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13th November 2022, 00:52 | #1 |
BHPian Join Date: Sep 2022 Location: Amstrdm/Kerala
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| Owning a car in the country of bikes and windmills | My BMW 318i (G20) | Ownership Review This thread has 3 main intentions
The car in question is a BMW 3 series G20 2021 make. Its a fairly familiar model now with lots of excellent reviews available, hence I will limit the review of the car to my perspective of buying and owning it in this particular country. BackgroundWe, a family which includes my 3.5 year old girl, has been living in Singapore for the past 7+ years. We started getting that infamous 7 year itch to have something new, made worse by strict long covid restrictions on travel in Singapore. Start of 2022, we decided to make that big move and in mid 2022, we moved to the Netherlands. One of the first order of business after getting here was to get a car, both a want as well as need. Do you need a car? Isn’t it the country of bicycles? Doesn't it have a great public transport system? Yes, The Netherlands has a decent public transport system. How good is it? that really depends on your perspective. Compared with North America, the public transport is top class. It’s efficient, fast and covers almost all of the country well. But when compared to developed Asian countries like Singapore, South Korea or Japan, the public transport is expensive, not perfectly reliable and sometimes inconvenient. The domestic intercity traffic is served by the NS, the Dutch national rail company. It works like a country wide metro network due to the frequency of trains. In most busy intercity routes there will be a train every 30mins or so. And you can’t reserve a seat, just tap in with your transit card and go in, just like a metro. Usually there are two classes, Normal (2+2 seating) and Business (2+1). NS app allows one to upgrade your ticket to Business on the fly (within 15mins of start of journey), great feature. NS trains are modern, sleek and generally well maintained. They usually does 160KMPH. Their fleet is a mix of double and single decker ones. It’s comparable to the current fleet of Train18 being rolled out in India. I've been keenly following the developments around train18 and hope to see a lot more of such trains in the IR network. Few rolling stocks of NS The cute Koplopers A typical double decker intercity, great views from the upper deck New generation intercity, this one can do upto 200KMPH And being in the centre of western Europe, Netherlands is well served with high speed international trains like German DB, French Thalys and now resurgent sleeper services. Currently the OBB Nightjet connects Netherlands with Switzerland as well as Austria. Not to forget Eurostar which connects Europe with UK via the channel tunnel. This makes waiting at a rail station in big cities like Amsterdam a treat for train nuts like me. Its like an international airport with different types of trains arriving and departing from different countries. Intracity transport is taken care by a mix of tram, buses (including a large number of hybrid as well as electric ones), metros and most importantly bicycles. And all of them are seamlessly interconnected. Even tier 2 cities has well developed public transport system with an amazing cycling network. You are only considered integrated into Dutch society if you can ride a bicycle in freezing winter balancing two kids braving icy winds at 60kmph while eating your sandwich. A tram in Amsterdam What is impressive is, although the trams and buses in each city is operated by a different company, there is a unified payment method using a transit card which works across all of them across country. One another important factor to consider in car ownership is the urban design philosophy being followed here. The Dutch urban design is quite different from a car centric design that is more popular in the US or some parts of Asia where you really need a car. Density in cities is quite high and even rural areas tend to cluster houses together. Due to that most of your day to day needs will be met within a few kms radius of your home. And there will always be multiple options to reach from point A to point B within a city. Within those, driving a car will almost always be the slowest, expensive and most inconvenient option. Taking a cycle is usually the fastest and cheapest followed by metro, tram and bus. I highly recommend the Youtube channel notjustbikes for a perspective of european urban planning from the point of view of someone from a car-centric society. Below is great video from them. Another similar channel is Kerleem and below is a great video from him From my personal experience, you can manage without owning a car if below 3 conditions are met:
For me, all of above 3 conditions were not met. I mostly travel with family, I faced cancelled trains a lot and I usually travel intercity. Ohh and most important, I wanted a car. So even if all 3 conditions were met, I would have bought a car anyway. Ok so what car?I thoroughly enjoy the process of buying things that I love (cars, bikes, any tech gadgets etc). I spend hours pouring over internet comparing models, watching reviews etc. So naturally I started my research long back before I started packing my bags. This even caused slight alarm to my wife since there was a housing crisis raging in this country yet I was busy finding the right car. First few words on the Dutch car market. Dutch (and Europeans in general) loves their hatch backs. From a popularity point of view it’s Hatch backs > Station wagons > CSUVs > Sedan > SUV > Trucks. It has to do with small city roads and super tight parking lots that is common is Europe. A few American trucks on road (RAM 1500 seems relatively popular) really does (literally) stands out. And the dutch market is shifting decisively to electric cars, partly because cars are taxed based on CO2 emissions and also because lot of people has solar panels installed on the roof. So combining both gives you a low capital as well as operating costs for e vehicles. Additionally parking spots in cities usually entails waiting months on a waiting list. Electric cars get preference there too. Go to any manufactures website and you will have to dig deep to even find gasoline powered cars. I choose to got with a pure ICE engine based on below factors
The contenders were:BMW 3 series G20 My first choice, always wanted one, don’t ask why, but could never afford it in Singapore where it costs ~ $250K. So this was the benchmark and all others were compared to it. Pros:
Volvo XC40 This was a car that was a polar opposite to the G20. Comfortable, luxurious, not sporty. Honestly this entered into my list just because of how it look. Pros:
Skoda Karoq Pros:
Audi A3 2018-2020 versions Pros
Few other cars which were in the back of my mind but was not seriously considered:
After evaluating my options, decision was made to go with the G20. And next up was choice of
The Buying processPretty straightforward. Go through BMW premium selection website with all filters of age, mileage and max price enabled. But finding that perfect car which meets all the requirements while fitting inside my budget was harder than I thought. There was always one or two sticking points. Finally it all boiled down to two. One was a grey 2019 model 320i run for ~50K kms. Another was a blue 2021 model 318i used for 25k kms. The 320i had some additional accessories. By virtue of being almost new, 318i was slightly more expensive. It was a difficult decision. Anyway to make it easier, I soon got a message that 320i is reserved by another buyer and honestly I was relieved that choice is now clear. The blue 318i it is. I travelled to the BMW dealership which was in another city 45km away. A short PDI and test drive followed. Car looked and felt perfect, almost as good as new. I checked the history of car via the RDW (RTO equivalent) as well as purchased a car vertical inspection report and everything checked out. The BMW dealer was also very helpful and provided me with a full service history with details. Also being a 2021 model, car still had 2 years of factory warranty left along with 3 years of APK validity. Checked for any discounts and my sales person (lets call him Mr M henceforth) came back with some. So everything was done, I signed the sales agreement and was promised delivery the next week. A note about APK, in the Netherlands, you need to do this test (similar to the fitness tests we have for commercial vehicles in India) on regular schedule. For a new petrol car it is 4 years after the purchase and then every year. A special mention about the experience with the BMW dealer (Renova Netherlands). Mr M was very mature, honest and helpful in all his communications. He even picked me and dropped me back to the nearest rail way station every time I visited the dealership for test drives and delivery. Interestingly he himself drove a 5 series electric and was using it as his personal vehicle. Also a note on car vertical, I found their inspection reports to be very thorough and useful. They are able to pull out a fairly comprehensive history of the car, any workshops visits along with estimated repair costs and also nature of usage such as if it was used as taxi etc and also a mileage history. Best part is it seems to be able to pull data from all over Europe. It cost around 35€ but well worth it considering what’s at stake. Delivery day experienceThe Dutch are famous to be non-nonsense people who go straight to the matter and get stuff done in the most efficient way possible. And my delivery experience was the most Dutch thing ever. Delivery was fixed to be on a Friday between 2 to 4PM. My previous experience with new car deliveries were all in India and every single time delivery was delayed by hours. With that in my mind, I took a half day off from work and set off to the dealership which was around 50kms away from my home at around 12pm. Wife was working so I went alone and expected to be back by 6pm. The timeline went as below
