Selling my parents' daily driver for the past 15 years, very reluctantly: it's being replaced by a newer Jag and I can't take it to London (one old Saab under ULEZ is going to be hard enough!), so it has to go...
MoT until the end of September 2021. Maintained by the local classic Saab specialist - it's fair to say cost considerations didn't really come into it. Most recently it's had a set of four new tyres all round.
It's the rare four-door saloon version, presented in malachite green with grey velour interior. It was recently upgraded to a set of period-correct Saab alloy wheels, otherwise it's all original, even down to the dealer plate on the back from 31 years ago.
The engine runs well - the car is totally reliable for long journeys and still packs a good turn of speed. At 142k, there's a lot of life left. The manual gearbox still feels tight, although there is a small leak which might need attention down the line.
The body is pretty straight, but there are a couple of rust spots, as shown in the photos - mainly in the typical 900 areas including wheelarches and door bottoms. Photos show the worst of it. Also an inch or so of missing chrome trim on the rear bumper. The interior is remarkably good - clean seats, no cracks in the dashboard, immaculate boot space, but it hasn't managed to avoid the usual droopy headlining, which has been pinned up so you get the impression of sitting in a tent.
There are a few electrical niggles - the central locking on the passenger door has given up the ghost, as has the heated seat and the headlamp wipers. The windows are keep-fit, so nothing to go wrong there. There is a mild blow to the exhaust caused by a ploppy driveway that splopes the bottom if you take it too quickly. All else works well. Music wise it comes with an aftermarket CD player.
It's a very straight and capable car - use as is, or invest a few weekends' work in it to make it really impressive. Inspections most welcome.
Price open to offers.
MoT until the end of September 2021. Maintained by the local classic Saab specialist - it's fair to say cost considerations didn't really come into it. Most recently it's had a set of four new tyres all round.
It's the rare four-door saloon version, presented in malachite green with grey velour interior. It was recently upgraded to a set of period-correct Saab alloy wheels, otherwise it's all original, even down to the dealer plate on the back from 31 years ago.
The engine runs well - the car is totally reliable for long journeys and still packs a good turn of speed. At 142k, there's a lot of life left. The manual gearbox still feels tight, although there is a small leak which might need attention down the line.
The body is pretty straight, but there are a couple of rust spots, as shown in the photos - mainly in the typical 900 areas including wheelarches and door bottoms. Photos show the worst of it. Also an inch or so of missing chrome trim on the rear bumper. The interior is remarkably good - clean seats, no cracks in the dashboard, immaculate boot space, but it hasn't managed to avoid the usual droopy headlining, which has been pinned up so you get the impression of sitting in a tent.
There are a few electrical niggles - the central locking on the passenger door has given up the ghost, as has the heated seat and the headlamp wipers. The windows are keep-fit, so nothing to go wrong there. There is a mild blow to the exhaust caused by a ploppy driveway that splopes the bottom if you take it too quickly. All else works well. Music wise it comes with an aftermarket CD player.
It's a very straight and capable car - use as is, or invest a few weekends' work in it to make it really impressive. Inspections most welcome.
Price open to offers.