Why Do We Only Bond With Specific Cars?
As our parents and/or other halves often take time to remind us, people like us do spend a lot of time looking at buying or swapping cars. It’s a bit of an addiction for some of us – or at least it can seem that way to those on the outside.
From year to year (or even month to month) we’ll chop and change our rides because they don’t excite us anymore, they keep breaking or just because of the constant lure of something better. On the other hand, sometimes we come across a car that we just can’t part with. What’s that all about?
Often we buy cars for our current circumstances, forgetting the bigger picture. Towing a lot? Great excuse for a pickup or a V6 diesel estate. Parking in cities all the time but want something fun? A hot hatch it is, then. Getting into trackdays? You simply need that cheap E46 M3 you’ve just spotted less than 10 miles from home.
If you play chess one move at a time, you’re going to lose. That same principle is why buying a car for what we need right now is often the wrong thing to do. How often is ‘what you need right now’ also what you need two years from now? Through your late teens and 20s, that’s pretty much never. Your lifestyle changes. Your income changes. Your priorities change. Inevitably, your cars change.
Secretly we quite like this financially ruinous merry-go-round. It’s all the excuse we need to swap cars as often as we want to. The enjoyment is partly down to the endorphins released by buying something we tell ourselves we really want; that rush of something new (to us) and the honeymoon period that comes after.
There’s something deeper than that, though; a bug that only bites sometimes. Some cars’ novelty begins to wear off after a week, or a month. Their faults and compromises start to show, and while we tell ourselves that we still love them, we already know exactly why we’ll end up selling them. Shh, don’t tell anyone else aboutthe issue for now, until you’ve found a replacement.
In the space of a few years I went from a Renault Sport Clio 182, to a Peugeot 206 GTI HDI, to a MkI Mazda Eunos Roadster, to a base-spec Citroen Berlingo, to a Mazda 6 Sport diesel, to a Skoda Fabia vRS and then, after a gap, a Honda S2000.
Looking back, the best all-round solution would have been to keep the 206. It was a really, really good car and would have got me through that entire period. We’re not always the most sensible people when it comes to these choices, are we?
But. Occasionally you’ll land on a car and after a week, or a month, you still can’t wait to take each drive in it. You keep finding excuses to go out. “Ahh, the Mrs needs some more paprika.” “Hmmm, I’m only on three-quarters of a tank so I’ll drive to that Shell station three towns over.” “I, err, thought I heard a clonk on the front suspension so I’m just going to go and have a drive to check…” These are cars we fall in love with.
Maybe it’s a particular noise the car makes. The way it feels. Maybe it’s how many things it’s good at. Something unique to you and the way you’re coded just creeps up, whispers “you’re mine, now” into your ear, and wham: you’re in a long-term relationship.
I know I’m not alone in saying that I haven’t bonded with most of the cars I’ve owned. Hands up, I admit it: I’ve bought more than a few cars that made precious little sense at the time, let alone after six months. But there were a few, like the 206, that I really did like a lot and should have kept longer.
I’ve had my Octavia vRS for three weeks, now. I can see it from my office window, and every time I look at it, part of my mind involuntarily finds an excuse to drive it. Right now it’s that I need some new number plate fixings, and you can bet I’ll hit the road as soon as this article is written. It’s been too long since I had that tiny everyday thrill in my life, and I have a sneaky feeling it’s going to last.
Which cars have you bonded with and kept long-term? Which ones gave you short-term thrills but ended up getting annoying? Which cars do you wish you’d kept for longer? Let us know below!
Comments
I should of kept my R32!!! I miss it everyday despite it being ruinously expensive too run as a daily. I will buy another one day soon and use as a summer/weekend car.
My truck needs new brake lines, has no a/c, a sagging headliner, rust eating the wheel wells on the back, a wiring problem with one of my tail lights, an exhaust that needs replacing, and massive amounts of peeling clear coat (it’s a 90s Chrysler product). I can’t imagine giving it up. I drove Blue daily for almost 9 years and any time I take it out it feels like being with an old friend, everything’s so predictable and enjoyable. Music on, windows down, V8 rumble soothing my soul.
I hate seeing Phil .
I’ve really bonded with my g35. It’s not the most exciting car in the world but it does everything well. I love the way it looks and the sweet sound of that vq just never gets old. And on top of that it handles pretty good as well.
This article explains why I don’t want to get rid of my 1991 Starlet. It doesn’t even work anymore, the Cam belt snapped one day and that was that. It’s sat in its old parking spot for a year now, collecting dint after dint. It’s old and knackered. It was loud. It was crap. It had an oil leak, a blown head gasket and the exhaust was loose. BUT it soldiered on for so long and was capable of so much that I inevitably fell in love with it. All of the adventures my friends and I had in that car will stay with me forever, and the car has gone down as legendary. Unfortunately it’s time for it to go. It’s being donated to the fire brigade as a test car for them to play with.
I’m pretty sure I won’t sell my 325i e30 !
“The berlingo is good fun” this baby can confirm
Its all about character. My 92 miata has lots of it. Rattles and all! Love the way the blinker sounds, shutting the door sounds so satifying. Revving her to death while going so slow truly makes me smile.
My yamaha fz 07 is 390lbs wet stock. The yoshi removes a few pounds so she feels more like a bicycle with an engine. Love turning and hearing the exhaust growl bounce off the pavement.
Cars and bikes are not transportation. They are about transporting you into another mindset.
Currently at 6 months with my Prelude. First car and I don’t ever plan on selling it. Learned to drive manual on it, passed my driving test with it, use it as my daily, take it out to cruises every weekend and is my long term project car. The thing I love most is that under 5k rpm you have a nice cruiser that drives nice around town but once VTEC hits you have a whole different engine. Amazing car and will be taken with me to the grave <3
I should have kept my 350z! The most fun car I have ever owned! Told myself moving to London meant it had to go! Turned out our flat had off road parking, I COULD HAVE KEPT IT…I could have kept it! Now I need a new car and I have no idea what to get! Argh!