1994 Peugeot 106 Rallye 1.3

Summary:

A Nippy Fly-MO

Faults:

New battery and starter motor at 40,000 miles.

New trim over front wheel. Note, dealer unaware that they existed, hence dealer comments. Also £100 for a piece of plastic.

General Comments:

A roadworthy Go-Kart.

Nice look on prestigious car drivers as you fly past them on major roads.

Even better look when hammering down twisty lanes.

Why do people panic when having a nose at the rev counter.

Am now fully aware of the lift-off oversteer with a couple of close shaves with inside kerb.

Slight problems. Am I the only one with an ashtray that doesn't want to stay where it should. I know they wanted to keep the weight down, but having an ashtray and not having a cigarette lighter seems a bit odd.

Disappointed when finding out colour code. Red. Hot or flame. No. The official colour is cherry, sickening.

Would you buy another car from this manufacturer? Yes

Review Date: 18th June, 2002

13th May 2003, 15:03

The cherry red on Peugeot is driving me crazy!!!

It is so hot, I love it! M-m-m-m, only thinking about it... Unfortunately, today I had just bought a black 106,year 1995, did not really have time to hunt around... Will share my comments soon, but really enjoyed the test drive. A definite improvement from my old and unfortunate Opel Corsa'87.Someone crashed me badly last week...

1994 Peugeot 106 Key West 1.0 petrol

Summary:

A performance commuter that is cheap to run

Faults:

Nothing yet.

But the brakes needed work when I bought the car. The disks and pads were well worn (neglect by the previous owner).

General Comments:

The car handles very well. Fastest car on the Gifford-Duns road.

The car is exceptionally quick for a little 1.1. It can easily keep up with my friend's 1.6 306 till around 80mph.

The handbrake has a dodgy feel.

The seats have very little back support and as I am 6'3 I feel it on long journeys. The stereo is also very crap.

The Key West stickers make the car look very feminine. They should be removed, even if you are female.

Would you buy another car from this manufacturer? Yes

Review Date: 22nd November, 2001

9th Apr 2004, 05:46

I too have a peugeot 106 key west and I think the stickers are excellent - they give individuality to the car. However I do agree they are a little feminine

PS - I am female.

1994 Peugeot 106 XSi 1.4

Faults:

Valve-gear a bit noisy (rebuild planned).

A couple of fuel leaks.

Knocking from the underside of the car (fixed itself).

Right channel on the stereo drops out occasionally.

General Comments:

You can keep your XR's, your GSi's and your other impressive-in-a-straight-line hot hatch drones. This is where it's at. Take the well-proven 1360cc TU engine, this time with Bosch Motronic multi-point fuel injection, a 7,200 RPM rev-limit, and packing a peaky 100 bhp, and bolt it into a rigid, beautifully balanced chassis which weighs less than 850 kg.

The result is a car which, whilst not exactly lightning quick, is capable of handing out a pasting to anything short of a Scooby along a twisting road. Everything is geared towards B-road caning - the engine wakes up over 3k (it actually revs to 7,200 before the limiter cuts in!) and the steering comes alive as cornering loads build. You can carry terrific speeds through corners, and adjust your line with millimetric precision using the throttle as much as the steering. No other FWD chassis has this kind of balance and poise.

Like the 205 GTi, and the hot 306's, the tail is very light, and the car will punish careless closure of the throttle mid bend by tucking its nose in hard, and trying to swap ends. However, it generally offers plenty of warning, and can usually be caught easily by simply winding off lock and feeding in power. Get used to it, and you can actually enter corners a good 10 mph too fast, snap the tail out with the throttle, and power out in a lovely four wheel drift. You just can't do that in most cars.

The interior is typically Peugeot - i.e. reasonably easy on the eye, but made of the cheapest possible materials and screwed together badly. The bodywork is also paper thin, although at seven years old, mine still polishes up brilliantly and shows not the slightest hint of rust.

There have been a few little problems, but the car starts first time, every time and has never let me down. It's what I'd expect of a well maintained but enthusiastically driven hottish hatch with 87k on the clock - basically sound but a bit tired here and there. Thankfully the car is easy to work on and parts/servicing are very reasonable through independent specialists. Running costs are excellent with cheap road tax, group 11 insurance and never less than 30 mpg.

This car never got the recognition that the Rallye, and more recently the cracking GTI got which is a shame. It handles as well as either, and goes just as well as the mk1 Rallye. All things considered it really is a storming little car, which makes up for its iffy build and moderate performance with sheer poise, not to mention a good helping of soul. Reminds me very much of the old Mini but with more finesse.

Highly recommended.

Would you buy another car from this manufacturer? Yes

Review Date: 12th November, 2001