Leasing can be an affordable, practical route into having your own private car, but it’s not always easy to tell the good deals from the duds. The experts at our sister magazine What Car? work hard to find you the best pay-monthly schemes, taking into account mileage allowance, montly outlay, contract length and initial deposit. We’ll be bringing you the best deals they find from a different segment each week. This week, it’s budget family SUVs: 1. Fiat 500 1.2 Pop £740 deposit, £123 per month, 48 months, 8000 miles per year The little Fiat brings a welcome helping of style to a model segment characterised by functional design. Agreed, it has only two doors and is cramped, but for two, it’s perfect, as well as great value for money. 2. Ford Ka+ 1.25 85 Active 5dr £828 deposit, £138 per month, 36 months, 8000 miles per year Not the prettiest city car but one of the roomiest and best to drive. Around town, the Ka+ is little short of a revelation, being surprisingly comfortable and good to steer. If only it had a little more power. 3. Hyundai i10 1.0 S 5dr £770 deposit, £128 per month, 48 months, 8000 miles per year A neat, roomy package backed by a five-year warranty makes the i10 a great ‘drive and forget’ city runabout. The trouble is that it’s just that: a little anonymous and charmless, if utterly reliable. But what value. 4. Kia Picanto 1.25 X-Line 5dr £956 deposit, £159 per month, 48 months, 8000 miles per year A seven-year warranty speaks volumes about this Kia’s expected reliability but it’s not the only highlight. Others include its sharp styling, roomy and high-quality cabin, comfortable ride and characterful engines. 5. Toyota Aygo 1.0 VVT-I X-Play 5dr £892 deposit, £149 per month, 48 months, 8000 miles per year Where the Fiat 500 is chic, the Aygo is all youthful vigour. Its engine lacks flexibility but its handling is reasonably entertaining. For a more conservative version, see its Citroën C1 and Peugeot 108 siblings. For more great personal business lease deals visit What Car?
Origin: Best lease deals of the week: City cars
best
Best lease deals of the week: Budget family SUVs
Leasing can be an affordable, practical route into having your own private car, but it’s not always easy to tell the good deals from the duds. The experts at our sister magazine What Car? work hard to find you the best pay-monthly schemes, taking into account mileage allowance, montly outlay, contract length and initial deposit. We’ll be bringing you the best deals they find from a different segment each week. This week, it’s budget family SUVs: 1. Dacia Duster 1.6 SCE Access £886 deposit, £148 per month, 48 months, 8000 miles per year The cheapest SUV here is much more comfortable, refined and practical than its predecessor. Don’t expect engaging handling or scintillating pace but do expect to feel ever so slightly smug. 2. Ford Kuga 1.5 Ecoboost 120 Zetec £1140 deposit, £190 per month, 48 months, 8000 miles per year The most expensive car in this selection is also the best to drive. The Kuga offers a blend of agility and body control that is, frankly, second to none. It’s a rare treat in a class that’s often lacking in both. 3. Hyundai Tucson 1.6 GDI SE Nav £1102 deposit, £184 per month, 36 months, 8000 miles per year The Tucson may not shine brightly in any particular area but is nevertheless a smart, capable and practical family SUV that’s also reliable and pretty likeable. SE Nav trim isn’t the cheapest but it’s our favourite. 4. Nissan Qashqai 1.3 DIG-T Visia £1098 deposit, £183 per month, 48 months, 8000 miles per year The car that kick-started the current SUV craze continues to lead by covering more bases than most of the opposition. Some newer rivals may better it for driving pleasure but few are as well rounded. 5. Skoda Karoq 1.0 TSI SE Technology £981 deposit, £164 per month, 24 months, 8000 miles per year Few will argue with the Karoq’s price but there’s more to this Skoda than the sound of pennies saved. In fact, it’s a great all-rounder with a composed ride, a good choice of engines and a spacious and versatile cabin. For more great personal business lease deals visit What Car?