A note on the 9 digit registration code. It is confidential and you need it to register a car and has to be provided to the buyer by seller after payment is made. Every time a car is registered, a new 9 digit code is generated and sent to the new owner by post. Another note on driving license. One is allowed to drive for 6 months with his/her foreign DL upon arrival in Netherlands. You need a local Dutch license after that. Those holding certain visa is allowed to exchange a foreign issued DL irrespective of the country of issue, and this allowed me to exchange my Indian DL to Dutch one. Few pictures of the car Exterior Interior At night 2L B48 Series engine A typical parking lot, notice the small hatches which is uber popular. Fiat 500s are very popular here Driving experience Once I took the delivery, I was as excited as I was nervous. Fact was I’ve never driven in a right hand driving environment other than the short test drives I had. Now I was faced with a 50km drive back home by myself. I had been pouring through Dutch driving rules and regulations the previous few days. Armed with confidence from those lessons and waze, I start my drive back home. The drive was mostly on expressways so I didn’t have to deal with the complicated city road of Netherlands. I was misjudging the width of the car and was driving too close to the right hand side. I was made aware of this by lane assist which vibrates and tugs the steering back to keep me in lane when it detects that I was drifting out of my lane. That happened multiple times during my drive home and it spooked me first few times it happened. Car masks the speed so well and the 8 speed ZF transmission is unbelievably smooth that I was constantly going above the 100 kmph speed limit. Cruise control is your friend here. Now I’ve done around 3k kms in last couple of months. 30% city and 60% expressway. Performance is more than adequate for my driving style, car accelerates pretty well to triple digit speeds. Although turbocharged, there is no distinct surge in power at any point, it’s just a clean linear build up. At the same time there is no explosive performance of a 330i. While 330i does 0 to 100kmph in 5.5s, 318i takes around ~8.5s iDrive It’s there, but I rarely use the interface other than for some basic settings of the car, mainly because the wireless Apple CarPlay is just so intuitive. I tried the inbuilt navigation and it’s fine, but no where as good as navigation apps like Waze. I do like the feature where a list of petrol stations with price is displayed when fuel level falls low. Useful since price of petrol vary pump to pump Apple car play This is good. It’s wireless, seamless and easy to use. Moment you enter the car, it’s connected and ready to go. Im a big fan of Waze for navigation, especially due to its ability to suggest the exact lane to keep in big interchanges. Then there is Spotify, YouTube music etc which also gets integrated via car play. IMHO, car manufacturers should stop spending effort into building and maintaining their own in car entertainment software. They simply cannot match the technology capabilities of Apple/Google. What I feel is once wireless CarPlay / Auto becomes standard, most people are simply going to use it. One disadvantage when using navigation from CarPlay is that the map doesn’t get shown in the digital cockpit. That’s reserved for the inbuilt navigation system. And thanks to lack of configuration options, I’m forced to look at a huge blank section in the middle of the instrument cluster screen while driving. Could have been better. Map shown in middle section when using built in navigation The empty middle section when using any other navigations Sound and speakers Car is equipped with BMW Hifi system. It comes with additional tweeters, woofer and amplifier compared to base system. I found it to be very good and meets my requirements. Good mid range with crisp audio without any distortion at higher volumes. Won’t be doing any upgrade. BMW Connected professional This is a subscription based service, and Ive a couple of years left before needing to renew. It basically keeps an online link to the car via an embedded sim and enable remote services like USB Map Update, Real Time Traffic Information, BMW Online, Personal Assistant Service and On-Street Parking Information etc. But for me the most useful is the my bmw app, which lets me keep an eye on the status of the car. Auto hold function This is a neat feature. Once enabled, a firm press on the brake pedal engage the park brake. and when car detects accelerator input, it disengages the park brake. Very useful as I can simply pull up to a traffic light, press the brake pedal fully and take my feet off. and when its green, just drive away. Driving