Skip advert
Advertisement
Long term tests

Peugeot 106 Rallye

Richard Meaden succumbs to Friday afternoon classified browsing and buys a Rallye

Just under a year ago I succumbed to the idle, Friday- afternoon pleasure of surfing the online car classifieds. I suppose I did have a pressing reason to buy another car, but even so, the speed with which my brain accelerated from thinking ‘Ooh, I haven’t seen a 106 Rallye for ages’ to ‘Crikey, that looks like a good one’ and finally ‘You’ve got to have it! Call the bloke tonight. CALL HIM TONIGHT!’ still makes me think I’m slightly unhinged.

Advertisement - Article continues below

Anyway, I made the call, and went to look at it on the Sunday. Typically it rained just as I arrived, so it looked super-shiny, but it felt fresh on the test drive and my heart had bought it before we got back to the vendor’s house.

A fearsome bout of negotiating followed. Actually a miserable attempt at hardball deal-making ensued, but I didn’t hand over all my cash (a brace of £20 notes and a crumpled tenner remained in my envelope after I'd handed over £2700) and I left with a cracking, two-owner, 48,248-miles-from-new S2 106 Rallye.

Since then I’ve had a brilliant, terrible, cheap, costly, fantastic and frustrating time with the blue meanie, which makes mine the typical old-performance-Pug ownership experience. It got me home with no problems and ran fine for a while, but then a rear brake caliper seized and needed to be rebuilt, along with a new disc and pads. Then the engine decided to cut out randomly, usually at the most hair-raising moments. A new fuel pump cured that. Then came an oil leak, which I decided would be best cured with a fast road QEP head and Cat cam. Man Logic at its finest, I think you’ll agree.

On the plus side I’ve driven more than 4000 miles on back roads, A-roads and motorways, come rain, snow or sunshine, and I can honestly say the one thing that’s never failed is the smile that spreads across my face every time I drive it. You can find a more detailed breakdown of the, er, breakdowns, along with driving impressions, images and the extensive list of upgrades and refreshed parts in my blogs at evo.co.uk. Just go to the Community section, click on Evo Team, friend me up and have a read. Be warned, though: any resulting Friday afternoon impulse purchases may seriously damage your wealth…

Running Costs

Date acquiredMarch 2009
Total mileage52,399
Costs this month£0
Mileage this month249
MPG this month33.4mpg
Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

The V8-powered Audi RS6 isn’t dead after all
Audi RS6 jump
News

The V8-powered Audi RS6 isn’t dead after all

Audi has reverted its decision to turn the A6 range all-electric, ensuring the next RS6 receives a V8
4 Feb 2025
Toyota GR Yaris Fast Fleet test – 6000 miles in the homologation hatch
evo Fast Fleet Toyota GR Yaris
Long term tests

Toyota GR Yaris Fast Fleet test – 6000 miles in the homologation hatch

It had neither Circuit nor Convenience Pack, but did our basic GR Yaris prove less can be more?
29 Jan 2025
Driving the last ever Nissan GT‑R on the Hakone Turnpike
Last Nissan GT-R 2025
Features

Driving the last ever Nissan GT‑R on the Hakone Turnpike

We revisit the home of the Nissan GT‑R to give it a sendoff on roads from Japanese legend
1 Feb 2025