Origin: Best lease deals of the week: Budget family SUVs
Best 50 cars on sale: Top five showdown
Can these really be the five best cars on sale in this country? Almost certainly not, for that is not what we set out to find. They are not the greatest driver’s cars, nor the ones that most exceed expectations, or come from that curious confection where cars appear to be without reason somehow greater than the sum of their constituent parts. There’s only one superlative that applies to this group: they’re simply the cars we like best. Which is how you get to see a Ford Fiesta and McLaren 600LT sharing space on the same page. How a four-door diesel saloon comes to duke it out with a mid-engined two-seat coupé, and how the presence of the perennially most versatile sports car of them all comes to brood over them. That all qualify as ‘fun to drive’ should surprise few reading this magazine. There are plenty of cars we really admire that got nowhere near even the top 50, let alone this top five, because driving entertainment didn’t make their ‘to do’ list. For us, enthusiasts to our toenails, to go top five you have to go top fun, too. Take the Fiesta. Yes, we’ve chosen an ST and it’s here in its own right, but also to represent all Fiestas. Last year, Ford sold 50% more Fiestas in the UK than the next best-selling car, a fact that makes us very happy. And, of course, that’s because the car is attractive and affordable to run and the deals are good, but the repeat business must in some part come from the fun it provides. I know a district nurse who has just given up a rival car for a 1.0-litre Fiesta and is utterly smitten. She knows nothing and cares less about cars but insists “I just really like the way it drives”. And that is enough for Ford to know it has done its job well. Haring across Wales in the ST and seeing how easily it keeps up with the pokier members of our happy band is instructive, not to mention highly entertaining. If you did the same journey back in 1981 in the first fast Fiesta, the original XR2, you’d see that in character, if very little else, not much has changed. There’s an infectious cheerfulness about this car, a willingness to be wrung out, hurled, flung and booted from place to place. More than any other here, it’s a car you drive on its throttle pedal because none is more inclined to adjust its attitude according to its opening. And, to us, that’s pretty much the definition of fun. Get the car into the corner by keeping off the gas, let the back go loose if that’s what it wants to do, because the moment you’re at the apex and on the power, it all falls beautifully back in line and you rocket away, grinning like a loon. And that’s pretty much the reason the BMW 320d has come from nowhere to make the top five of this list. When we performed this exercise last year and despite excluding all cars costing more than £50k, its predecessor didn’t even make the top 10. There’s plenty I’d choose to criticise about the 320d: on sport suspension, the ride quality sits on the challenging side of comfortable, the engine no longer has that bizarre willingness to rev of previous four-cylinder BMW diesels (blame WLTP, I suspect), and if I was going to be convinced by BMW’s curious new instrument layout, it would have happened by now. But all that is overshadowed, especially in a feature such as this, by the one thing it has gained. Or, I should say, regained. Being old enough to remember successive generations of early 3 Series, their position as weapon au choix among those in need of a compact saloon but who liked to drive was nothing less than inviolable. Okay, I’m not so ancient as to have been doing this job when the E21- generation 3 Series was on the market, but the E30, E36 and E46 ruled that particular roost with impregnable authority. But the more recent E90 and F30, while more rounded products, were also less distinct and cars concerned with all their occupants, not just the driver. Now with the G20, though, the balance has swung decisively back the other way. It’s the car’s handling that does it, the way it wolfs down a great road with such authority and precision that you might be tempted to look over your shoulder to check this really is a four-door family car, and not some hunkered-down sports coupé. The result is a 3 Series with a character we’ve not seen for nigh on 15 years and it’s great to have it back. It may not look it, but it is in many ways the most surprising car here. The least surprising should be the Alpine A110. What more can we add to the ocean of purple prose already expended upon this remarkable, game-changing little sports car? Only this: despite it all, despite the fact that it is as familiar to me as an old pair of slippers after having driven plenty and living with one as a daily driver for a few months, surprising it remains. There is so much about this car that flies in the face of the purist’s handbook – it has only four cylinders, it’s turbocharged, it’s a third down on the requisite pedal count and so on – that
