What constitutes a “cheap” versus an “expensive” car is different for everyone, but I think everyone has a number where a car purchase crosses the threshhold to a more serious number. For me, that number is about eight thousand dollars. If you’re spending that much, you have to mean it, and you have to be sure. So for our Friday Showdown this week, I’ve found two very different cars that come in just under that amount.
Yesterday, we spent considerably less fake internet money than that. We looked at a Ford Probe in need of some interior and suspension repair, and a Voyager minivan whose only flaws are cosmetic. Many of you made a good case for each, but in the end, the Probe took the win.
I think I’d go the other way. I test-drove a ’94 Probe equipped the same as this, in roughly the same shape, for $800 several years ago, and I passed on that one. This is an even harder sell, even with the increase in used car prices in recent years. The Voyager feels like a better deal, and it’s more practical to boot.

As it so happens, today’s choices mirror yesterday’s somewhat. One of them is highly original, but tired and in need of some refurbishment, and the other is well-used, but well-kept and still looks great. They’re the exact same price, and you could drive either one home. Let’s take a look.
1972 Ford Mustang – $7,900

Engine/drivetrain: 302 cubic inch OHV V8, three-speed automatic, RWD
Location: Playa Del Rey, CA
Odometer reading: 99,000 miles
Operational status: Runs and drives well, but needs restoration
This is a prime example of my favorite kind of old car: the regularly-driven survivor. You can find them all over, if you look hard enough, but the western half of the US definitely has a higher concentration of them, without the ravages of road salt thinning their ranks. I like to think about everything they’ve driven past, how many changes have happened along the same old roads while they just keep rolling along. This Mustang was undoubtedly someone’s pride and joy back in 1972, but it’s not a special model or anything. Five decades and change have worn it out, but given it a sort of dignity that it probably didn’t have when it was new.

There are no surprises under the hood; it’s got the same 302 V8 and C4 automatic transmission as hundreds of thousands of other Mustangs its age. It’s a good sturdy combination, and it sounds like a Mustang should. This one runs fine, thanks to a new carburetor and radiator. The brakes have been replaced as well. The suspension is a little tired and rattly, but it’s a Mustang; there are plenty of choices available to whip it into shape.

This is the only photo of the interior in the ad, and it’s really hard to see. I tried to mess with the brightness and contrast a little to get a better look, but it didn’t help much. I can see that the dash top is cracked badly–no surprise there–and the seats have covers on them. The door panels look all right, though. And again, restoration parts are easy to come by.
The paint is weather-beaten and coming off, and it has a few dents and scrapes that tell the story of a life well-lived. But since it’s a California car, it doesn’t have any rust. And I love the fact that all four of its dog-dish hubcaps have survived all these years. You could restore it, and I’m sure somebody will, but I kind of love it as-is.
[UPDATE: The lead photo of the Mustang was clearly AI-enhanced, so we’ve removed it. Thank you to everyone who pointed this out. – MH]
1995 BMW 525i – $7,900

Engine/drivetrain: 2.5-liter DOHC inline 6, five-speed manual, RWD
Location: Tarzana, CA
Odometer reading: 180,000 miles
Operational status: Runs and drives well
A lot of enthusiasts, including me, feel like BMW has sort of lost the plot in recent years. But opinions vary on when the last “good” one was. I could make a case for this car, though, the E34-chassis 5 Series. New enough to use daily, but old enough to be simple, with timeless styling and that signature inline six, this is a car I could see myself driving – and I can’t say that about a lot of BMW’s products.

This 5 Series has the smallest engine offered in the US, a 2.5-liter six with BMW’s VANOS variable valve timing on the intake side only. It’s paired with a five-speed manual as the BMW gods intended. It has 180,000 miles on it, and the seller says it runs and drives with “no issues.” The brakes and shocks are new, and it just passed a smog test. No old German car is risk-free, but this one sounds just about as close as you can get.

Inside, it’s got that good old driver-centric no-bullshit BMW interior design, something I wish would come back. It has enough toys to make you feel special, but nothing gimmicky or unnecessary. The seats are classic tan leather, with what looks like some heavy wear on the driver’s seat, but they’ve cleverly not shown that seat clearly. It doesn’t look too bad, though. And according to the seller, everything works, including the air conditioning.

Outside, its classic lines are shown off beautifully in that spectacular dark green of BMW’s, and it’s completely stock and original. This car is a great example of how spending a little more up front can get you a much nicer car right away. You can find cheaper E34s and fix them up, but it will probably end up costing you more than this in the long run. It’s so much easier to keep something nice than it is to make it nice.
So there you have it: two cars for just under eight grand. You have a faded elder statesman of the California beach highways, and a well-kept German sedan from the Valley. Either one will get you home, and either one will likely cost you a bit more money before too long. You’ve got all weekend to decide which one earns a place in your imaginary driveway.






