Autocar

James Ruppert

Check these cars carefully, especially the tyres, before buying

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Careful if you’re buying one of these

Here’s part two of my ‘tyres are rather important’ investigat­ion, in which I obtain data from MOT centres around the UK and reveal the makes of car most likely to fail the roadworthi­ness examinatio­n because of sub-standard tyres.

Last week, I covered the cars that are least likely to have tyre trouble at an MOT test and, by extension, more likely to be looked after properly, making them potentiall­y a safer bet for used car buyers. This week, I’m taking a look at the models that seem to have the most tyre issues.

I won’t keep you in suspense: the very worst was the Ford Focus C-max. After 34,948 tests, 4118 failed due to tyres so the percentage failure rate was 11.78%. This model can work hard for a living and, being a Ford, is usually good value.

I would be tempted by a 2008 1.8 Zetec with 80,000 miles and two previous owners for £1700. That’s the cheapie option. Otherwise, there’s a 2017 diesel example, a 1.5 TDCI in Titanium specificat­ion with sat-nav, cruise control and everything else. Like the Zetec, it’s Ulez-friendly – and all for £6995. Both are offered by dealers, so their tyres should be fine.

I was rather surprised to see the Mazda 5 at the tail end of the list, but there’s definitely a pattern emerging here. After 17,727 tests, 2015 failed on tyres (a 11.37% failure rate).

The 5 is a quite cool-looking MPV, which is also surprising, but it’s great value and widely available. A smart 2007 2.0 Sport with 90,000 miles is advertised at £1750 with a full service history (which needs checking, of course). Otherwise, spend £6495 to get a 2.0 Sport with 65,000 miles and a one-year warranty.

And here’s another oddity in the worst 10: the load-lugging Volvo V50, with 4233 tyre-related failures in 38,757 tests (a 10.9% failure rate). There are loads of examples up for less than £3000, but I will be more responsibl­e and suggest you consider a 2011 1.6 Drive SE Lux with 66,000 miles and three previous owners for £7500. That’s a bit pricey, but the tyres ought to be brand new for that.

So load- and people-luggers are the problem, but never mind. The rest of the top 10 worst tyre-failers are, in order: the Peugeot 5008, MercedesBe­nz CLS, Volkswagen Touran, Kia Carens, Chevrolet Matiz, Peugeot 407 and Jaguar X-type.

Out of those, let’s get ourselves a not-unattracti­ve CLS. There are some worryingly inexpensiv­e ones around, so just for fun, a 500bhp 2005 CLS 55 AMG with a smidge under 100,000 miles is £10,990. It has everything except a suitably detailed descriptio­n, but there’s a claim that its history is full – and it needs to be. Very-lowprofile tyres are required, and each would have to cost at least £100, but that’s definitely a price worth paying.

So load- and people-luggers are the problem

 ??  ?? Too many C-maxes are tyred of carting kids and cargo about
Too many C-maxes are tyred of carting kids and cargo about
 ??  ?? You need to give a blown 5.5-litre V8 high-quality tyres
You need to give a blown 5.5-litre V8 high-quality tyres

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