1.4 or 1.9 206 diesel

Discussion in 'Peugeot 206' started by Steve C, Mar 17, 2005.

  1. Steve C

    Steve C Guest

    I am looking at buying a diesel 206SW. Has anyone got any experience
    as to which engine is best. I am after economy but was wondering if
    the 1.4 suffers from lack of power.
    TIA
    Steve
     
    Steve C, Mar 17, 2005
    #1
  2. Steve C

    Nik&Andy Guest

    I have no first hand experience of the either of these engines, but I would
    just like to add a little something for you to consider.

    If you drive at a steady ~50-60mph on the motorway or do a lot of town
    driving then the 1.4 is probably going to be more economical, if you thrap
    it at 90mph everywhere then the 1.9 is going to be working less hard, so
    will likely be more economical.
    I have an older 2.1Td and it only manages ~50mph on the motorway, but I can
    travel at 70-95mph and the fuel usage doesn't vary much, it will always do a
    steady 50mpg.
    I used to have a 1.9 none turbo Citroen ZX - Which is basically a Peugeot
    306 1.9d - This did ~55mpg except at 90mph on the motorway, where it would
    drop to approx 40mpg, I can only assume because it had to work so much
    harder to get to and maintain that speed.

    I have driven a 1.4tdi Toyota Yaris, it was rather gutless.... In fact it
    seemed less powerful than my zx diesel - ~ same power output but probably
    because the zx had more torque or something.

    My 2pence worth on the subject after a few beers...

    I suspect somebody will now shoot this hypothesis down in flames.....

    Andy
     
    Nik&Andy, Mar 17, 2005
    #2
  3. Steve C

    Longshot Guest

    Andy the beer is making sense mate as a lot of things it can cloud or
    clarify your thinking.

    The 1.4 will undoubtedly be more economical round town but gutless on the
    motorway. If economy is your priority then go with the 'weener'. Having
    said that the 1.9 will give you more poke and if you don't thrash it may
    well stand up better on the extra-urban than the 1.4. Over and above, if
    it was me, I'd go with the bigger engine as it would be under less strain
    in most driving conditions and the difference in economy would probably be
    a mile or three to the gallon.
     
    Longshot, Mar 18, 2005
    #3
  4. Steve C

    Nom Guest

    But both engines make the same 70bhp !

    The 1.4 is a *much* newer engine design, and it's Turbo-charged.

    You'd be mad to choose the 1.9 !
     
    Nom, Mar 22, 2005
    #4
  5. Steve C

    Phil Cook Guest

    BHP ain't the be all and end all of engine performance. What about
    torque and where in the rev range maximum torque and power are
    produced? Add to that the gear ratios of the attached gearbox and what
    revs the engine runs at typical road speeds and it becomes a far more
    complicated equation, especially when you factor in the likelyhood of
    all that elastic-trickery engine management on the more modern engines
    going belly up.
     
    Phil Cook, Mar 22, 2005
    #5
  6. Steve C

    Nom Guest

    Exactly. That's why he should choose the forced-induction 1.4
    Yep - there's more torque and a wider powerband from the HDi lump.
    The gearing between the two isn't much different.
    Er, are you trying to suggest that modern engines are NOT much much better
    than their older equivalents ? Cos that would be madness.
     
    Nom, Mar 23, 2005
    #6
  7. Steve C

    Phil Cook Guest

    Not if you are a DIY tinkerer and want something you can maintain with
    just a few spanners and the odd screwdriver.

    Mercedes make taxi versions of their latest models with the
    old-fasioned engines for markets where sophisticated service eqipment
    and skills to operate it are scarce.
     
    Phil Cook, Mar 23, 2005
    #7
  8. Steve C

    Longshot Guest

    Newer doesn't necessarily mean better. As Phil has said there's more to
    compare than plain old horses. Had a 1.4HDI 206 loan car while main 406
    was in for major service and belt change. It was gutless and only just
    more economical than the 406's HDI 110 2L. Was very glad to get the 406
    back.
     
    Longshot, Mar 23, 2005
    #8
  9. Steve C

    Nom Guest

    Agreed.

    But don't you think the benefits of the modern lump, far outweigh it's
    maintainence issues ? They aren't even issues anyway, unless it goes wrong
    :)
    Really ? Interesting !
     
    Nom, Mar 24, 2005
    #9
  10. Steve C

    Nom Guest

    With cars, it does.

    Every generation of car, is better than the last - the car companies spend
    obscene amounts of R&D money to ensure this is the case. You get more
    refinement, more safety, more gadgets, more power, etc. etc. The trade-offs
    are more complexity and more weight.
    Yep - 70bhp is way underpowered for a lardy modern vehicle !
    My point was, he'd be no better off with the 1.9 NA lump - it would be just
    as gutless, and offer very similar (probably slightly less) economy.
     
    Nom, Mar 24, 2005
    #10
  11. Steve C

    Phil Cook Guest

    Also quite possibly less power due to emissions law being tightened.

    More gadgets and more complexity means there is more to go wrong and
    it will cost more to put right when it does.
     
    Phil Cook, Mar 24, 2005
    #11
  12. Steve C

    Peter Guest

    I assume that you're looking at buying a new car? If so then the
    choice you have is between a 1.4 or a 2.0 diesel. Peugeot don't market
    a 1.9 any longer.

    As a matter of preference, i would almost always buy the model with
    the larger engine - it is less likely to have to work as hard and
    therefore use less fuel and last longer - IMHO.

