BBC Top Gear Magazine

WE’VE BOUGHT A 306 RALLYE SO YOU DON’T HAVE TO

Report 3: getting the Rallye through the MoT test. Just

- Dead or alive, this 306 Rallye will come into TopGear HQ... one day

An email from Matt Jobling at Pug1Off where the 306 went to be brought back to life. “You’re not going to believe this, but we’ve replaced the battery and the seized fuel pump, done a quick puncture repair on the nearside rear for the convenienc­e of rolling it about the place and… she’s alive.”

I’m lightly flabbergas­ted. A month ago 100 per cent dead in a lock-up and covered with cobwebs, but after the applicatio­n of some automotive defibrilla­tion, 100 per cent alive. I read on eagerly. Inevitably I shouldn’t have bothered. In my emotional state I’d read ‘alive’ and assumed ‘factory fresh and ready to roll’.

Of course not. The rest of Matt’s email details the issues that still need to be overcome. The highlights – more lowlights, if I’m being honest – were as follows: corrosion either side of front subframe, rusting centre joint in the catalyst, brakes binding, inoperativ­e central locking, dim indicator and offside bulbs, play in the track rod ends, poor radiator fitment, fuel that had gone off so badly it smelled of turps and instantly reblocked the fuel

pump and… tadpoles in the screenwash. Apparently that’s not an automatic MOT test fail.

Other things – track rod ends, bulbs, brakes binding – are, though. So Matt sets to work. Five hours later, plus £14 for a new track rod end, £20 for new bulbs and wiper blades and with newly drained and refilled fuel tank and screenwash reservoir, T916 JKP goes in for an MOT.

It passes. This time we’re both flabbergas­ted. I drive up to Brackley to see my newly road-legal 306 Rallye. It looks spanking. I tell Matt there was no need to give it a full valet. “We haven’t, just a wash with soap and water and a hoover out inside.” It looks a different car to the one I brought up here. The clean up has also revealed a few less desirable things. I knew about the discoloure­d offside rear panel – it’s pretty much orange instead of red, a legacy of either an accident or respray before my time – but I’d forgotten about the ripple in the nearside front wing, and the scattering of dents and stonechips elsewhere. And the corroded wheels. And the fact I’d kept OE Pirelli P6000 tyres on the front, but stuck markedly less grippy Firestone Firehawks on the rear…

The only things it still needs are brake fluid and oil changes, so we take it inside and put it on a ramp. My heart sinks – the Rallye’s undercarri­age is more rust than metal. Matt tells me it looks worse than it actually is, reckons the best thing to do is take it home and drive it for a while, then decide what’s worth doing. Total cost so far: £619 for all parts, labour, fluids and MOT. In exchange I have a resurrecte­d Peugeot 306 Rallye. Next step: blow the dust off the V5. It’s tax and insurance time.

 ??  ?? 2.0 4cyl petrol 167 bhp 6spd manual 7.8 secs 30 mpg 218 g/km
2.0 4cyl petrol 167 bhp 6spd manual 7.8 secs 30 mpg 218 g/km
 ??  ??

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