I'm tentively looking around for possibilities for our next van.

Post#46 ???
Either I forgot to paste the link, or it got censored.
 
Back to the original subject of getting a proper automatic with not a lot of money: That is what I wanted when I started looking. Another 'want' was NOT to have a new or newish one because there is in my considerable experience there is no dealer in the country who is competent to resolve the computerised faults that you will get. So, looking for a 'cheap' automatic also means an 'old' automatic. With a Proper Borg Warner or ZF box. he hydraulic type, not the electronic type. So far as my knowledge extends I think this would restrict the base vehicles to Ford Transit or Mercedes Benz. So I ended up with a 1999 Ford Transit with 65,000 miles on the clock and quite a few (or at least one) very incompetent owner who didnt realise that the gas water heater (Carver Cascade) was so defunct that it was sending flames outiside from the flue. Amongst other things. Anyway I got this Transit AutoSleeper with my and her ideal layout: what is called a Pullman lounge. One permanent full length Chaise Longue opposite the dinette which consists of two facing double seat sofas with a table in between. The two double seat sofas make up into a very wide single bed, the Chaise longue makes, or is indeed a permanent single bed so when the two single beds are made up there is a gap between them to use in the wee hours. Altenatively this lounge area can be made into a double (or triple if you are good friends) bed. It is soo soo quick to change from sofa seats to a bed it is very easy. All the bedding just gets shoved up over the cab so we don't have to lift heavy bed bases to shove it underneath.
As for it being 'old' and not-to-current-emission-standards: tough. Even if I were to inadvertently misadventure into a killing zone, it is cheaper to pay their emissions fines than it is to continually feed money into the "let's see if this £500 item fixes the fault" garages who always do what the OBD computer says is the fault. It never is. In my £2,000 worth of trying four different garages for various computer related faults, the OBD computer is ALWAYS wrong. Or at best, inaccurate - it is probably something attached to the alleged broken part, not the actual part the OBD says it is.
I've just been up to the Arctic Circle in my 1999 non compliant cheap automatic . . . .which doesn't have an OBD connector .
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:giggle:
 
Nothing there to argue with, but we all have an idea of what we want and a coachbuilt isn't in my future, and I don't know what an electric auto is.
 
I see, and no, I would want one of those either, it needs to be a slush box, not an automated Manual which no one can fix.
 
Nothing there to argue with, but we all have an idea of what we want and a coachbuilt isn't in my future, and I don't know what an electric auto is.
An electric auto is either a 'comfortmatic' or a modern automatic which is a DSG (Dual Selector Gearbox) . Comfortmatics are so bad they do not deserve to have electrons wasted explaining how they work. Or don't, which is more often. The DSG gearbox is one where an electronic computer decides which gear you will want next, it selects it but only operates that gear's clutch to engage it when the balance between the engine revs and the accelerator position are in harmony. In other words, at any time two gears are meshed together, but only one is attached to the driving wheels. Each of the ~7 or ~9 gears has its own clutch and they are engaged or disengaged according to the computer which decides on the appropriate one. I had a VW Golf with this system. It worked wonderfully but the more I looked at Youtubes on how they work and the cost / intricacy of servicing them at regular intervals made me sell it while the going was good. They are one of those "If it lasts a long time it is wonderful but if it doesn't, bang goes your bank account as well as the gearbox" things. It uses very specific oil or it won't work. It would appear that the oil and filter to do a DSG gearbox service cost about £150 for the parts. Plus labour if you don't do it yourself, and if you think you can make sure before you start by looking at a Youtube. Best get a quote for the job.
Whereas on an old type Borg Warner or ZF all you have to do is drain the old oil, undo ten or twelve sump bolts, remove the sump, then three bolts removes the flat pancake filter, fit a new filter, refit the sump, refill with oil and drive away having spent £30 on oil and £25 for the filter . . . . .


I would add that I am a great fan of automatic gearboxes (proper ones, that is). My son in law had a manual box Mondeo which needed a new clutch. Ten years ago it cost £1600, I don't know what it would cost now. The only time I have known a Borg Warner or ZF box to need replacing was when I was in Madeira and I asked a 1983 taxi driver with an auto box how many km it had done. 1,500,000 approx. "And have you had a new engine or gearbox?" Yes, I had a replacement gearbox once, at about 700,000 km.
Nuff said.
 
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