He'll be 19 next month, only has a manual license at the moment. He's very responsible so I don't think I'll have to worry too much about him driving like a maniac. In fact his sister (who is currently still on Ls) reckons he drives way too slow. He's also planning on joining the police force after finishing his degree, initially the QLD police, then federal, so there can be no funny business going on and I would say a defensive driving course very much on the cards. I think he needs to get his manual licence before joining the police force.
He is not a car nut, I guess he just likes the appeal and look of the skylines. I must admit they are very nice looking cars, they have a certain appeal, no question about that.
The comment I made about it not being a very good idea to buy a skyline (at least as a first car) was because of the running/maintenance costs. Don't want him to have a money pit when he's paying off uni debts etc. He was initially looking at later models, late 90s/early 2000s for around the $12-14000 mark. Then he realised he would definiately have to comprehensively insure that and it was just out of range without borrowing any money. Like all parents I guess we were trying to talk him into getting a cheap second hand small car where initial outlay and running costs are reasonable, and the occasional ding here and there is not going to matter much. His compromise was to look at the older skylines around the $5000 mark. Looks like there is not a great deal of demand around for these near 20 year old skylines, particularly the autos, so there might be a few well maintained ones out there that people just want to get rid of. The car I mentioned in the initial post might fit that bill.
Can anyone comment specifically on the car I mentioned, e.g. is there anything inherently wrong with that model, specific things to look out for etc. I've read through the general posts about what to look for when buying a skyline.
@truffles
What would you have done differently? Not bought a skyline?