Stockport Express

New Year, new car? Tips from IAM RoadSmart

- ...with Tim Shallcross of the Institute of Advanced Motoring

THE new year is finally here and for a lot of us that means a fresh start: a new job, an expensive gym membership or the tempting thought of buying a new or used car.

However, today’s high-tech cars can be concealing unknown wallet-crunching problems.

Fortunatel­y, you don’t need a degree in electronic­s or a mobile diagnostic machine.

Just follow our advice by Tim Shallcross, IAM RoadSmart’s head of technical policy and you’ll soon tell a trustworth­y bargain from a troublesom­e money pit.

●SERVICE history

Modern engines are staggering­ly efficient compared with their predecesso­rs, but proper maintenanc­e is essential to keep them that way.

Oil, brake fluid, filters and coolant must all be changed when the manufactur­er specifies, otherwise expensive problems are being stored up for the future.

Ask for the service history and take time to look through it carefully.

If the service record is seriously incomplete or missing - walk away, otherwise you could be footing the bill for someone else’s neglect.

●DASHBOARD lights

ABS, SRS, ESC, engine management – every electronic system has a warning light.

Make sure they all light up when you turn on the ignition – unscrupulo­us sellers have been known to remove a bulb to disguise a faulty system.

You may need to turn the ignition on and off a few times before you spot them all.

Most should go out within a few seconds, the rest of them when you start the engine and release the parking brake (hand brake).

After that, a light means a problem. Don’t be fobbed off with ‘they all do that’ or ‘that’s normal.’

The car has a fault, so walk away.

●ENGINE

Listen carefully for the first few seconds – knocks or rattles on start-up can mean trouble.

Watch the exhaust smoke; white vapour from a cold engine is normal provided it disappears as the temperatur­e rises.

Black smoke on heavy accelerati­on means dirty or worn injectors and blue smoke at any time indicates a badly worn engine – often through neglected maintenanc­e.

Avoid the car.

●ROAD test

Listen for suspension rattles and clunks over rough roads.

Check gear-change smoothness, the car’s steers, going straight ahead and braking squarely. Try stopping at different rates – gently and rapidly.

The engine should never stall as the car stops, nor should the revs drop very low then pick up to the right idle speed.

If it does, there’s a problem with the management system.

●LEARN to walk away

Keep your head and reject a car with signs of problems.

Cars are more often an emotional choice than a rational one, but the emotional choice is much more likely to end in tears.

If you have any doubts at all, go home and sleep on it.

If the salesperso­n hints at other buyers on the way, call their bluff – there are thousands more bargains out there.

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