    I run a 110 2.0 406HDI and my wife runs a 90 2.0 206HDI and are happy
    with both.
    --
    Cheers

    Peter

    Remove the INVALID to reply
     
    Peter, Mar 25, 2005
    #12
  13. Steve C

    Nom Guest

    But most modern cars are much more powerful than their older counterparts !
    Power-to-weight ratio both remains broadly similar for cooking-model cars -
    but it's risen hugely for performance vehicles (Clio 182, new M5, Evo,
    Scooby etc. etc.)
    What kind of negative attitude is that :)

    If it concerns you to such an extent that you're willing to forfeit all the
    modern luxuries, then you need to buy yourself an aftermarket warranty -
    they're readily available these days, and then you get the best of both
    worlds !
     
    Nom, Mar 29, 2005
    #13
  14. Steve C

    Nik&Andy Guest

    UTTER TOSH!
    Not always - Late cavalier 2.0 16v was 150bhp - New vectra 2.0 is around
    140bhp.....
    there are many other examples like this out there.

    Volvo V6 - 190Bhp - 2 years later they added badly designed CAT, down to
    170BHP... As with many cars.

    Most modern diesels are loosing power to become complient with Euro4+5 regs,
    wheras most euro3 diesels will outperform there euro4 counterparts.
    Very very real, my touran has already had one ECU changed under warrenty.
    And then you add another £250 to the price of the vehicle, only to find out
    that the warranty excludes anything that can go wrong!!!
    i.e. - On my old cavalier 1.8 - coming back from France it started to
    overheat, turned out to be the waterpump, this was explicitly excluded in
    the warranty from warranty holdings ltd.
    This was the only thing that ever went wrong with that car....
    Luckily Vauxhall had fixed price servicing, so it was £130 all in... with a
    warranty.

    Andy
     
    Nik&Andy, Mar 29, 2005
    #14
  15. Steve C

    Nom Guest

    Um ?

    You're trying to say that noisy, uncomfortable, polluting, slow,
    zero-crash-protection, gadget-free old cars are somehow better than their
    quicker, quieter, better-riding, gadget-laden, crash-protected modern
    counterparts ?

    Are you mad Sir ?

    The *only* thing I can think of that an older car does better than a modern
    car, is the act of weighing less :)
    That would be relevent, if the comparable modern-day Vectra was not the 2.2,
    which makes exactly the same 150bhp.

    It does lose out at the top end though - GM's crappy 3.2 makes a measly
    208bhp. And in a lardy new Vectra, it doesn't get anywhere near the
    straight-line performance of the Turbo Cavalier.
    Have you forgotten about the 200bhp LPT and the 250bhp HPT ? And the 300bhp
    blown V6 ? Volvo engines make more power than they ever have before.
    You know full-well that modern Diesels are way way more powerful than
    they've ever been in the past.
    And ?

    So what you're saying, is you'd rather drive a lovely 1975 Land Rover
    Defender, instead of your shiny new Touran, because the landy is more
    reliable and cheaper and easier to fix ?
    All the used-car-warranties that I've ever had, have included everything
    except a select few consumables (tyres, brakes, exhaust, clutch, battery
    etc.) and the ICE and alarm/immobiliser.
    Well yes, obviously if your warranty is crap, then it's gonna be crap :) The
    solution to that problem, is a none-crap warranty.
    So it doesn't matter that it was exluded then !
     
    Nom, Mar 30, 2005
    #15
  16. Steve C

    Phil Cook Guest

    You are making a bit of a leap there. When we started this thread it
    was about the previous model and the newest one.
    Just practical.
    Yes but then I was comaring the latest model with the one previous. It
    is steady and incremental improvement.

    I see lots of posts in here about ECU's and "clever" bits going wrong
    and needing to be fixed with new.
    Well it would be cheaper to tax (free) and insure.

    I think you just have a fixation about driving a new car. Get real
    most people can't afford to do that, and not even all those who do
    *must* have the latest model.
     
    Phil Cook, Mar 30, 2005
    #16
  17. Steve C

    Nik&Andy Guest

    Phil, Don't take my views as extreem please, I am just saying that although
    I own a new'ish car, I would feel a lot more comfortable if there was not so
    much crappy technology in them to go wrong.

    I have no doubt that the computers improve engine power and emissions etc.
    I love Air-Con.
    I love 1975 Land Rovers!!!
    I love electric Seats etc...

    Point being, I can fix a 1975 Land rover cheaply, as can I a 1984 Golf/Polo
    or Escort or even a 1991 Vauxhall Cavalier 1.8GL with a relativly moderate
    tool box.
    Not many people can fix a 'CAN' bus computer system with linked moduler
    ECU's !!!

    Also cars are only just starting to get back the power they had in the 80's
    before the emmisions laws etc.. Look at the Sierra Cossy 500 - 250-350BHP
    with a few tweaks from a 2 litre engine.
    Now you need a 2.3Litre Hybrid Turbo Engine to produce 250BHP

    I know which one I would rather try fixing.

    If you are going to get a more modern engine, I think it is realistic expect
    higher running costs.

    Andy
     
    Nik&Andy, Mar 30, 2005
    #17
  18. Steve C

    Nom Guest

    Yeah, I do that :)
    Well the point still stands, to a lesser extent.
    But I don't drive a new car. It's not even nearly new.
    I'd never buy a new car - there's no reason to suffer the initial
    depreciation-hit, when someone else can suffer it for you.

    I don't really see how this is relevent :) The financials make buying a
    new-car a none-starter - I don't intend to ever own one.
     
    Nom, Mar 31, 2005
    #18
  19. Steve C

    Nom Guest

    Yes, that was my point all along.

    I'm quite happy to pay my higher repair bills, given the amount of things I
    get in return (ie, just about everything) from my more-modern car.
     
    Nom, Mar 31, 2005
    #19
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