240Z
Well, I'm considering purchasing one of these cars. Does anyone have any useful information?
For example:
Problems (what goes wrong with the car)
Everything. I've got to admit - these (94-97 850 Turbos; same thing basically) were my favorite used cars $5000-$10000 for some time. I recommended them to countless people, and my cousin bought one in September. Since September he's had to pay $4000 in repairs for the thing (he bought it for $6500), and it's failed to start on numerous occaisions. He isn't the only disgruntled owner I've heard from, either - and I've heard a wide range of problems. For this reason I no longer recommend 850 Turbos - which sucks, because on paper they rock - and am praying that the 00-03 Nissan Maxima depreciates rapidly to fill its spot.
AT vs. MT (avaliability and if MT is that much better)
Okay. A little rundown on the 850:
The 850 was created in 1993. In 1994, the 850 Turbo was created. 1995 was a great model year, because it saw the addition of side airbags (standard on turbocharged models) and a high-performance model, known as the T-5R. The T-5R had 18 more horsepower than 850 Turbo models (240 vs. 222) plus three exterior modifications (front spoiler, rear spoiler, wheels). Additionally, T-5R models only came in yellow and black - though some claim a small portion of green ones came here (I've seen several on eBay, though they could've obviously been repainted). T-5Rs only existed in 1995 - they were renamed 850R for 1996 and continued as the 850R in 1997. When the S70 and V70 debuted in 1998, R models were discontinued on the sedan bodystyle in the US, but a V70R soon debuted as the all-wheel drive version of the V70 T5.
In case you wanted to know.
To answer your question: no turbocharged 850 model has EVER had a manual transmission in the United States. Automatic was standard on the 94-97 850 Turbo (renamed T5 in 1997), the 1997 850 GLT, the 95 850 T-5R, and the 96-97 850R. Manual is simply unavailable, though I have seen at least one 96 850R with an aftermarket manual transmission.
Insurance (seems pretty cheap for the wagon version)
Decent, but the insurance companies haven't let this one get by them. Wagons might be cheaper to insure but if you're looking at a T-5R, you're looking at a 1995, meaning it'll rattle a lot. Frankly I'd pay a bit more and get the sedan just so I wouldn't have to listen to it rattle like mad at idle and over bumps.
0-60 in 7.1sec; 1/4mile in 15.2@93mph.
Look around more. The car kicks ass but unless you get a deal or can fix it yourself, it's going to become real expensive real quick. Very many people have owned 850s well above 150,000 miles with no major problems but I've heard story after story about major problems with major repair bills.
Consider these which also perform well and fit into your budget:
- 93-95 Acura Legend coupe 6-speed (230hp 3.2L V-6)
- 92-95 Audi S4 (92-94), S6 (95) (227hp 2.3L I-5T, AWD)
- 93-95 Ford Taurus SHO automatic (220hp 3.2L V6)
- 98-00 Ford Contour SVT (200hp 2.5L V6)
- 98 Jeep Grand Cherokee 5.9 Limited (235hp 5.9L V8 - 0-60 in 7.3)
- 92-94 Mercedes 500E (92-93), E500 (94) (5.0L V8)
- 93-97 Saab 9000 Aero (247hp 2.3L I-5T)