RJM62
Touchdown! Greaser!
- Joined
- Jun 15, 2007
- Messages
- 13,157
- Location
- Upstate New York
- Display Name
Display name:
Geek on the Hill
My cars of whatever brands have always had the stock type stereos. They worked just fine.
Rich
Rich
I guess I would be hard to read by the cars I have and drive. I drive a Tundra, 3000GT, pro street Chevy Luv and when I have the girls a Honda Odyssey. When the wife and I are able to have date night we bring out the Lexus LS460L.
I can't quite explain it, but I love Volvos, but not the old boxy ones. It started with the curvy 2001 S60, and now I have a 2015 XC60, and I love it. I honestly don't know what that says about me.
Other car is a Scion tC, which I also love, since it's so reliable (it's basically a base-model Camry with a body kit).
Perfect! Since I'm a helicopter mechanic.
That's great! Someone with more cars than me.
I guess I would be hard to read by the cars I have and drive. I drive a Tundra, 3000GT, pro street Chevy Luv and when I have the girls a Honda Odyssey. When the wife and I are able to have date night we bring out the Lexus LS460L.
I drive an '03 Volvo S60 2.4T. Really a neat car to drive and I always get complements on how new it looks, even though it's an '03.
But... In the last year I've:
Refurbished the ETM (car was stuck in limp mode due to potentiometer error)
Replaced the right half-axle (started clunking)
Replaced serpentine tensioner idler pully (had excessive play)
Replaced water pump (coolant crust forming around gasket)
Replaced timing belt components (which are limited to around 100k miles)
And in the next month or so, I'm going to have to replace the power steering pump, PS reservoir, PS suction hose and do a flush of the PS system with pricey german made PS fluid.
I love my Volvo!!!!
I guess I have a bit of this too
Any of you guys drive an Audi? I'm due for a new car, and I usually default to a sensible Japanese option and drive it forever. But I really like the A5 - even more the S5 - and am thinking of going outside my comfort zone and getting one. I'm just scared of what'll happen when it goes out of warranty in a few years. Perhaps I should be like every other Angelino and just lease a new one every three years.
I go to Germany several times a year. Driving on the autobahn I see Audi's everywhere. FAR more than Mercedes, or any other premium line car. Tells me they must have it together. I would love to have the big Audi wagon I see going 200 kph+ all the time.
What I remember from my time in Germany was all of the MB A-class subcompacts running around. Regardless of the car's merits (small, efficient, gas is expensive in Urrup) they would never bring one of those to the US -- it would torpedo their entire "Luxury" brand image. Everywhere else in the world, an E-class (usually diesel) is a taxicab -- who's paying $60k for a Caprice or a Crown Vic?
Acura (Honda), Infinity (Nissan), Lexus (Toyota) were all invented for the US market solely to differentiate the brands and extract more money for a vehicle that is only superficially different. That's the view of the US to the world's car makers -- rich and stupid.
Here's my take on the whole Subaru/liberal fascination. I just bought a Legacy myself specifically for the AWD performance, and am very impressed with it. I'd never be mistaken by anyone for a modern liberal/leftist.
People in Wisconsin don't drive Subarus because they're liberal. They drive Subarus because they live in f***ing Wisconsin, where it happens to snow a lot, and Subarus tend to shine. I'm sure plenty of centrists and right-thinkers in Wisconsin drive Subarus as well. Coincidentally, however, Wisconsinites on the whole tend to be a hotbed of liberalism. So, liberals elsewhere in the country, where an AWD Subaru has far less practical use, buy and drive a Subaru to advertise their affection for Wisconsin, and establish their affiliation with their political idols. Its the same reason any sports fan buys a jersey of their favorite team -- not because they have any intention of playing the game. This monkey see, monkey do behavior, in apparent disregard of practical or technical considerations, is what the left calls "independent thought".
A very similar line of reasoning -- that self expression largely drives vehicle choice -- nicely explains the popularity of the Toyota Pious... uh, Prius, particularly compared with, say a hybrid Honda Civic that is visually almost indistinguishable from its gasoline-powered cousin. I mean what's the point of saving the world with your choice of car if the whole world can't SEE that you're saving the world everywhere you drive?!? [ETA: linky]
I'm just scared of what'll happen when it goes out of warranty in a few years. Perhaps I should be like every other Angelino and just lease a new one every three years.
Replaced timing belt components (which are limited to around 100k miles)
Refurbished the ETM (car was stuck in limp mode due to potentiometer error)
Replaced the right half-axle (started clunking)
Replaced serpentine tensioner idler pully (had excessive play)
Replaced water pump (coolant crust forming around gasket)
Replaced timing belt components (which are limited to around 100k miles)
Clearly another exception. :wink2:
How many miles on your Volvo?