Origin: Best 50 cars on sale: Top five showdown
Best lease deals of the week: 4×4 estates
Leasing can be an affordable, practical route into having your own private car, but it’s not always easy to tell the good deals from the duds. The experts at our sister magazine What Car? work hard to find you the best pay-monthly schemes, taking into account mileage allowance, montly outlay, contract length and initial deposit. We’ll be bringing you the best deals they find from a different segment each week. This week, it’s 4×4 estates: 1. Skoda Octavia 2.0 TDI SE L 4X4 DSG Estate £1701 deposit, £284 per month, 48 months, 8000 miles per year It’s the cheapest option here but the Octavia has a slick 4×4 system, a clever electronic diff lock, XDS braking and a multi-link suspension system. 2. VW Golf Alltrack 2.0 TDI 184 DSG £2658 deposit, £443 per month, 48 months, 8000 miles per year The Alltrack is a jacked-up Golf estate (it rides 15mm higher than the regular car) with an off-road mode, front and rear bash plates and restyled bumpers to give better approach and departure angles. 3. Audi A6 Avant 40 TDI Quattro Sport S Tronic £3926 deposit, £654 per month, 36 months, 10,000 miles per year A stylish and practical estate with quattro four-wheel drive and a smooth, powerful engine. Tick the air suspension option if hauling heavy loads is your plan. 4. BMW 320i Touring xDrive Sport Auto £2045 deposit, £341 per month, 48 months, 8000 miles per year The 3 Series Touring is a stylish and sporty compact estate, but you may crave the security of four-wheel drive on a wet and twisty road. So choose this version, with BMW’s intelligent xDrive system. 5. Audi A4 Allroad 45 TFSI Quattro Sport S Tronic £2981 deposit, £497 per month, 48 months, 8000 miles per year Its additional 34mm of ride height doesn’t unsettle this ‘ruggedised’ A4. In fact, the longer suspension springs give a comfier ride than standard models. For more great personal business lease deals visit What Car?
Origin: Best lease deals of the week: 4×4 estates
Best lease deals of the week: Superminis
Leasing can be an affordable, practical route into having your own private car, but it’s not always easy to tell the good deals from the duds. The experts at our sister magazine What Car? work hard to find you the best pay-monthly schemes, taking into account mileage allowance, montly outlay, contract length and initial deposit. We’ll be bringing you the best deals they find from a different segment each week. This week, it’s superminis: 1. Ford Fiesta Zetec 1.1. 5dr £1037 deposit, £173 per month, 48 months, 8000 miles per year Look no further for driving pleasure. The Fiesta is uncommonly good in this respect. The 1.1-litre isn’t as nippy as the 1.0 EcoBoost but precise steering and handling are ample compensation. 2. Volkswagen Polo 1.0 TSI 95 SE 5dr £1123 deposit, £187 per month, 48 months, 8000 miles per year Agile but comfortable, spacious, well equipped, refined – if the Fiesta excels as a driver’s car the Polo is the great all-rounder, the supermini that ticks more boxes for more people. Only the noisy diesels spoil the fun. 3. Skoda Fabia 1.0 MPI S 5dr £842 deposit, £140 per month, 48 months, 8000 miles per year The cheapest car here betrays its status with hard interior plastics and a less than sophisticated ride. But it’s remarkable value being good to drive, spacious and practical. Skoda ranks high on customer service, too. 4. Seat Ibiza 1.0 SE Technology 5dr £910 deposit, £152 per month, 48 months, 8000 miles per year It lacks the maturity of the Polo but the Ibiza is an immensely talented and capable supermini. Driving pleasure and a range of strong engines are balanced by a roomy and practical interior. It’s top value, too. 5. Nissan Micra 1.0 IG-T 100 Acenta 5dr £948 deposit, £158 per month, 48 months, 8000 miles per year You’ll find eye-catching looks, a smart interior and good equipment levels. Where it falls down is in its average driving experience and poor rear head room, a bit of a shortcoming for a five-door-only supermini. For more great personal business lease deals visit What Car?
