Originally Posted By: rslifkin
If I wanted an old Jag as a DD, it would have to be an 88 XJ6. .... They seem to be a bit more reliable than most others.
I'd consider an XJ-S to be a little crazy though.
Having owned four of the Ford era cars, and still owning two, I just disagree with this in its entirety. The '88 and '89 vehicles were notoriously unreliable and thrown together, and well deserved the moniker that one needed two Jags to be sure of having one that ran. My first Jag was an '89. They are great driving cars, maybe better than some of the later cars - but from a reliability standpoint they just sucked.
By 1994, the year of the car the OP was formerly considering, Ford had made tremendous strides in reliability on the cars. They were not the equal of the late 90's or the 2000 Jags that are on par with Lexus for quality and reliability (or perhaps better considering the Lexus UA issues), but they are very good cars, and largely free of the problems that plaque their german contemporaries (with the exception of the early AJ-V8 Nikasil engined cars - Nikasil worked out slightly better for Jag than it did for BMW, but that's really not saying very much). I still have my 1994 V12 powered Xj12 so still have first hand experience with that era car.
To the OP: I would not, repeat not, trade a new car for a seventeen year old car, regardless of the marques involved. That said, the car you were considering should be easy and pleasant to maintain, parts are readily available and not expensive, and there is no reason that the '94 car cannot be a reliable DD. There is a long and shameful history of consistently incompetent service from Jaguar dealers, "specialists", and everyone else offering to work on these cars. The big caveat is to avoid, at all cost, letting people work on the car that do not know what they are doing. They will, as Trav warned, likely turn minor PITA's into expensive problems.
Kirby Palm's "Experience in a Book, Help for the Jaguar Xj-S Owner" is now 700 plus pages and is still a free download at jag-lovers.org. If you are DIY competent, or want to get that way, the XJ-S, especially an AJ6 or AJ16 powered car, is an easy car to maintain.