in Netherlands Netherlands has a world class road network system which is toll free! This country has the world highest density of roads and expressways. Driving is easy on expressways and motorways, but long drives can be boring due to monotonous natural scenery as well as speed limit of 100kmph on roads that are capable of much more. The limit used to be 130kmph until very recently, but was reduced to limit emissions. A map of expressways and their numbers, one can see how dense the network is On Dutch urban roads, you as a car driver is basically last in the pecking order. Bicycles, pedestrians, trams, buses etc all get the higher priority than a car. Hence driving in urban areas can be quite stressful. Priority is defined by white triangle markings on roads (commonly called shark teeth). So if the teeth is pointing at you, you yield. They are also complemented by road signs designating a road as priority. Shark teeth marking on road I find turning right as well as exiting round-abouts to be challenging since you need to mindfulness of bicycle/e scooters/ mopeds etc going straight at good speeds. I find it very difficult to get a clear view of the bike lanes to my right while turning especially with a co-passenger blocking your view out A typical round about with cycling lanes and pedestrian crossing Some road signs can also be confusing. For example below shows means U turn prohibited, but many foreigners are used to seeing a crossed out U and assume it to be U turn allowed. Another interesting rule is vehicles coming from right has priority. That means even if you are going straight (on a non-priority road), you need to yield to a car merging to your road from right. and there are priority uncontrolled junctions which are 4 or 3 way junctions which do not have traffic lights or priority markings. Throw in some tram lines too and I dread encountering them especially at busy times. And evidently, its not just me who is confused with uncontrolled junctions, below reddit thread and comments below is a good example. https://www.reddit.com/r/Amsterdam/c...bike_or_a_car/ Combined with the fact that parking in cities is very limited and expensive, I try and avoid driving into the city and try and use “Park n Ride” facilities where you park your car in a metro station in the outskirts of a city and take a metro for rest of journey. Kitna deti hai A very relevant question with prices per liter of petrol touching 2+ Euros. I use the app fuelly to track and the average is 13.2KMPL over the last 2.5K kms. Not bad. Costs of owning a car Having a car really shrinks this country down due to the small size (Netherlands is almost the same size as Kerala) and its excellent highway network. No place is more that few hours of drive away and this allows you to explore the whole country over the weekends. But all this convenience comes at a cost, especially for ICE cars, which I will break down below.
Accessorizing added or plannedDash cam - Viofo A129 plus Duo Dual WiFi Ordered it from Amazon for 180 Euros and did a basic installation myself. It consists of two modules, one each for front and back. So the wiring has to be done from the front unit to all the way back to rear windshield which was easy since the included cable was long. its powered from one of the USB-C ports. Video quality at day and night is quite good and I'm quite satisfied overall, although the screen could have been a bit bigger. It also includes a park mode where camera continuously runs when the car is parked, but the footage is only written when there it detects an impact. But that requires the camera to be hardwired which I intends to do later. Baby mirror A very simple mirror attached to the top left corner of the windshield, super useful to hold conversation with my chatty 3.5 year old girl without turning back Black front grill (yet to be bought) I do not like the current chrome one and feels a black grill will fit better. Installing it seems an easy enough DIY and plan to install one after winter. Thanks for reading!! Last edited by Rehaan : 22nd November 2022 at 13:22. Reason: Adding some formatting :) |
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20th November 2022, 22:53 | #2 |
Team-BHP Support | Re: Owning a car in the country of bikes and windmills | My BMW 318i (G20) | Ownership Review Thread moved out from the Assembly Line. Thanks for sharing! |
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22nd November 2022, 14:48 | #3 | |
BHPian | Re: Owning a car in the country of bikes and windmills | My BMW 318i (G20) | Ownership Review Congratulations G20Rider, the car is a looker and very very desirable. I am torn between G20 and F30 ( bigger engine for same price) and haven't come to a decision yet. B48 is pretty good and you will get good gas mileage thanks to the smaller tune. Quote:
This is still impressive by German Standard, my car delivery was done in 5 mins flat. In Germany you need to register the car in well advance so all the formalities and signature stuff was done when I bought the car. On delivery, I was given a nice wine botter along with keys and was told the car is parking in dealership's parking somewhere I was in and out in less than 5 mins. | |
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22nd November 2022, 14:51 | #4 |
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| Re: Owning a car in the country of bikes and windmills | My BMW 318i (G20) | Ownership Review First of all hearty congratulations on moving to Netherlands, it's a beautiful country. Congratulations on the 318i, you will definitely enjoy driving them around Europe! How's the power on tap in the 318i? I am looking to get a car in UK and saw a couple of 318i's listed at mouth watering prices. Last edited by suhaas307 : 22nd November 2022 at 15:09. Reason: spacing |
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22nd November 2022, 15:48 | #5 |
Senior - BHPian Join Date: Feb 2010 Location: DPM and CHN
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| Re: Owning a car in the country of bikes and windmills | My BMW 318i (G20) | Ownership Review Very interesting to hear about your buying experience. Happy and Safe Motoring. I was somewhat aback by their extensive motorway system, but 27% of the population use bicycles than any other nation in the world. The entire infrastructure was rebuilt to accommodate bicyclists. |
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22nd November 2022, 16:09 | #6 | |||||
BHPian | Re: Owning a car in the country of bikes and windmills | My BMW 318i (G20) | Ownership Review Welcome to team-bhp! And 'Welkom in Nederland!' It was a nice read. Thanks for the tip on carvertical. Didn't know about this service. Quote:
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Cheers and Enjoy your time here! Karthik Last edited by carthick1000 : 22nd November 2022 at 16:26. | |||||
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22nd November 2022, 16:58 | #7 |
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| Re: Owning a car in the country of bikes and windmills | My BMW 318i (G20) | Ownership Review Beautiful car, Congratulations. I just brought home my used f30 in Finland one week ago as well. |
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22nd November 2022, 17:01 | #8 | |||
BHPian Join Date: Sep 2022 Location: Amstrdm/Kerala
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| Re: Owning a car in the country of bikes and windmills | My BMW 318i (G20) | Ownership Review Quote:
Power is adequate. It's neither explosive nor slow. It can accelerate pretty well to triple digit speeds, but don't expect it to win any drag race Also if you are comparing with 330i, well there is no comparison. 330i feels much more quicker and responsive. 330i does 5.5s to the ton compared to 8.5s for 318i. But between 320i and 318i, difference is much more muted and if the deal on 318i is really sweet, then it might me a good balance. Quote:
And maintaining an excellent transport network is important to Netherlands as it acts as a gateway to Europe with Rotterdam port being the largest in Europe. So ability to get a box from a factory in Germany to a ship in Rotterdam and vice versa as fast as possible is a competitive advantage. Not to forget the vast water networks which is full of barges moving cargo. It helps that the port is connected directly to the famous Rhine river in Germany around which a lot of german cities and industries are clustered. Its so efficient that Netherlands is now a hub for drug trade flowing into Europe All the news about bikes may make one feel that car ownership is an exception in Netherlands, but a look at below statistics and car ownership per 1000 is actually higher than in Germany (!!), France and UK. https://longreads.cbs.nl/european-sc...car-ownership/ Quote:
And thanks for the tip on driving lessons, I will skip it as I've grown used to driving here over last many months, but my wife is seriously considering it, probably after winter. | |||
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22nd November 2022, 17:34 | #9 |
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| Re: Owning a car in the country of bikes and windmills | My BMW 318i (G20) | Ownership Review Wait, did you not have to take up the driving test in Netherlands for the license there first? And I assume you did not drive a car in all your 7 years in Singapore right? So back to driving after a big gap. |
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22nd November 2022, 18:41 | #10 | |
BHPian Join Date: Sep 2022 Location: Amstrdm/Kerala
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| Re: Owning a car in the country of bikes and windmills | My BMW 318i (G20) | Ownership Review Quote:
