View Poll Results: Petrol or Diesel?

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  • Petrol

    25 47.17%
  • Diesel

    28 52.83%
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Thread: Van: Diesel or Petrol?

  1. #31
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    3rd January 2007 - 22:23
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    Quote Originally Posted by dhunt View Post
    So am I understanding you correctly a turbo requires more maintenance and can be expensive to fix?


    Yeah my current Van is definitely on the gutless side of things so I'm already used to hugging the left lane.



    This I don't understand. Why for basically the same vehicle one diesel, one petrol the diesel one costs more to register
    If a turbo goes pop, lotsa coin. If the engine sees turbo boost a lot (ie; you thrash it coz you can) things like head gaskets can give up, more coin. They go heaps better but everything's a trade off; you pay for power one way or another.

    I am not aware of any diesel being more to register than any other type of vehicle but you will be paying road user charges, something to take into account.

    I have a couple of builder buddies who haul all manner of shite in their diesel HiAces and they're going like trains. Both non turbo tho.

  2. #32
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    22nd April 2004 - 15:31
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    Quote Originally Posted by peasea View Post
    I am not aware of any diesel being more to register than any other type of vehicle but you will be paying road user charges, something to take into account.
    Taken off the LTSA website. Hopefully the formatting comes out ok. But Diesels are definitely more expensive to register for some reason.
    Quote Originally Posted by LTSA
    MR2A/2B Registration of motor vehicle (issued with standard plates)

    Passenger car/van 6 months 12 months
    Private passenger Petrol driven - 1301-2600 cc 235.59 323.42
    Petrol driven - 2601-4000 cc 265.97 353.80
    Non-petrol driven - 1301-2600 cc 284.72 421.66
    Non-petrol driven - 2601-4000 cc 315.10 452.04
    Life is difficult because it is non-linear.

  3. #33
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    3rd January 2007 - 22:23
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    Quote Originally Posted by dhunt View Post
    Taken off the LTSA website. Hopefully the formatting comes out ok. But Diesels are definitely more expensive to register for some reason.
    Are you sure that's not the one-off 'as-new' registration cost, not the annual re-licensing?

  4. #34
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    22nd April 2004 - 15:31
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    Quote Originally Posted by peasea View Post
    Are you sure that's not the one-off 'as-new' registration cost, not the annual re-licensing?
    Nah definitely the annual relicensing. See here for details http://www.ltsa.govt.nz/vehicle-owne...istration.html
    Life is difficult because it is non-linear.

  5. #35
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    5th August 2005 - 18:41
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    I rest my case! Life is just so unfair.
    "Ability hits the mark where presumption overshoots and diffidence falls short". Nicholas of Cusa

  6. #36
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    17th July 2006 - 14:32
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    Quote Originally Posted by dhunt View Post
    Nah definitely the annual relicensing. See here for details http://www.ltsa.govt.nz/vehicle-owne...istration.html
    Annual rego costs are going up on 1st July and the new prices are as per the above link. Bugger

    We just sold our 2.8l hiace lwb diesel van - sad to see it go but it just sat there not getting used as we have another vehicle and hubby has a company ute. Couldn't tell you the economics of running it but it was pretty reasonable and was pretty peppy for a diesel.
    Some days you are the bug , some days you are the windshield

  7. #37
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    5th April 2004 - 20:04
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    Not sure if the van our sponsors gave us is 3ltr or 2.8, but it's auto and seems to go mint. Stays in overdirve most the time, and only drops under 90kph in a couple spots just outside of Hunterville and Taihapi.

    The auto is primo after thrashing a bike all day at the track, just get in and drive.

    Prices have gone stupid now though since the importing laws have changed for diesles.

  8. #38
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    25th June 2003 - 13:54
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    If you're talking cheap vans, doing your own oil and filters and ignoring depreciation:

    I'll use L300 2.5TD vs 2.4P figures from my own experience

    For 20,000km/year

    Diesel
    Reg $302.50
    RUC 20km/3t $665.36 (counter transaction, all 20km at once)
    4 X 5l diesel oil $140 ($35 per 5l)
    4 x filter $60 ($15 ea)
    1 x fuel filter $28
    1800l diesel @ 1.73l (9l/100km consumption) $3114
    Total $4309.86 or 21.55c/km

    Petrol

    Reg $183.22
    2 x 5l oil $70
    2 x oil filter $30
    2600l 91 petrol @ 2.01 (13l/100km consumption ) $5226

    Total $5509.22 or 27.55c/km

  9. #39
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    25th June 2003 - 13:54
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    Incorrect links given for cost of rego labels

    The links given in posts by dhunt and mazz1974 are for cost of relicencing a vehicle (say for lapsed rego) including new plates.

