponderous, a bit wandery, so thinking of replacing it.

New dampers and bushes and checking all suspension/steering components should sort that out

An 80k miler will soon feel like a 120k miler...after a few years..

Edited by madf on 02/03/2016 at 14:43

Volvo XC90 - Updating Volvo XC90 - RT

For that sort of money, you'd get a 61-plate Hyundai Santa Fe Premium auto 7-seat with 60k on - I got £10.5k when I sold mine a few months back, in pristine condition.

Volvo XC90 - Updating Volvo XC90 - JohnCC

I quite like the idea of the Santa Fe / Sorrento but quite a few garage folk have warned me off them based on build quality. I was skeptical the first time (assumed it was just prejudice against a lesser know far east marque) but after about the third I figured there's probably something in it.

Volvo XC90 - Updating Volvo XC90 - RT

I quite like the idea of the Santa Fe / Sorrento but quite a few garage folk have warned me off them based on build quality. I was skeptical the first time (assumed it was just prejudice against a lesser know far east marque) but after about the third I figured there's probably something in it.

Unless they define the generation, they're being too general - Hyundai (and Kia since they became part of Hyundai-Kia) have moved on from being cheap and cheerful budget brands, through mainstream and into the premium sector - but of course their image lags a decade behind the cars.

"Garage folk" like cars that go wrong often, so they make money out of fixing them or selling custmers a new one.

Volvo XC90 - Updating Volvo XC90 - JohnCC

I was thinking if I went for Kia Sorrento, I'd try to go after the 2012 facelift. Would that put me into the right generation for better quality?

Volvo XC90 - Updating Volvo XC90 - RT

I was thinking if I went for Kia Sorrento, I'd try to go after the 2012 facelift. Would that put me into the right generation for better quality?

The Kia Sorento facelift was the 2013 model year, quite a bit or re-engineering and other improvements.

Volvo XC90 - Updating Volvo XC90 - Avant

If you think your XC90 is sound apart from the suspension, and you're otherwise happy with it, I think your best bet is to follow Madf's advice and have the new dampers etc; this plus a good valet should keep it going for a year at least and allow you time to save for a newer XC90.

Volvo XC90 - Updating Volvo XC90 - NARU

>> But just having a moment of thinking is it crazy to pay £7.5k difference to get a car that is 4 years and 40k miles younger? Would I be better taking the risk on the one we have? Or would I be better trying to find a bit more money and going slightly newer?

I solved that one by putting my 07 Landcruiser into a specialist for a 'mid life revamp' and rust proofing. It cost me about £1900 (£600 of that was the steam clean and dinitrol). Work included rebuilding the brakes, changing all fluids etc. It's now running better than ever - money well spent.

Volvo XC90 - Updating Volvo XC90 - slkfanboy

>Unless they define the generation, they're being too general - Hyundai (and Kia since >they became part of Hyundai-Kia) have moved on from being cheap and cheerful >budget brands, through mainstream and into the premium sector - but of course their >image lags a decade behind the cars.

It would seam the prices have not laged, often more expensive than the alternatives now

My old XC90 was build like a tank and Hyundai/Kia don't build to the same standard. I often drove across fields at 50mph in comfort which is not something I want to be doing in many cars.

Volvo XC90 - Updating Volvo XC90 - RT

>Unless they define the generation, they're being too general - Hyundai (and Kia since >they became part of Hyundai-Kia) have moved on from being cheap and cheerful >budget brands, through mainstream and into the premium sector - but of course their >image lags a decade behind the cars.

It would seam the prices have not laged, often more expensive than the alternatives now

My old XC90 was build like a tank and Hyundai/Kia don't build to the same standard. I often drove across fields at 50mph in comfort which is not something I want to be doing in many cars.

Hyundai/Kia prices go up each new generation, not surprising really - they now priced high enough that they're nothing like bargains any more. Having read horror stories about the XC90 4wd system failing un-noticed, until you're desperate for 4wd, it's honours even as the Santa Fe used the same system as one of the Porsches - and yes, I took my Santa Fe anywhere too.

The only reasons I didn't buy another one was because it's become more of a crossover than SUV - and I had money to burn!

Volvo XC90 - Updating Volvo XC90 - slkfanboy

If your are refering tot the XC90 bevel gear assembly issue, that did fail on some it has to said, it should cost around £500 give or take a bit which is about the cost of fuel it used to my weeks holiday in scotland about 2 years ago. So relivetively if you can afford run one, then the issue is rather minor.

It's a good point as many of the more off road 4WD systems don't do town driving well and Landrovers had there fair share issues too. If you do 90% town use then a Honda style 4WD copes better.