Origin: Best lease deals of the week: Superminis
Used car guide: the best second-hand Bentleys from £8000
One of the more implausible stunts I managed to pull off was back in 2005 when I took a brand-new Bentley Flying Spur to the Nardo test track to find its true top speed. Bentley had said 195mph for the 552bhp, 2.5-tonne monster, but I knew it was always conservative with such claims. Could it go faster? Could it, whisper it, do 200mph? So what I should have done is just gone round the track as fast as I could go and see what number came up on the GPS. But that was far too easy and insufficiently Bentley. So when I headed up onto the track it was with four people on board, air conditioning on, front and rear seat coolers refrigerating our nether regions and the two in the back pretending to read newspapers. With an all-up weight of nearly three tonnes, the fact that above 150mph the Nardo bowl turns into one endless tyre-scrubbing, speed-sapping corner and a 36.5deg C ambient temperature, could it possibly do 200mph? It could, and also 201, 202 and all the way up to 208mph, too. And even then it only stop accelerating because I hit the rev-limiter in top gear. It seems not so much faintly implausible as utterly ludicrous that such performance is now available to anyone with the price of a new Ford Fiesta in their pockets. But that’s the way it is: early, high-mileage but still clean-and-tidy Spurs can be bought for around £15,000 – or about £100,000 less than when they were new. And here’s the thing: back then, the Spur was actually a better car than the Continental GT coupé from which it was derived. When new, the Conti had two problems that degraded its credibility as a super sporting GT: it was far too heavy and didn’t sound nearly distinctive enough. But what were flaws in the GT were attributes in the Spur: that heft gave it the primary ride characteristics you’d want from a large and imposing luxury saloon, even if the secondary ride was never as good as it should have been. And the engine? Its dulled tones were so much less important in such a car; indeed, its quiet voice was a positive bonus. And the rest was fabulous. When new, it was more powerful than the most powerful Ferrari on sale. Despite its size and weight, it would pop sub-5.0sec 0-60mph times and this, remember, is not the still more gutsy ‘Speed’ version we’re talking about, just the everyday standard product. Why are they so cheap today? Luxury saloons aren’t cool and never have been. Almost all made in reasonable numbers plummet in value and just because this one is a Bentley does not make it an exception. That, coupled with the fact that Bentley oversupplied the market with cars in the early years. But there’s nothing wrong with the car itself. They didn’t just look built to last, they really were, and come with remarkably few horror stories. The engines and transmissions are fairly bombproof if properly maintained, and a Spur will tolerate years of being taken for granted without turning into a sloppy, creaking and rattling shadow of its former self. A Spur is not for everyone and, even it’s for you, the usual caveats about known provenance and service history stand. But the very fact such a superbly crafted, astonishingly fast and amazingly robust car is available for so little money has to be good news; the added fact that it also happens to be a Bentley is perhaps what’s most incredible of all. Here’s some more flying B-badged gems you could pick from the classifieds: The second-generation Azure may look a bit old hat with its land-yacht proportions and breeze-block styling. However, there are bits of carbonfibre in its construction (a first for a road-going Bentley) and it’s got a top speed of 174mph – provided that the roof is up. It’s rare, mind, with prices starting at £100,000. Turbo R (1985-1999): They might have been opulent, but the Rolls-derived Bentleys weren’t known for their sporting performance. Enter the turbocharged Mulsanne with formidable straight-line speed and, later, the magnificent Turbo R with a beefed-up suspension for more amiable cornering. Prices start at £10k and work up to £40k for the later ones. Mark VI (1946-1952): The 1946 Mk VI was a huge commercial success and Bentley enthusiasts loved them for the density of their engineering. It was the first complete car built at the Crewe factory, and so impressive that most customers went for the standard steel factory bodies rather than a coachbuilt one. Watch for rust, though, and you’ll need between £25k and £75k for one now. Brooklands (1993-1998; 2008-2011): Confusingly, there were two cars called Brooklands: one was a four-door 1990s saloon that offered nearly everything you could get from the Turbo R without, initially, the turbo; the second was an immense two-door, four-seat pillarless coupé (above) that shared much with the Arnage and the drop-top Azure. Buy the four-door for as little as £8k and the coupé for at least £100k more. Born out of a need to show the Mercedes rivals what for,
Origin: Used car guide: the best second-hand Bentleys from £8000
Best lease deals of the week: Automatic superminis
Leasing can be an affordable, practical route into having your own private car, but it’s not always easy to tell the good deals from the duds. The experts at our sister magazine What Car? work hard to find you the best pay-monthly schemes, taking into account mileage allowance, montly outlay, contract length and initial deposit. We’ll be bringing you the best deals they find from a different segment each week. This week, it’s automatic superminis: 1. VW Polo 1.0 TSI 95 SE 5dr DSG £1219 deposit, £203 per month, 48 months, 8000 miles per year The Polo’s easy-going character suits an automatic gearbox, especially one as good as VW’s dual-clutch affair. Add a smooth ride, good refinement and robust cabin, and this Polo looks free of holes. 2. Seat Ibiza 1.0 TSI 115 FR DSG 5dr £1138 deposit, £190 per month, 48 months, 8000 miles per year The feisty Seat offers crisp handling, snappy looks and keen performance. An automatic ’box sounds like a fly in the ointment but it’s a swift-changing transmission that makes easy work of keeping the Ibiza on song. 3. Ford Fiesta 1.0 Ecoboost Zetec Auto 5dr £1221 deposit, £204 per month, 48 months, 8000 miles per year Ford’s Powershift automatic gearbox is an unsung hero and here it adds extra sparkle to an already great motor. It and the car’s 1.0-litre engine are perfectly matched, while Zetec trim helps keep the cost down. 4. Skoda Fabia 1.0 TSI 110 SE DSG 5dr £1236 deposit, £206 per month, 48 months, 8000 miles per year Auto ’boxes are tarred with the sensible brush, and you won’t find a more sensible buy than a Fabia – except that following its recent facelift the model got an injection of desirability plus a raft of new safety kit. 5. Audi A1 30 TFSI Sport S Tronic 5dr £1555 deposit, £259 per month, 48 months, 8000 miles per year The priciest car here justifies its premium with a blend of top-notch build quality, impressive refinement and classy cabin. The dual-clutch S-tronic ’box adds an extra layer of sophistication to a smart motor. For more great personal business lease deals visit What Car?