    To buy the annual 'rego' the costs are below:

    http://www.ltsa.govt.nz/vehicle-owne...sing-fees.html

  10. #40
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    29th September 2003 - 20:48
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    I upgraded from an 87 2 litre petrol hiace to a 01 Hyundai H100 last year. Best decision ever. Even though the Hyundai has done 384000kms it is still going strong. Has a 2.5l mitsi engine and is great value for the money. If you can get a 200000km or so one that has decent service history I'd stake my life on it. Cruises sweet as at up to 120 and consistently gets 10l per 100km. Can't complain about that. The old hiace used to get 12L if I was lucky and would struggle big time up the hills. The diesel loves the hills and is great for passing on the flat too, don't have to get a 200m run up on the busses and trucks. I've done 45000km in the last 12 months and I have no reason to suspect that it won't do that again!

  11. #41
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    22nd April 2004 - 15:31
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    Quote Originally Posted by bungbung View Post
    If you're talking cheap vans, doing your own oil and filters and ignoring depreciation:

    I'll use L300 2.5TD vs 2.4P figures from my own experience

    For 20,000km/year

    Diesel
    Reg $302.50
    RUC 20km/3t $665.36 (counter transaction, all 20km at once)
    4 X 5l diesel oil $140 ($35 per 5l)
    4 x filter $60 ($15 ea)
    1 x fuel filter $28
    1800l diesel @ 1.73l (9l/100km consumption) $3114
    Total $4309.86 or 21.55c/km

    Petrol

    Reg $183.22
    2 x 5l oil $70
    2 x oil filter $30
    2600l 91 petrol @ 2.01 (13l/100km consumption ) $5226

    Total $5509.22 or 27.55c/km
    Thanks bungbung that's a really useful comparision
    Life is difficult because it is non-linear.

  12. #42
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    5th April 2004 - 20:04
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    Purchase price isn't in that evaluation though, $1200 cheaper to run a diesle over 20,000kms, but you would pay that and more to get a van of the same condition when ya buy it. So if you have the money and aren't getting a loan to buy it, then you will save money after a couple years, otherwise it cost about the same over three years.

    It comes down to preference, peterol is great when you have gas left over from racing cos you get to chuck it in the van for the trip home.

  13. #43
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    6th May 2008 - 21:43
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    I have a 2003 mitsi 2.4lt petrol ,revs way to hi at 100km and uses the most gas but heaps of power. Also a 2003 nissan caravan 2lt cheaper to run but less power and both cost $15000 with 100 000km. I also have a delica 2.5 diesel turbo really nice to drive and not all that much cheaper to run than petrol vans. when you include rd tax and double cost for oil and parts in servicing. My last van is a 1998 econo van lwb with cd player and tinted windows ect but has 240 000km. I am currently selling for 1800 bcos I have one to many vans.

  14. #44
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    16th November 2007 - 21:20
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    I'm a big fan of Diesel and have a 07 Toyota Hilux for work and it is magic for towing, you can even pass while towing up hills.

    I would say if you are going to be loaded up most of the time go Diesel, if you just want the space and won't be loading it to the roof get petrol.

    I was told that the emissions laws stopped many turbo imports from getting in, even stopped some new vehicles.
    Lead, follow or get the f*%! outa the way.

  15. #45
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    25th June 2003 - 13:54
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    Quote Originally Posted by Drew View Post
    Purchase price isn't in that evaluation though, $1200 cheaper to run a diesle over 20,000kms, but you would pay that and more to get a van of the same condition when ya buy it.
    If you're talking about the low end of the market, old high k petrol hi-aces have a price premium over the equivalent diesel model due to the perceived unreliability issues.

    I'm talking of the up to 4k price range, 180k - 250k mileage

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