Jump to content

XM - arrived this weekend!!


mouseflakes

Recommended Posts

I'd have bought that R25 TXE off ebay, had I not already shelled out for this...

 

Posted Image

 

70,000 miles with huge history and fastidious previous owner apparently. MOT until April (not great) tax until September - good value at £395 I reckon.

 

Posted Image

 

It's not really what I was after (2 litre petrol, non-tuberous and I really need an estate) but I think it'd be hard to find such a nice XM at such a low price. And the colour is fablious!

 

TBH my main concern was that someone with an eye for a profit would snap it up, stuff it on ebay with £1000 start price, it wouldn't sell, would be listed again when out of MOT, asking £850 with threats to scrap it if no-one wants to pay and so on - you know the kind of thing. Another nice old car lost.

 

So now it's mine.

 

Posted Image

 

It's in between Nottingham and Newark and it's a horrible and expensive train journey plus taxi ride from Bristol.

 

Just on the off-chance I wondered if anyone is going that way from this area over the weekend from whom I might cadge a lift / split fuel costs? Slim chance I know, but thought I'd ask.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

G-reg = 1st year of UK sales. Marvellous devices. I remember auditing a Cit dealer back in early '99, and overheard a salesman's surprise that a punter had just rung up asking about them - he (the salesman) didn't realise the XM was still in production. This dealership (a small one just outside Alton) had the MD doing a tax dodge by driving a late '80s XJS-R (the Walkinshaw tweaked job with the placca bodykit) to work every day, plonking it at the back of the forecourt, then sticking an optimistic pricetag in the 'screen - result was he could claim it wasn't his company car for Benefit In Kind, and the thing never sold 'cos of the high sticker so he could carry on driving it.IIRC up to '92MY the electrical connector quality of the XM was not GR8, so if everything electric still works on that one (or at least the critical stuff), it looks a cracking buy.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

IIRC up to '92MY the electrical connector quality of the XM was not GR8, so if everything electric still works on that one (or at least the critical stuff), it looks a cracking buy.

Apparently the last owner insisted on having it serviced 25 miles from home by an XM specialist - so I'm guessing that some of the foibles the earlier cars had are likely to have been sorted on this one.Well - I can live in hope!
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Jeez I like that, have always liked these and WILL have one one day*

 

Well done, but as others have basically said-it might be a ball-ache to collect it but just imagine the comforting and probably soothing ride on the way home!

 

A proper Citroen that

 

*Goes to Google image search and looks at Citroen XMs

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Absolutely awesome! and in a rare (IIRC) colour too! you say it's not turb but is a 2.0l - is it injection though? there were a small collection of curburetor base models at the very start - they're all but extinct now.The XM electrical probs was all about multi point earthings - it was meant to be a more modern way but they skimped on quality and it all went wrong. Most surviving S1s had the earth points replaced with the later type.I'm increasingly drawn to Xms by the day..

Link to comment
Share on other sites

What a honey!

 

I wish I had big enough cojones to buy one of those.

Fortunately the previous owners appear to have held their cojones aloft and have forked out for some fairly comprehensive servicing.

 

One thing I was concerned about was the life left in the clutch - but the records show it had a new one 7000 miles ago. Reconditioned hydraulic pump recently too. :D

 

It will need spheres as it rides a bit firmly - but serious XMers seem to change those like they change their underpants (every 12,000 miles or 12 months, whichever is sooner).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Do XM owners really only change their underpants at 12000 miles/12 months intervals though?

I do - just assumed it was the same for the others. I carry a spare pair in a carrier bag in the boot in case the interval passes while I'm on holiday.I was just mucking about of course - I don't know what the intervals are for the spheres - but every car for sale always seems to need them.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Both my XMs needed spheres - my first one was almost undriveable on bumpy roads as the front spheres did a passable imitation of pogo sticks. The estate was just a little on the firm side. I also had a Xantia which had had its LHM replaced by 20W50 - that was very odd, the suspension did everything in slow motion. That XM looks like a kwolity buy, and pretty clean for a G-plater. Don't think I've seen one that colour either.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It will need spheres as it rides a bit firmly - but serious XMers seem to change those like they change their underpants (every 12,000 miles or 12 months, whichever is sooner)._________________

- for economy only change the XM 'center' spheres first as these are the ones that give the soft ride - the 'corner' spheres are the 'sports suspension' ones and can probably wait. Also , it's worth checking the suspension ECU is alive! if it dies, it defaults to hard suspension - apparently theres a way of checking it by tuning the radio into a certain LW frequency and listening to the buzzz of the solenoids switching in at a certain road speed. If there are probs with is there's also a special retro fit diode replacement kit that scotchlocks on to the connecting wires of the ECU available.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Also , it's worth checking the suspension ECU is alive! if it dies, it defaults to hard suspension - apparently theres a way of checking it by tuning the radio into a certain LW frequency and listening to the buzzz of the solenoids switching in at a certain road speed.

That is so French :D !
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Wow. That really is clean! Nice to see plenty of hydro-Citroen love here._________________

- Hi Ian! it's Graeme here! you'd never know since I have different user names on various forums: j-j here (dunno why), Aerodynamica on BXClub and CX Club, Cit-79 on Citroen Car Club, Passe-Partout on 2CVGB, Aerodynamica on RR. Apologies to all on any of those shared forums...!
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I thought Aerodynamica was the landcrab and ado 16 bodied by pininfarina Laughing

- it was! the Pininfarina concept car named 'Berlina Aerodynamica' and was a proposal for the Landcrab replacement. The new Citroen GS in 1971 bore some resemblance to it and it was said that the design was bought by Citroen, however it was not the case as the GS was wholly designed in house but it's quite likely that the design swayed the pen somewhat. Then when the CX appeared in 1974 there was an even purer form of the same style - definite influence from the Pininfarina style as both the previous GS and CX early prototypes bore no resemblance to the Pinin prototype. I love the Pininfarina car because I love the CX ad GS and generally any old, big futurist spaceships!A year or so after the CX Rover launched the SD1 which bore a resemblance to the Aerodynamica style once more and indeed the SD1 was one of my favourite cars of the child years! ( I also had a bit of a thing for the 80s Opal Senator but that's another story!) I sometimes wonder if the SD1 would have looked like that had the GS and CX not previously looked that way.. The XM on the other hand is very Bertone - styled.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...