No.. stick with the Citroen..
You can have a 'classic FIAT' in years to come.
Once PSA have finished making the interesting cars
That’s true. I suppose by the time I’m done with this DS there could be a better choice of Fiats merged with PSA technology which I’ll have experience with then.
It's up to you, if the Citroën is more suited to your current requirements then it's a backward step.
Seem to recall you did a lot of miles so diesel supermini would make sense.
I remember the ride quality on the DS3 being surprisingly bad, don't think ours had sports suspension (it was only a 90 e-hdi) and it still rode like a skate board. Smaller wheels and bigger section tyres would help a bit (C3 wheels are 3% larger in diameter but share a tyre size with many VW and Ford cars so tyres are super cheap as very common). But I always got the feeling the damping was very stiff which tyres can only help so much.
I remember being quite surprised when it arrived as I'd recently picked the Mazda which has a similar tyre size and although it's firm at lower speeds it never jars and shudders and once you get up to 60 odd mph it's nicely judged. DS3 seemed to find bumps the other car didn't even notice and was so firm it rattled the interior fixtures loose..or that could have been the old 90 diesel either way it was full of rattles day 1.
If you want a Panda though, you can get one similar to the one you had 2015 on for roughly a bag of crisps and can of pop in automotive terms so if you have somewhere to put it a weekend car is not exactly unattainable.
The skateboard analogy is spot on!!! Lol. I seem to remember an ex girlfriends e-HDI 90 Citroen badged DS 3 being much smoother. Then again I had the Panda 169 back then. A week into owning my 2017 Panda I drove the 169 before selling it. The brakes were poor, steering numb and felt much worse in comparison. I was expecting the same driving the ‘15 Panda vs. The DS but as I mentioned above it wasn’t so bad. Only the speed difference stood out.
But you’re right. The mileage was too much for the Panda I think. I suppose maybe next year I might be doing more high miles again (fingers crossed) and this will be clearly more suited.
Fiat basically stripped the later punto of luxuries they even took away the EVO led tail lights after 2015. You won’t get a later model punto that has as good a spec at the DS
you’re comparing apples to oranges to some extent, the panda is a non turbo petrol and the citroen a turbo diesel so they will have very different driving characteristics. If you drive on the turbo you will get much better performance but if you’re used to non turbo petrol cars then you won’t be used to using the turbo.
Also if you bought the DS on finance then you’re going to cost yourself a fortune to change it so quickly
Yeah, I think I should stick with the DS. As much as I enjoyed the Pandas.
It made me realise though how different the two cars truly are. I do admire the simplicity and robustness of the Panda. I always didn’t like the idea of big complicated engines and electronics and designs. But in saying that, I’m lucky to have the facility to be able to fix / learn how to fix this car too and save money on not having to pay a mechanic. So when the DS inevitably does break down more often than the Panda will, it’s a good opportunity to learn.
It’s just a shame all the knowledge of ICE repairs probably won’t be doing me well as long as it has probably helped some of you guys over the decades due to the electric move.
Still, I appreciate all the advice. The DS stays. And I will watch to see what Fiat and PSA can release over time.