I love me a 71-73 fastback, but the coupe and convertible were fucking hideous. That’s way too much scratch for a ratty one, too. Beemer all day.
Manual E34? Sign me up. These are a pleasure to drive.
BMW is just a US-spec M3 engine away from greatness.
I’ll give the Mustang it’s due. Twice thears half the miles but we all age and I don’t think refurbishing it will be cheap and the BMW looks tight and ready.
That BMW has seen some love over the years. Sorry Mustang, I’m going Bavarian on this one.
Maybe it’s just today, but I’m not feeling either. Gonna pass.
Tough choice, but I am leaning toward Mustang to get it for my mom. She loooves classic Mustangs.
I’d rather have the BMW. That old Mustang will never be as nice to drive as that BMW… even if you spend a ton of money on it. And with the 3.2/slushbox, it’s not a desirable spec either. So it won’t be valuable if you keep it stock. And if you modify it to make it better, then that doesn’t help the value either.
And if you want to make it better than stock and more enjoyable to drive and decent looking, it will need tens of thousands of work.
So in this case, as blasphemous as it sounds to pick a BMW over a Mustang, the BMW is my pick.
Bimmer! Normally I’d go for the old skool classic muscle car, and used to know someone who had a 70’s Fix Or Repair Daily Mustang…I don’t mind that body style as much (the 60’s are still better) That bimmer is so clean and looks like so much fun. Plus it’s a stick!
I couldn’t vote yes to that BMW 5er fast enough. Yes yes yes!!
Is the Mustang old enough to retro-rat-rod it? Asking for a friend who likes Coyote swaps.
I think that’s too high a price to drive as-is, and also too high to pay for something you’re going to heavily modify. And way way too high to pay for a solid restoration.
So I voted BMW with the understanding that $7.9k is the down payment and I’ll need on average a few hundred a month in repairs and maintenance.
Yes, and a Coyote powered 72 Mustang would be bitchin’.
We’ve had 2 e34 BMWs in the family- an earlier 525i with the SOHC 2.5 (that has been dead reliable with literally nothing besides scheduled maintenance) and a 535i that we sadly parted ways with. They really are pleasurable to drive, even now, and feel so substantial yet so nimble. The VANOS DOHC 6 might be more troublesome, I don’t know. But it will be smooth and sound great!
If that E34 was closer to me I’d probably buy it.
My mother drove the same Mustang (year, colors, etc.) but a Sportsroof, when I was born. So there is a bit of nostalgia for me in that one. But the E34 is an easy choice for me, even though I know stupid German car shit will happen and I will think of the Mustang parts prices I’m not paying.
This (and the E39) are my favorite BMWs. And you’re telling me that it runs, is clean, and has working air-con and a stick? For me, the Mustang doesn’t stand a chance here, even with Teutonic maintenance costs.
The BMW is a better choice. But I want to mad max the Mustang. So that is how I voted
I have driven very close approximations of both cars. My friend has a 1972 convertible with the 5.0L and the 3-speed auto. I had the displeasure of driving it on some twisty roads in Kentucky. If I’ve driven a worse car, I can’t think of it right now. No power and handling akin to my grandfathers 1978 Mercury Marquis.
The BMW, on the other hand, is almost identical to the one my father owned since new. The only difference was that his had a black interior, which presented so much better at 177,000 miles when we sold it. The car was very reliable. I think it needed a battery and a radiator. Alas the recirculating ball steering box started to develop a lot of play and I could not source a replacement or someone who would rebuild it; so it went up for sale. It had acceptable power from a sweet-sounding engine, got about 28mpg from what I recall, and just drove nicely.
The BMW is very clean, but it’s still a bunch of miles for 8 grand. But I’d still take that over a largely blah Mustang.
The BMW is the better deal here. I like that vintage of Mustang, but it’s a bit rough at that price.
Not a BMW or a cosplay type, but sure, I’ll cosplay as a late-90s Yuppie.
I think BMW was still making great cars a bit longer than the e34, e39, e36, and e46 all come to mind. The e90 was still offered as a rwd, manual, wagon with a naturally aspirated I6 so I would probably include that as well. All that to say in this condition and especially in Boston Green Metallic with the right transmission I would love to daily that BMW.
I’ve wanted an E34 ever since 12-year-old me rode with my dad when he test-drove a new 1991 525i. Despite loving the car, he bought a Maxima instead and I’ve longed for a 5-series ever since. To me, they were the pinnacle of old BMW styling, and represent a driver-focused ethos that has long disappeared. Easy pick on this one, over the worst generation of Mustang.
I would buy the Mustang just to respray it so nobody has to look at that color anymore. Woof.
I like both. The Mustang is cool. I disagree with the seller that it needs restoration. This car looks great as-is. I like cars with character – I would rather own this than a perfectly restored ’72 Mustang. I’m not sure about the price, though. It seems high, particularly when you consider this vehicle isn’t even registered. I have had a few bad experiences buying cars that haven’t been regularly driven – issues tend to crop up when you get them back on the road.
I absolutely love the BMW. If BMW still made cars that looked like this 525 I would be driving a BMW (why hasn’t Chris Bangle been tried for crimes against humanity for what he did to BMW styling? He deserves to be in GITMO. Maybe even CECOT.). This car is also in great condition and has the correct number of pedals. While I like the Mustang, I could pass on it for the asking price. I can’t say the same about the BMW – I would absolutely be a buyer if it weren’t 2,573 miles away. Or if I had time for a road trip.
Depressingly, I’d take a Bangle era BMW in a heartbeat compared to the horrors they are now foisting upon us.
Fair point. I rant a lot about Bangle-era BMWs, but BMWs designed after his reign of terror haven’t been any better.
I didn’t want the Mustang when I assumed they were in the same condition.