Origin: Best lease deals of the week: Automatic superminis
The test of time: the best cars from the Autocar team’s birth-years
Can you stop doing this, please?” requested colleague and friend Richard Bremner. He’s got a point. This is the second feature in a year that has involved Bremner and I getting together with some of the younger members of the Autocar team and some iconic cars of varying vintage. It’s fun but it does make us feel rather ancient. So here we are again. The challenge this time is for half a dozen of us, representing a broad sweep of ages on the magazine, to choose our favourite from cars that were launched in the year we were born. You can now appreciate Bremner’s anxiety, not least because he’s the oldest. As you will read, the exercise has brought together a truly fascinating line-up of cars; a group so varied that they would be unlikely to appear together in a feature in a classic car magazine. They’re from a wide range of years, too. Bremner starts us off in 1958, followed soon after by me in 1962 and stretching right up to Simon Davis, who the stork deposited on the earth in 1993. In between, we have Matt Prior in 1975, Matt Saunders in 1981 and Mark Tisshaw in 1989. The cars are interesting in their own right, but they also mark moments in time and put into context the companies and industry that produced them. My choice, as you’ll see, and Tisshaw’s, are extremely closely linked despite being 27 years apart in age. Prior’s and Saunders’ cars also narrate a telling tale about the British motor industry, straddling the old world and foreshadowing the new one. Who out of the six was born in the best year for cars? We’ll be tackling that thorny one, but I’ll tell you right now: from memory and from checking on Wikipedia, I can’t see how Saunders will be able to put forward a case for 1981. So follow us on this journey back to the crib. I’ll wager that all of you will be poring over the list of cars launched in the year of your birth to see if you’re from a vintage year or one in which the grapes died on the vine. Richard Bremner – 1964 Aston Martin DB4 Quite surprisingly, the DB4 is the best-known new car that 1958 produced. Well, almost – it’s the succeeding but largely identical DB5 that’s familiar throughout much of the world as the Aston Martin of James Bond. But there would have been no inkling of this at the time. Only 1110 DB4s were produced, the car’s price ensuring it a rarefied clientele and infrequent sightings for the rest of us. Miles certainly aren’t drawn out in a DB4. This coupé had 240bhp to deploy 61 years ago – massive, compared with the 37bhp of a Morris Minor 1000. Not that sterile statistics make it my choice among the class of ’58. Rather obviously, it’s the exquisite beauty of its superleggera aluminium skin that makes this the irresistible fantasy choice. Designed by coachbuilders Touring of Milan, its complex construction consisted of a steel chassis, a tubular steel framework from which were hung hand-wrought aluminium panels that with rain and time provide an expensive demonstration of electrolytic corrosion. But the alloy panels also reduced the Aston’s weight, its 1311kg not so bad given the size and the heft of the twin-cam six-cylinder lying beneath its letterbox-scooped bonnet. In the unlikely event that you tire of admiring the DB4’s just-so lines, opening the bonnet also presents you with a beautifully sculpted cluster of machinery. The low walls of the cam covers that house neatly arrayed spark plug leads, the bell-shaped domes of the twin SU carburettors and the absence of plastic mouldings make this a sight to admire even if you don’t understand the combustive forces that occur within. When it was new, those forces were sufficient to thrust the elegant nose past 60mph in 9.0sec. Slightly disappointing today, perhaps, if scaldingly fast compared with a Minor 1000. Many of these earliest of DB4s – the Series 1 you see here the first of five mild evolutions – have had their cylinder blocks bored out of necessity, the pistons and liners required to renew them unavailable for decades. The only solution was to expand the engine to 4.2 litres, yielding 280 horsepower, and of more believable