John
Just had that done on our XC90 last month. $1100 job. We just turned 125k miles and going good. never had a problem with the ride. Though it does clunk when turning out of a parking spot at times. But it doesn't happen often.
A coworker had an Audi. It was a maintenance hog and nobody around here would work on it. But I would also suspect the car was not very well taken care of to begin with.
For crying out loud, you broke through 100k. That's quite a bit even for a Volvo.
Do you want to hear what I replaced on my Jeep Wrangler?
Male homosexuals?The parking lot here at work includes many Subarus (and pickups). I can assure you that most of the owners are neither liberal nor female.
I'm betting I have the most. Wait...
Do all the vehicles in my front yard up on blocks count?
the bed of a pickup on blocks
It's not brand-specific, but quite a few people have accused me of various psychological conditions because I prefer manual-transmission cars. If I'm buying new, I won't even consider an automatic.
I am having difficulty finding a manual transmission Wrangler in inventory. People just don't seem to want to shift anymore, and I don't count Tiptronic "shifters" as manual as there is NO MANUAL CLUTCH.
I have the same problem when shopping for a car. When I was at the Audi dealer last week and mentioned that it had to be a stick, he began to chuckle. I had given only two parameters for the A5 - manual transmission, and a specific (common) color. I left everything else open ended. There were two cars in the entire nation - the closest one being in Texas. Fortunately he had a used version on the lot with a manual - at least I could test drive it properly.
There's just something about the motion that I love - it's adds tremendously to the enjoyment that I get out of driving.
It's not brand-specific, but quite a few people have accused me of various psychological conditions because I prefer manual-transmission cars. If I'm buying new, I won't even consider an automatic.
Most often the diagnosis is that I'm trying to act like a young guy because I don't want to grow old, which I think is bizarre considering that more old people than young ones know how to drive stick. Besides, if you don't get old, you get dead; so in balance, growing old's not that bad.
The actual reasons are less clinical.
Firstly, I like stick. I learned how to drive on a 65 Dodge Dart with a three-speed column shifter, long before I was old enough to legally drive.
Secondly, if you know what you're doing, you can dramatically improve your MPG with a stick. I average ~35 MPG in my Soul using 89-octane gas, or ~38 MPG using ethanol-free 91-octane.
Finally, an automatic transmission is one of the very few things on a car that I can't fix myself. I could change a clutch on a manual transmission if I had to, but automatic transmissions are just too complex.
Rich
So, in other words....you like to shift your stick in order to maximize your enjoyment while driving?
I share the affliction.
It's not brand-specific, but quite a few people have accused me of various psychological conditions because I prefer manual-transmission cars. If I'm buying new, I won't even consider an automatic.
Most often the diagnosis is that I'm trying to act like a young guy because I don't want to grow old, which I think is bizarre considering that more old people than young ones know how to drive stick. Besides, if you don't get old, you get dead; so in balance, growing old's not that bad.
The actual reasons are less clinical.
Firstly, I like stick. I learned how to drive on a 65 Dodge Dart with a three-speed column shifter, long before I was old enough to legally drive.
Secondly, if you know what you're doing, you can dramatically improve your MPG with a stick. I average ~35 MPG in my Soul using 89-octane gas, or ~38 MPG using ethanol-free 91-octane.
Finally, an automatic transmission is one of the very few things on a car that I can't fix myself. I could change a clutch on a manual transmission if I had to, but automatic transmissions are just too complex.
Rich
It's not brand-specific, but quite a few people have accused me of various psychological conditions because I prefer manual-transmission cars. If I'm buying new, I won't even consider an automatic.
Most often the diagnosis is that I'm trying to act like a young guy because I don't want to grow old, which I think is bizarre considering that more old people than young ones know how to drive stick. Besides, if you don't get old, you get dead; so in balance, growing old's not that bad.
The actual reasons are less clinical.
Firstly, I like stick. I learned how to drive on a 65 Dodge Dart with a three-speed column shifter, long before I was old enough to legally drive.
Secondly, if you know what you're doing, you can dramatically improve your MPG with a stick. I average ~35 MPG in my Soul using 89-octane gas, or ~38 MPG using ethanol-free 91-octane.
Finally, an automatic transmission is one of the very few things on a car that I can't fix myself. I could change a clutch on a manual transmission if I had to, but automatic transmissions are just too complex.
Rich