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Curious. What forum members would buy American and for what reasons. What prompted this poll is below. There was also the warranty thread.
I was in the barber shop the other day and over heard the next barber down talking. He is in the market for a new truck. As I listened to him and others talk about all the problems with Chevy vs ford, I spoke up and said "why not just get a Toyota and be done with it". He looked at me like I slapped his mother. Then he replied, "I don't like slitting my own throat!" the other 2 older gentlemen gave their nod of approval. I wanted to reply how do you feel about Chevy slitting it for you but that would've been disrespectful.
I own a 96 Toyota Land cruiser (loaded) -231K on the clock.
Since owner ship I have added:
1. New starter added at 226K.
2. Rear heater hose sprung a leak 2 years ago.
3. The bulb illuminating the letter D on the shift indicator has blown.
Outside of batteries, tires pads etc. These are the only issues I've faced in 13 years. We got a 99 Mazda Millenia in 2001. Come 2003 we had all sorts of problems. We were replacing something every 6 months. This is why we settled on the Camry. Not the most exciting car but Toyota has proved to be a reliable one for us. Then there's my dad who only buys American. I've seen many of his new Lincolns, dodges and fords go back for repair work within a year.
So I don't buy domestic.
I love my 968 for what it is & don't hate it for what it isn't!
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Unless you count Volvo as Ford I am unlikely to buy American for quality reasons. I just purchased Volvo #2 based on the quality/dependability of #1.
The only Brand new car I ever purchased was a 1988 Chevy Beretta (OK, don't beat on me, wife liked it). At 60k it was played. I have been buying Japanese cas with 60k miles every since and typically get another 100k out of them.
Just my $.02
Jay
“Faster, Faster, until the thrill of speed overcomes the fear of death.” - Hunter S. Thompson
"I couldn't find the sports car of my dreams, so I built it myself." ~Dr. Ferdinand Porsche
"968Forums, a quaint little drinking community with a serious horsepower problem"
"Life's journey is not to arrive at the grave safely in a well-preserved body, but rather to skid in sideways, totally worn-out, shouting, 'Holy sh*t! What a ride!'"- Unknown
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<!--quoteo(post=69259:date=Mar 24 2009, 07:47 AM:name=biotechee)-->QUOTE (biotechee @ Mar 24 2009, 07:47 AM)
<{POST_SNAPBACK}><!--quotec-->Chrysler- it'll be a cold day in hell before I buy a Chrysler.
Neighbors bought a brand new Chrysler T&C- 1 year old. Tranny replaced under warranty already. Already going back in for more leaks. This is their second Chrysler minivan. Traded in their 1st on this new one. The first one had the same issues, plus a long history of visiting the dealer for repairs.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
I have not 1, not 2 but 4 stories just like that. 2 dealing with the 300 and 2 with the T&C.
Its hard to believe that these major issues go unchecked and the dealers have got to be frustrated as well.
I love my 968 for what it is & don't hate it for what it isn't!
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<!--quoteo(post=69260:date=Mar 24 2009, 07:50 AM:name=PorscheDude)-->QUOTE (PorscheDude @ Mar 24 2009, 07:50 AM)
<{POST_SNAPBACK}><!--quotec-->Besides your Camery probably has way more "American" content than a Chevy, Ford or Chrysler.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
True. I read about that in a mag a while back. The Camry and accord are about 60% and 70% american parts. Didn't know it at time of purchase though.
Glad to be doing my part [img]style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/tongue.gif[/img]
If you come across a chart listing what parts are American made, pass it along. I'm curious if any parts of the powertrain are in there.
I love my 968 for what it is & don't hate it for what it isn't!
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<!--quoteo-->QUOTE <!--quotec-->american quality has fallen, is generally more expensive than japanese stuff, and is not supported as well by the company<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
While quite a popular opinion among politicians and pundits these days, none of these contentions survives scrutiny once you stop thinking like it is 1985 - when all three were true. Did the Big Three build some terrible cars and loose all touch with their customers? Yes they did. Did they for far too long sink all of their time and energy into SUVs? Yes (but that was what we the public wanted...) they did. Is this true today? No.
Some facts:
- Car and Driver just chose the new Ford Fusion hybrid in a comparison of Toyota, Ford, Nissan, and Chevy hybrid sedans - it was not even close in their opinion - and the Ford was cheaper.
