
So, I'll kick off with my list...
- Vauxhall Cavalier GLS Coupe. First car. On an 'R' plate (1977). Looked like an Opel Manta but without the slats in the front grill. Yellow when I bought it but I resprayed it black. Loved that car.
- Vauxhall Cavalier SRI hatchback: 'A' reg, red. OK, but wasn't really that exciting. Sold it after a few months to my brother who kept it for about 4 years and never had any problems.
- Opel Manta GTE Hatchback: 'A' reg, bright red. Big Jetex exhaust. Looked and sounded fantastic. UJ in the reconditioned propshaft let go on the M11 the second day I had it and the dealer lent me a beige Austin All-Aggro for a fortnight while the Manta was repaired. Great car. Wish I still had it (the Manta, not the All-Aggro!)
- Ford Escort XR3i: 'B' plate, silver. Complete nightmare. Doors shut with the clanging sound of putting the lid on a metal dustbin. Had to keep changin brake discs due to judder that shook the whole car. Bonnet came unbonded from the frame so it lifted at the corners at speeds above 40mph. Poor earths causing starting problems and rear light problems. Only 3 years old but already had rust in the front valance, wheel arches and tailgate. A real disappointment as I'd always wanted one of these but it just turned out to be a Dagenham Dustbin

- Fiat Panda: 'Y' plate (1983?). Bought this for a girlfriend to learn to drive in. Beige top half, Black bottom half (the Fiat, not the girlfriend). Always a challenge to get it started - had to creep quietly up and surprise it otherwise you'd be sitting there cranking it over for half an hour before it fired up. Deckchair style seats and a top speed of 80mph down hill with a tailing wind. Fond memories.

- Renault 5 GT Turbo: 'D' reg - Red, Phase 1 car with the black bumpers. A true pocket rocket. Great fun to drive. Always put a smile on my face but she had to go when petrol prices went through the roof (the first Gulf war). Decided I should go for a 'sensible car', so bought the Citroen next on the list. DVLA check shows my old Renault is still alive: D510 LCE is SORNed at the moment.
- Citroen BX19RD: 'E' plate, Burgundy metallic with powder blue interior. Bored me to tears, but did a million miles to the gallon. sold it to my dad after about 3 months who loved it a kept it for years.
- MG Metro: 'C' plate, Silver. Another car bought for the same girlfriend who was still learning to drive. She did eventually pass in this one. Fun little car with squeaky hydragas suspension and a driver's seat that had a habit of collapsing . Alternator bolt sheared and the drive belt sliced through a radiator hose one Saturday morning heading north through the Hatfield tunnel. Fixed at the roadside with gaffer tape and a bottle of Evian!
- Lancia Delta HF Turbo: 'D' plate, metallic grey. MOT failure when I bought it, but soon sorted with a couple of new handbrake cables and a few rubber suspension bushes. Had a recon turbo fitted by the previous owner, but it still sucked oil through the seals on the overrun, so was a bit smoky. lots of turbo induced torque steer. Gearbox mounting let go after a heavy landing when I launched it of a hump-backed bridge in rural Bedfordshire.

- Lancia Delta HF Turbo: 'F' plate, White with all the Martini racing stripes. A spur of the moment buy when I spotted it in a local garage (so I had a brace of Lancias at the time). Lots of fun in this car as the overboost feature worked on this one. Stood out like a sore thumb, and clocked up a few fixed penalty points before it went.
- Peugeot 309 GTI: 'G' plate, black. Had this at the same time as the Lancias. Brilliant car, but I gave it to the girlfriend when we split up. She caved the front end in a few weeks later.
- BMW 320: 'B' plate. Another 'sensible' car I ran for a while (still had the Lancias, and the MG Metro I think). Metallic green with green belour interior. Let it go after a few months. Seemed to eat rear wheel bearings.
- Rover 216GTi: Red, 'H' reg 3 door hatchback. This was actually a really good car.. seemed to be solidly built, quite quick, looked smart, I quite enjoyed owning this but sold it when I got my first company car.
- Mazda MX6: 'M' plate, red. My first company car. I can't believe these cars weren't more popular than they were. 2.5 litre v6, revved to ridiculous rpm as smooth as silk. Spent hours every weekend cleaning an polishing til it gleamed. Great car, but a little unlucky with it (when it went back after 60k miles, just the roof was original) - Broken into 3 times, so both door skins replaced. Rear ended by Mrs Clio driver as I turned into work (new boot lid, bumper and rear wings). Neighbour dragged his caravan along the n/s (new n/s wings and door). Colleague drove it into back of a Volvo when I was on holiday (new front end). Brilliant car though, and I keep finding myself drawn to these on ebay at the moment - £300 will secure a decent one it seems at the moment (buy the manual, not the auto). A definite future classic.
- Vauxhall Astra Convertible: K plate, dark blue. Bought for the wife (now ex!). Looked the part (the Astra, not the wife). Only a 1.6, but looked like the GTE version. Terrible scuttle shake and the familar vauxhall timing belt whine (could have been the wife?).
- Jeep Cherokee 4.0 LTD. K plate, dark blue. Bought this for the wife when we had our first child as wanted something a bit more solid for the family. I still love these cars.. actually prefer these to the Grand Cherokee I have now. Had the lattice style alloys that were a real pain to keep clean.
- Subaru Impeza Turbo. 'R' reg, Green. Another company car. 16 mpg but absolutely amazing car. 4 wheel drive meant take off was like being shot from a catapult. Managed to keep a clean licence while I had this car, much to my surprise.
- Vauxhall Vectra GSi: 'V' plate. Brown / Burgundy type of yacky colour you used to end up with in your paint pallete at school when you mixed every colour of paint together. I ordered Black, but they cocked up the order. They also forgot to put the oil filler cap on when they delivered the car, so it was back with them for a new engine by lunchtime after the original one emptied all of it's oil inside the engine bay on the A1. 2.5 litre V6 promised so much when it started up, but when the power came in it was only 500 rpm from the rev limiter. Disappointing.
- Mondeo 2 litre company repmobile. 'Y' plate. Blue. 'nuff said.
- Toyota Avensis 2.0 VVTI. '51' plate, silver. Another company repmobile. Nothing exciting, but it did have satnav... which was nice.
- Audi A4 Quattro Deisel. '03' reg, black. Another repmobile, but I did like this car. Loads of torque and quite quick, but had a heavy front end and lots of understeer which was a worry at times.
- Saab 9-3 2.0 Vector Turbo: '56' plate, black. Another company car, and one I did like a lot. Looked smart, went well, but like most modern cars looked very much like everything else out there. Let down by poor dealership - always had problems when it went in for servicing: wheel bolts loose, forgot to change brake pads on one axle, double booking courtesy cars (three times!). Future classic though? Probably not.
That's pretty much it, although I've probably forgotten a few. Plus there were a few pool cars I had for a few weeks (BMW 316 compact, Vectra 1.6 auto, MK1 Audi A4, and so on). Changed jobs and decide to take the cash rather than company car in 2008, working in London so bought the Jeep to run back and forth to the station. So we're left with the list in my signature below, plus the Girlfriend has her daily Peugeot 107 (55mpg and £20 per year road tax). New cars are fine if that's what you want, but give me a barn full of classics or older cars any day - I can maintain them myself and avoid the ridiculous costs the garages charge for often poor quality work (last time the Pug was serviced by an independent garage they wanted £18 + VAT for a wiper blade and over £300 to do front discs and pads

So, what's your list? Any you wished you'd never got rid of? Tempted by ebay in a 'I used to have one of those' kind of way? Which ones would you rather forget?