Camaro's are clunkers?Papa John’s planned to offer all Camaro owners a free pizza on Wednesday.
Camaro's are clunkers?
I kinda liked the older Mustangs. I am bigoted toward Camaros and Trans Ams. When I was in HS it seemed all the rich kids who were real butt wipes had a Camaro or Trans Am that mommy and daddy had bought them. I cannot recall one that made it to graduation without being wrecked. Based on what I see at one of the local HS now that type of car has changed to BMW.Mustangs, too...
IMHO, pretty much anything GM makes is a clunker.
I kinda liked the older Mustangs. I am bigoted toward Camaros and Trans Ams. When I was in HS it seemed all the rich kids who were real butt wipes had a Camaro or Trans Am that mommy and daddy had bought them. I cannot recall one that made it to graduation without being wrecked. Based on what I see at one of the local HS now that type of car has changed to BMW.
Here it's Mustangs. There's actually a game based around it, kinda like punch buggy.
And rarely does a week go by without someone totaling theirs.
And what do mommy and daddy do? Buy a new one for their precious snowflake.
...
I kinda liked the older Mustangs. I am bigoted toward Camaros and Trans Ams. When I was in HS it seemed all the rich kids who were real butt wipes had a Camaro or Trans Am that mommy and daddy had bought them. I cannot recall one that made it to graduation without being wrecked. Based on what I see at one of the local HS now that type of car has changed to BMW.
So, Tony, I guess that technically makes you one of mommy and daddy's precious snowflakes.
Yep. Unfortunately, as far as today's automotive technology is concerned, there isn't a single domestic car that isn't a clunker. Sad, but true
I still think the U.S. automakers produce the best light trucks and SUV's. However, Toyota et al make some good trucks also and have caught up in that arena.
I haven't bought an American passenger car since 1981.
Neither Toyota nor Nissan trucks hold up under severe use like Ford, Chevy or Dodge (talking pickups here, medium-duty cab/chassis trucks another story).
When I was in high school, there was this guy who's parents bought him a brand new sports car for getting his license. He killed himself that day!
Neither Toyota nor Nissan trucks hold up under severe use like Ford, Chevy or Dodge (talking pickups here, medium-duty cab/chassis trucks another story).
The Nissan/Fuso/Mistubishi heavy duty trucks (non-consumer, but analogous to F450/F550/F650) seem to do quite well...
Cheers,
-Andrew
I was not really being completely serious. The technical merits of a car are secondary to whether or not you like that car. If you like it, then that's really all there is to it. I'm not saying your car is "bad" - it's all a matter of preference, obviously.so, in your opinion, what car isn't a clunker?
and why?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wtxiMGA8QRQThat's why I sad the U.S. still make the BEST trucks. I do think the Japanese automakers are getting a lot closer and for the average Joe needing a truck they are pretty darn good. I know not a pickup, but I think the Toyota Forerunner is the best in its class of SUV. I saw lots of built up 4runners in the mountains of Colorado, doing harder trails than my Jeep.
...gave its life that I might live when a Ford Bronco turned in front of me...
Spike, I admit that that's a decent engine. But, it's about 6 years too late and it's not used on most of their cars. 6 years is a LONG time, and that's just for that particular engine. They still make plenty 4-5L V8s that barely make 300hp. That's just a waste of fuel....Felix, while I agree that GM has needed to step it up on interior appointments, they're getting there, and the engine technology is quite strong; your perception that the engines produce a "tiny amount of horsepower" is simply wrong.
I cannot speak for Chrysler, but Ford and GM are producing V6 engines which have outstanding specific output, including (in particular) GM's 3.6 L direct-injection V6 engine which produces 304HP and 273 lb-ft without any form of boost. This is, by any measure, an exceptional stat.
I don't think that's true. Of course, simpler engines are generally more reliable. But that said, I'd be more than happy to spend $1,000 every 60,000 miles if I get an engine with lots of torque and good fuel consumption in return.The other thing which bears mention is this: Detroit tends to produce engines which (1) are better-suited to hot-weather operations, something which the Euro nameplates have only lately been able to tackle well, and (2) are much less maintenance-intensive (eg, no timing belts with mandatory $1,000+ replacements every 60k miles).
