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Showing 41 - 50 results (out of a total of 875) found for "Petrol" in Ask Us Anything

Belt or chain in my 2004 Audi A3 2.0?

Is my 2004 Audi A3 2.0-litre three-door with a cam chain or cam belt?

Peter (Honiton)

Feb 2025 Filed under: timing belt or chain

Expert answer

Hi Peter,

All the various 2.0-litre engines (TDI diesel and FSI/TFSI petrol) in the 2004 Audi A3 used cam belts.


Ford Ranger private tax costs?

New Ford Ranger Wildtrak private tax cost and Raptor private tax cost please.

Shane (Navan)

Feb 2025 Filed under: taxation

Expert answer

Hi Shane,

When you're taxing a commercial vehicle for private use then the rate goes by the engine size. 

The Wildtrak can be had with 2.0 or 3.0-litre diesel engines, while the Ranger can be had with a 2.0-litre diesel or 3.0-litre petrol option. The 2.0-litre engines cost €710 a year to tax and the 3.0-litre units (doesn't matter what fuels them) are €1,494 per annum.

Read our Motor Road Tax Prices in Ireland Explained feature for full details.


VRT estimate on a 2013 Mercedes CL 500?

Looking for VRT estimate on a 2013 Mercedes CL 500 4.6-litre V8 bi-turbo with 105k miles on the clock.

Thanks

Mark Butler (Galway)

Jan 2025 Filed under: VRT

Expert answer

Hi Mark,

As I’m sure you realise, we can only guess at the OMSP (Open Market Selling Price) that Revenue will place on such a rare car. And the VRT calculation hinges on that. Let’s say it’s €25,000, and that its CO2 emissions put it into the top VRT band at 41 per cent. That would mean a VRT bill of €10,250.

Don’t forget about the NOx levy on top of that, which is likely to be the top €600 limit for petrol cars, and of course import duty and VAT if the car is coming from England, Scotland or Wales.


How much to import a 1991 Mitsubishi GTO?

How much is the cost to import a 1991 Mitsubishi GTO 3.0 petrol from Northern Ireland?

Michael Buggy (Portlaoise)

Jan 2025 Filed under: importing

Expert answer

Hi Michael,

Assuming it has been registered and used in the North “for a reasonable period of time” (Revenue’s words, generally accepted to mean more than three months), then no VAT or import duty should be payable, and as the car is over 30 years old the VRT is a flat €200.


Worth importing a Passat estate from the UK?

Hi,

I'm looking to change from my 2011 VW Passat Saloon 1.4 petrol. This has been a great car for me and I’m looking to change to a 2022/2023 VW Passat Estate - 1.5 petrol. These are thin on the ground here and as they aren't sold here anymore this will become even more so. There are plenty around in the UK but I’m wondering if there are still the same savings to be made when importing from the UK as there once was?

Brendan Cullen (Dublin)

Jan 2025 Filed under: importing

Expert answer

Hi Brendan,

The savings are not what they were, and effectively non-existent if you're talking about England, Scotland or Wales. The only realistic option is to look to Northern Ireland as most cars won't be subject to VAT and import duty, just VRT and the NOx levy. Read more below:

Guide to importing a car from Northern Ireland

Guide to importing cars from the UK


When to check my Skoda Octavia's timing belt?

Hi,

I've just bought a 2014 Skoda Octavia 1.4 TSI Elegance petrol. Car has only completed 24,000km. No indication whether a timing belt has previously been changed. Car runs perfectly. Can you advise when I should start think about checks /changing the belt please?

Thanks

Mike Savva (London)

Jan 2025 Filed under: servicing

Expert answer

Hi Mike,

That engine has one of Volkswagen Group's so-called 'long life' timing belts that don't actually come with any set replacement schedule. That's very low mileage but even so there's no harm asking your mechanic to take the 'top cover' off each time the car is serviced to check the condition of the belt itself.


Toyota Corolla or Hyundai i30?

Which would be most reliable for shorter commutes between a 2019 Toyota Corolla 1.2 petrol and 2020 Hyundai i30 1.0 petrol?  Leaning towards i30 for practicality. Hybrid/electric out of budget but wary of reliability of these turbocharged engines.

John Smith (London)

Jan 2025 Filed under: choosing used car

Expert answer

Hi John,

There really won't be much to choose between them. Both manufacturers have good reputations for the reliability of their petrol engines. In your position I'd go with the car I prefer and not worry about the reliability. 


Does the 2015 Ford Kuga EcoBoost have a "wet" belt?

I own a Ford Kuga Mk2 from 2015, powered by the EcoBoost petrol engine with manual transmission. My question is, does it have a wet timing belt? Thank you in advance for the answer.

Best regards

Robert (Zielona Góra )

Jan 2025 Filed under: servicing

Expert answer

Hi Robert,

The 1.5 and 1.6 EcoBoost engines in the 2015 Kuga use "dry" belts, not "wet" ones.


Looking at buying a 2013 BMW 316...

Hi,

I’m looking to buy a 2013 BMW 316. Will diesel or petrol be the best option? Are there any issues with the diesel engine?

Syam Krishna (Dublin)

Jan 2025 Filed under: choosing used car

Expert answer

Hi Syam,

Unless you need the long-distance efficiency of diesel then I'd suggest sticking with the petrol model if you can find one. They won't be very common though.

The diesel model feels faster and is more economical, but is likely to have higher maintenance costs as it gets older, even if nothing major goes wrong. And unfortunately the timing chain on that diesel engine can be a weak point.


Is VRT higher on an Audi TT Roadster?

Hi,

I'm thinking of importing a convertible car (2017 Audi TT 1.8 petrol cabriolet) from Northern Ireland and put the details into the VRT calculator. However, the calculator only gives the choice of three 1.8 petrol models, all of which are coupes, not convertibles. Is VRT higher for a convertible car?

Thanks

Simon (Westmeath)

Jan 2025 Filed under: VRT

Expert answer

Hi Simon,

VRT might be a little higher, but it shouldn't be much more. It's nothing to do with the body style directly, though; it comes down to the VRT band, which is determined by the official CO2 rating (which can be a little higher in open-topped cars as they're generally a little heavier and less aerodynamic than their coupe equivalents) and what Revenue calls the Open Market Selling Price (OMSP). The latter may be a little higher for the TT Roadster, but there really shouldn’t be a lot in it.