strength than the original 240bhp. More realistic, says this car’s owner Bryan Smart, is 215bhp. Despite his installing a longer-legged axle ratio to counter the lack of overdrive, this DB4 bounds away, and will quite effortlessly travel at 30mph in first should you need it. That makes it more than able to keep up with, and outpace, many moderns, providing you master a gearchange that requires a sometimes brutally firm hand to gift first gear. The rest submit more easily, and with rewardingly mechanical engagement once their oils are warmed. The chassis sometimes feels quite mechanical too, from the resistant heavy steering to a suspension prone to sudden, vintage jerks and geometry that allows topography-induced wander. So you need to pay attention. Paying attention to curves and throttle brings reward too, the Aston’s urge to run wide snuffed out
Origin: The test of time: the best cars from the Autocar team’s birth-years
West is best for carnut culture
When Cam spotted this early Chevy Belair Custom in Edmonton last weekend he thought of Dan Belanger’s classic Belair. Bob and Dan’s Car Show is still going strong and with Dans passing serves as a tribute to the one-of-a-kind man.Cam Hutchins I was on a big road trip to Saskatchewan last weekend so missed the action-packed car show weekend here in B.C. The reason for the road trip to Loon Lake, Saskatchewan was to see our son and we cant fly because we have our dog Stella with us.I was reminded how great we have it here when I couldnt find one car show to attend last Sunday in Edmonton. However, the night before we watch a great procession of cool cars driving up and down that citys Whyte Avenue. There was an early Fifties, customized Belair, a couple of older compacts that looked better suited to the track than a city street, what with their tunnel rams and big four barrel carbs sticking out of the hoods.On the way to Edmonton we saw a row of Ford and Mercury trucks along the highway and I had to stop to capture some images of these classic old trucks. In Canada, Ford and Lincoln/Mercury were divided into two separate dealerships so the Ford trucks got a new grille and sold as Mercury pickups in Canada only. Closer to Edmonton we came across the Little Lot with lots of cool old iron for sale, many on consignment. The car I think may stay there forever is the 1979 Datsun 210 with only 85,000 miles that runs well. Just how well a 1200 cc engine can run Ill leave up to you. I love Nissan/Datsuns, but they certainly had some ugly designs in their past. To be fair, many manufacturers made some really ugly designs, but that doesnt stop people from loving the VW Thing, one of which was also on the lot. The granddaddy of all used cars on the lot was a 1964 Galaxie XL. This example apparently originally sported a 4-speed manual with 390 V8, but now has an elusive 427 Side Oiler with solid lifters and dual 4 barrel carbs. Just 3,000 clicks on this powertrain, and if theres a reader who wants to shell out $28,900 for this beauty, Im happy to tag along.In a little more than a month weve got another big road trip planned, this one my annual drive south to Northern California to cover the vintage car races at Weathertech Raceways Laguna Seca in Monterey. I have been attending these races since my parents first took me to in 1983. If youve never been, it is like going to a car museum where you are not only allowed to touch the cars, they get raced at crazy speeds against other vintage racecars on one of the worlds most iconic tracks. This weekend I will be attending a car show in Lloydminster but will be missing a number of great local shows, including Deuce Days in Victoria. This show is one of the best in BC and I do not relish missing it. The last time I missed it, I was touring Jay Lenos collection in Burbank, but Im not sure the Lloydminster show is going to compare to either Deuce Days or Lenos. But considering I will have my son with me, I am not complaining!Were still on the road, so next week more roadside attraction stories.SHOWSJULY 19What: Aldergrove Fair Days Show ShineWhere: 26770 29th Ave., AldergroveWhen: 6 pm. to 9 p.m.Admission: FreeRegistration: Free and open to all vehiclesInfo: