Cerbera, Yes or No?
Discussion
The Chimarea''s up for sale, very tempted to go for an early 4.2 Cerbera, know about all the usual things to look for, clutch, camshafts, etc, is it a good idea, or should I just get a newer Chimaera, its my only car, but only used at weekends/sunny nights, I''m prepared, for most things, but don''t want it going back to the factory for 1/2 the year.
Go on convince me.
From the people I have spoke to, early 4.2's have a bit of a problem with cams, and when they fail both need replacing and you are looking at about £5k if you havent got a warrenty, also clutches are no longer available, so have to be uprated to 4.5 spec which involve a bit of work and comes in at about £3k.
Any other problem are going to be expensive as well because you can't look for the ford/vauxhall/rover/etc part numbers!
But as soon as the Chimaera goes I'll be looking for a sorted one!
Here's my 2 pence. I've had 4.2 for over 4 years from new. Done 35k. Plenty of leaks, small elec. problems broken shock, door needs regular adjustment, handbrake crap - hardly anything else. I've heard aout other broken ones so kept hold a good one. I've had it resprayed (Team Central/Proactive) - as Rosso Pearl fades badly. Now looks better than new, have adjustable shocks(now 1.5 inches lower), de-catted, new style headlights, sport exhaust. Looks, goes, sound and handles better than ever before. Don't what all the slagging off aout early 4.2's is all about.
Also I reckn they are the bext sounding ones because of the hard cams which were changed about 98 I think to a softer quieter version.
Buy a 4.2, keep hold of it and keep the used prices as high as possible !!
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