TurboLlew
Honorary ///Member
It'll be my first car to be entirely honest with you. A little fast would be about 0 to 100 in around 7 seconds or less to be honest something that's got a bit of torque you know. Decently comfortable hopefully I am a bit on the taller end I am 192cm so I know not all cars are made for me and there's a few I've been in that are too small as I have a long torso. Repair prices are not necessarily too much of a hassle for me I'd just prefer something reliable that won't be in for repairs all the time. Also hopefully something that seems modern that's automatic and looks nice on the outside is what I'm hoping for. Thank you very much for the help
The most interesting car that springs to mind (that was also fairly easy to work on, diagnose etc) was the 330ci that recently left my garage. It feels quite modern, built solidly, plenty of fun factor and it was quite comfortable. You can bring it up to date with a newer head unit or sound system - even units that look like they are OEM. That said, you are either going to have to find a fixer upper or wait for a nice one to come up. Parts are mostly available and it is well documented online.
That being said, being old cars (and your budget will ONLY get you old cars if you also want interesting ones), your mileage will vary greatly depending on how much you're willing to learn, what kind of support you have and becoming familiar with self-diagnosing issues and doing some basic repair work.
A sedan or coupe variant is likely going to tick alot of your boxes. While complicated for its day (and a convertible is likely going to have another layer of complication), it is nothing compared to modern turbo cars and their issues.

The owner of this 330ci sent me another early Christmas present to look after for a few weeks in the form of this: this is the opposite and a car I would ABSOLUTELY NOT recommend for a newbie because, while it is built properly and generally looks good, when it goes south, it is orders of magnitude more difficult and more expensive to diagnose, source parts for and repair. It can be very tempting and you will hear lots of guys saying 5ers and 7ers are "alot of car for your money". You need a lot of patience and deep pockets for the ownership experience to be positive. From what you are describing this will NOT be fun. For similar and different reasons, this also goes for the shittier examples of newer (F-series) cars with obviously tampered mileages, loads of repairs and that also have fairly complex electronics

You can also look at vehicles like the Volvo C30 or S40/60 which take HEAVY depreciation knocks. I don't know much about them, but volvo owners tend to be a generally happy bunch - some will no doubt chime in here.