pattybennett@telus.netWebsite: aldergrovefair.caJULY 20What: Ultimate Car ShowWhere: Hard Rock Casino, 2080 United Blvd., CoquitlamWhen: 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.Admission: FreeRegistration: 8 a.m. to 10 a.m. $20 (cash only)Info: 604-523-6888 or mlaw@hardrockcasinovancouver.comWebsite: hardrockcasinovancouver.com/event/ultimate-car-show/What: Hot Rods Classics Customer Appreciation NightWhere: 43813 Industrial Way, ChilliwackWhen: Start at 5 p.m.Admission: FreeRegistration: FreeInfo: 604-792-9005 or sales@hotrodsclassics.caWebsite: hotrodsclassics.caWhat: Marketplace IGA Show ShineWhere: 1100 Gibsons Way, GibsonsWhen: 11 a.m.to 3 p.m.Admission: FreeRegistration: 10 a.m. $5 and open to all vehicles. All proceeds to selected charities on the Sunshine Coast.Info: mrcutter@dccnet.com or shanks@dccnet.comWebsite: coasterscarclub.caWhat: Bowen Island Classic Motor ShowWhere: 1441 Adams Rd., Bowen IslandWhen: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.Admission: By donation. Children freeInfo: 604-618-6413 or info@bowenislandmotorshow.comWebsite: bowenislandmotorshow.comJULY 21What: Northwest Deuce DayWhere: Victoria Inner HarbourWhen: 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.Admission: freeInfo: 250-385-8571 or al@deucesnorthwest.comWebsite: northwestdeuceday.comWhat: All-Ford Show ShineWhere: Orchard Ford, 911 Stremel Rd., KelownaWhen: 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.Admission: Free.Registration: 9 a.m. $20 and open to all FordsInfo: 250-878-2700 or okmustang@shaw.caWebsite: okmustangsandfords.comWhat: OConnor Chrysler Car ShowWhere: OConnor Chrysler, 45730 Hocking Ave., ChilliwackWhen: 8:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.Admission: FreeRegistration: 8:30 a.m. to 9:30 a.m. $10 and open to all vehicles. Proceeds to Little Heroes Hockey Academy. Open to all vehiclesInfo: 604-792-2754 or
Origin: West is best for carnut culture
Best lease deals of the week: Large hatchbacks
Leasing can be an affordable, practical route into having your own private car, but it’s not always easy to tell the good deals from the duds. The experts at our sister magazine What Car? work hard to find you the best pay-monthly schemes, taking into account mileage allowance, montly outlay, contract length and initial deposit. We’ll be bringing you the best deals they find from a different segment each week. This week, it’s large hatchbacks: 1. BMW 620D GT SE Auto £2608 deposit, £435 per month, 48 months, 8000 miles per year The replacement for the 5 Series GT makes better sense thanks to an interior from the new 5 Series, the dimensions of the large 7 Series and a truck load of technology. Divisive styling but top-notch quality. 2. Audi A7 Sportback 55 TFSI S Line Quattro S Tronic £2858 deposit, £476 per month, 24 months, 8000 miles per year Don’t be fooled by those sleek lines – the A7 Sportback is a spacious and comfortable car. Its 3.0 TFSI bi-turbo petrol engine produces 335bhp for 0-62mph in 5.3sec. 3. Ford Mondeo 1.5 Ecoboost Zetec Edition £1475 deposit, £246 per month, 48 months, 8000 miles per year Once the default choice for keen drivers, the Mondeo has since lost ground to fresher rivals but it still represents great value for money. 4. Peugeot 508 1.6 Puretech GT Line Auto Fastback £1346 deposit, £224 per month, 24 months, 8000 miles per year Stylish looks inside and out and delivering composed handling, the 508 is a new contender in this class but those looks come at the expense of rear cabin space. 5. Skoda Superb 1.5 TSI SE £1373 deposit, £229 per month, 48 months, 8000 miles per year Not only great value for money, but exceptionally roomy, practical and surprisingly agile. The 148bhp 1.5 petrol may look modest on paper but its relaxed nature suits the Superb and its economy is good. 6. Volkswagen Arteon 2.0 TDI Elegance £1709 deposit, £285 per month, 48 months, 8000 miles per year Solidly built, spacious and a strong, long-distance but frugal tourer. However, it isn’t quite as stylish or distinctive as its name implies and it sorely needs a six-cylinder engine in the line-up. For more great personal business lease deals visit What Car?
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