Sorry, not dieselfobia at all, each to his own and it was intended as a tongue in cheek comment. I just don't like them even though all of my company cars for the last 20 years have been diesels. I like the sound of a V8, I like the smooth power, I like to be able to hit the sport button, floor the throttle and wonder how the hell you can get something that weighs that much to accelerate that fast. With a diesel, I don't like the rattle, or the driving dynamics. When did anyone ever rev a diesel engine with a big silly grin on their face because of the noise it makes? It's like this years F1 cars, the old V8 with an 18,000 rpm limit sounded gorgeous but the new ones with a V6 and a 15,000 rpm limit just sound wrong. If they had fitted a diesel engine in the P38 that gave the same amount of power as the petrol then I could see the point but it's a heavy car anyway and it needs the extra grunt to make it enjoyable to drive. It may be able to keep up with normal traffic but what about the times when you want to overtake a couple of trucks in convoy?
As for the running costs, i bought my Classic LSE from a friend of a friend. 4.2 litre V8 and already on LPG when he bought it. It had a vertical toroidal tank in the boot on the opposite side to the spare so it looked like there were two spare wheels. It also meant that with the seats folded you still had the full length and had only lost about 250mm of width. It would do around 200 miles on 60 litres of gas so that works out at 15 miles per gallon. But as petrol is twice the price of gas, he was paying the equivalent of 30 miles per gallon. After I bought the LSE he replaced it with a 2.5DSE P38. Compared with the V8 it was gutless, slow and sluggish so he drove it hard all the time and got 25 miles to a gallon of diesel (and diesel in the UK is more expensive than petrol). So it actually cost him more to run and he got less enjoyment out of driving it. Both my P38s are on LPG, in fact, I can't see myself ever driving anything not on LPG. I don't think I could afford to run a P38 on petrol, or not to use it the way I do, I'd constantly be looking at the fuel gauge and would drive it much more gently because I'd be thinking how much it was going to cost me to fill it. Both have toroidal tanks in the spare wheel well so no boot space is lost unless I want to carry a full sized spare which I do when doing long journeys, the rest of the time, I just have a pump in the boot.