Huh? I'm sorry, that is so wrong I don't really know how to explain it. I'm not a car expert, but I know quite a few. The quality is not even remotely comparable. But that said, of course overall quality matters little if one only cares about a subset. If you look at the whole picture - live axle suspensions, transmissions from the early 90s, little torque, cheap plastics - there's just no comparison. For highway driving, of course, a domestic car will do just fine.I love the German cars, have had two Audis (ran one up to 160k miles before selling, other gave its life that I might live when a Ford Bronco turned in front of me), a BMW (drove like a dream, but interior parts rattling and falling off like the leaves in autumn- sharp contrast with the bank-vault-like interiors of the Audi, and maintenance expense which shocked the conscience).
Fact is, though, every measurable survey of reliability and quality shows that the quantitative quality difference between American cars and most foreign nameplates (specifically including the various asian brands) is negligible.
You know, I think cars really are just like any other luxury good. There are incredible differences, but they might not be relevant if you don't care about them. I do appreciate the fact that there are no cheap plastics in my car, unlike every other US car I've driven, including corvettes and escalade. I do appreciate the fact that my electronics don't die after 2 years like in my friend's Taurus. And I do appreciate the excellent suspension and power response, which blows every US sedan out of the water. But it really depends on what you're looking for.Myself, I've driven a Cadillac Deville to about 180,000 miles, sold it to brother-in-law and he drove it another 60k or so; and I drove a Jeep Cherokee to over 150k and sold it running and looking like new. So much, of course, depends upon the quality of the dealer and service experience.
All that said, I am Jonesing for an Audi A5 - and the Cabrio hits dealers next month...
I was not really being completely serious. The technical merits of a car are secondary to whether or not you like that car. If you like it, then that's really all there is to it. I'm not saying your car is "bad" - it's all a matter of preference, obviously.
I think the perception that domestic cars aren't that good comes from a few sources. For example, most people in Europe spend twice as much on their car as people do here. As a result, their cars, on average, are quite a bit better, and they're surprised just how basic they are here. It's not a fair comparison.
As far as the more expensive domestic cars go - those are sub-par from a technical point of view. Cheap plastics, old engine technology, live axle suspension (a technology that was originally introduced in the 1940s), cheap transmissions, vague steering, etc. I drove a Corvette a few months ago. That was probably the only domestic car I've driven that had good handling. The interior was still cheap and incredibly plasticky. I've also driven countless Cadillac STSs and CTSs as rental cars. Same thing there - cheap plastics, big engines that produce a tiny amount of horsepower, and poor handling. Recently, I've been driving a lot of rental Infinity M35s. At $40,000, they're about the same as a STS, but gone is the cheap interior, terrible handling, lack of acceleration....
I know a few people who work for GM. They know just too well that they can't, in the foreseeable future, compete with high-end foreign cars. So they're focused on other areas. They made one very clever move: build trucks and sell them to people who don't need trucks. Trucks are very cheap to make, yet people were willing to pay a premium for them. It worked as long as gas prices stayed low.....
I was not really being completely serious. The technical merits of a car are secondary to whether or not you like that car. If you like it, then that's really all there is to it. I'm not saying your car is "bad" - it's all a matter of preference, obviously.
I think the perception that domestic cars aren't that good comes from a few sources. For example, most people in Europe spend twice as much on their car as people do here. As a result, their cars, on average, are quite a bit better, and they're surprised just how basic they are here. It's not a fair comparison.
As far as the more expensive domestic cars go - those are sub-par from a technical point of view. Cheap plastics, old engine technology, live axle suspension (a technology that was originally introduced in the 1940s), cheap transmissions, vague steering, etc. I drove a Corvette a few months ago. That was probably the only domestic car I've driven that had good handling. The interior was still cheap and incredibly plasticky. I've also driven countless Cadillac STSs and CTSs as rental cars. Same thing there - cheap plastics, big engines that produce a tiny amount of horsepower, and poor handling. Recently, I've been driving a lot of rental Infinity M35s. At $40,000, they're about the same as a STS, but gone is the cheap interior, terrible handling, lack of acceleration....
I know a few people who work for GM. They know just too well that they can't, in the foreseeable future, compete with high-end foreign cars. So they're focused on other areas. They made one very clever move: build trucks and sell them to people who don't need trucks. Trucks are very cheap to make, yet people were willing to pay a premium for them. It worked as long as gas prices stayed low.....
Well, I like my Mercury Mariner hybrid. My favorite car was my 1993 Ford Explorer Sport. Neither would qualify as clunkers
One way to explain how much I liked my '93 Explorer: Whenever I thought about what I would do if I won the lottery, I didn't dream about replacing the Explorer. There wasn't a single car out there that I would have wanted instead of my Explorer.