- Buick just won JD Power's survey of dependability (tied surprisingly with Jaguar)
- US manufacturers are offering their cars at historically low prices
- Chevrolet is closer to offering an actually practical true electric sedan than any car maker in the world.
Some great current US cars:
- Cadillac CTS
- Corvette
- New F150 and Silverado and Dodge Ram
- Ford Fusion
- Chevrolet Mailibu
- The upcoming Taurus replacement looks stunning - and the SHO version will be a screamer.
Are there still some crappy US cars - sure. But both GM and Ford have made tremendous strides in the past 10 years. The Chevy Malibu is a superior car (I have driven all three) to either the Camry or Accord - and less expensive. Toyota and Nissan truck sales have never even come close to the volume of US - because the trucks are not as good. Toyota quality has slipped in JD Power's initial quality surveys for 4 straight years.
However - the industry is still in real trouble. The problems of outmoded and unneeded capacity, high wages, and legacy health care costs may yet kill them all, and some of their cars do suck.
Now, does this mean we should buy American cars? Not at all... you should buy what you like. But the basic (and very popular in Washington) premise that American manufacturers cannot compete/do not make good cars is just not true.
As for Volvo - I have an S60 T5. While I love the car, it has spent literally months in the shop with problems that they could never diagnose properly. Luckily it was all under warranty and I had a loaner the whole time.
<b>Important Caveat</b> - None of this discussion applies to Chrysler, whose cars in general are just awful (expect the Dodge Ram, Chrysler 300 (getting old), and Jeep Wrangler).
Ralph
2002 Carrera Coupe - Orient Red Metallic
'93 968 Coupe Amazon Green Metallic w/airbox mod (sold 2009)
'89 944 S2 (gone to live in the Midwest)
'77 911S (RIP)
And a whole bunch of VWs over the years...
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Dealership problems are a constant... with both domestic and foreign. Local Chrysler service department just quoted my son $600 for a 30k service on his 2004 PT Cruiser! At the same time, for years when I owned VWs I had to carefully watch the service invoices for padding and outright thievery.
Ralph
2002 Carrera Coupe - Orient Red Metallic
'93 968 Coupe Amazon Green Metallic w/airbox mod (sold 2009)
'89 944 S2 (gone to live in the Midwest)
'77 911S (RIP)
And a whole bunch of VWs over the years...
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I have only lived in the US briefly and drove Japanese then, so I can't comment on build quality, reliability etc. But as a frequent visitor for the last 3 decades, I can say that average DD american cars are SO ugly and lacking in style I would never contemplate buying one!
92 968 Coupe, Polar Silver/Black, 6 speed
88 928 S4, Lagoon Green/Cobalt Blue
79 911 SC Track car
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I haven't purchased an American Car in a long time now, mostly due to the fact that US auto makers haven't marketed the kind of cars I'm interested in driving. When I bought my first Audi Avant in 1993, there were two American choices if you wanted a station wagon and not an SUV, Ford and Mercury. I tried them both and found them to be underpowered and uncomfortable to drive for long periods. That Audi lasted 11 years and 249,000 miles before it was totaled in an accident. The build quality and design of that car saved my wife's life.
Watched Top Gear last night and they tested an American made car that uses a hydrogen fuel cell to generate electricity to power and electric motor power train. A smart design that outclasses the current hybrids by a mile. They also did a drag race between a Tesla and a Lotus, no contest, the Tesla blew the Lotus off, but it's limited range and lengthy recharge time limit its practicality. I would consider a hydrogen fuel cell car as a daily driver. I believe that widespreard acceptance of this technology would go a very long way towards preserving our dwindling oil resources so that there will still be gasoline to run our Porsches on.
I would like to see the american car manufacturers go into bankruptcy so they can shed their onerous union contracts and outrageous pension costs and emerge from bankruptcy leaner and focused on moving forward.
Keep in mind that it was the tremendous manufacturing capability of the US that built this country into the richest most powerful country in the world. If we continue to let our manufacturing jobs go overseas, our economy will become ever more unsettled and we will loose our economic and political influence in the world. There is no way we can continue to be a powerhouse if the majority of jobs avaliable are partime minimum wage jobs at Wal-Mart, Stabucks or Micky D's.
Chris Vais
1994 Coupe Midnight Blue Metallic
2015 Audi Allroad Quattro Brilliant Black
2008 Audi A5 Brilliant Black
(This post was last modified: 03-24-2009, 03:19 PM by
Chris Vais.)