And I did drive, but all were rentals. Before covid I used to rent and drive extensively in Malaysia which was just a short bus journey from Singapore. Post covid It was through an app based rental company in Singapore called GetGo which allows you to book a car on demand and pay per hour, all via app with no human interaction. It’s similar to booking an Uber, just that car comes without a driver. And luckily I had a getgo car available almost every time in my building parking lot. Note: An Indian driving license holder can get an Singapore driving license just by writing a basic theory test (or learners test), which I did. So I was lucky till now to land in countries where I never had to go through the full process of getting a new license | |
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22nd November 2022, 18:50 | #11 |
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| Re: Owning a car in the country of bikes and windmills | My BMW 318i (G20) | Ownership Review That's the most Dutch-est thing I've read. Sincere and heart out. Congratulations on your new venture. The interior looks car looks peach, the blue ambiance brings out the best of it. Interesting to note how secure, fast and easy the ownership transfer process actually is, if only it can be reciprocated here in India. I think you should soon start to cycle in blistering winter at 60 kmph with sandwiches on both the hands, that would be the coolest Indo-Dutch thing to happen. Good luck to you. Cheers! VJ |
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22nd November 2022, 18:54 | #12 |
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| Re: Owning a car in the country of bikes and windmills | My BMW 318i (G20) | Ownership Review Congrats on your move to The Netherlands mate! I lived in neighbouring Belgium till 2019 and used to visit The Netherlands frequently - mostly by train since cars are a luxury when you are a student The Dutch public transport network, especially trains, are certainly among the best in Europe - better than the German, Belgian, Spanish or French systems and much much better than the system in the UK. Despite being neighbours and the similarities, it seems owning a car is much more expensive in The Netherlands than in Belgium - I get why car ownership there requires careful planning in order to prevent breaking the bank as reported by many of my friends there. The Dutch highways are a joy to behold though, so probably worth the extra tax |
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22nd November 2022, 20:19 | #13 |
BHPian | Re: Owning a car in the country of bikes and windmills | My BMW 318i (G20) | Ownership Review I was waiting for this ever since I read your introductory post Interesting insight into the practicality of owning a car in the Netherlands; very helpful from an outsider's perspective. The transport situation does seem excellent though, with all modes being usable. Looking at the way cities are laid out, I can see why such a high proportion of the Dutch population cycles! The blue suits the car very well and so do those wheels. Do update us once you procure your black front grille. Fantastic review, thoroughly enjoyed it. |
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22nd November 2022, 23:28 | #14 |
Distinguished - BHPian | Re: Owning a car in the country of bikes and windmills | My BMW 318i (G20) | Ownership Review Thanks for this elaborate write up of your car and transport related topics in my home country the Netherlands. Glad you are enjoying yourself and the experience is overal positive. Not quite sure why the dealer had to take you somewhere to transfer the title of the car. Normally that is all done on line. You do need a so called Digi-ID and perhaps you haven’t got one yet. If not, I suggest you get it quickly as it makeshift a lot easier. From filling out your tax, to transferring car tittles, paying traffic fines online and a million other things. WHEN I bought my Jeep about 6 months ago the owner had los the code you mentioned. With her Digi-ID she could get a new code, we used it to transfer the title to me with my Digi-I’d en than I paid her with an online bank transfer, so my money in her account within seconds. The whole process took about four minutes sitting at their kitchen table drinking coffee. Enjoy your new car, very nice! Jeroen Last edited by Jeroen : 22nd November 2022 at 23:32. |
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23rd November 2022, 00:28 | #15 | ||
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| Re: Owning a car in the country of bikes and windmills | My BMW 318i (G20) | Ownership Review Quote:
There was a suggestion to take a trip to lapland from my wife, but I wanted to check if I can survive the relatevely mild dutch winter before venturing out into north Quote:
There was a bit of confusion at dealership too, as they were not sure about this and calls had to be made to the RDW to confirm this. Apparently its not everyday a chap walks into a dealer and goes "I want to buy a car, but I do not have a licence" | ||
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