Smithy wrote:
Yes I appreciate the "computer says no" concept, but real world experience is that modern cars are easier to run and it seems most people enjoy the benefits of that.
Not when the "computer says no". The old Fords had no computer (nor "lambda sensor!) and never said no. A computer only has to "say no" once on a dark, rainy night, and it's a sad, crap car forever.
Smithy wrote:
Modern cars aren't always on the ramps at the dealer ... I can't believe I am saying this because I still have my Capri and it's been fantastic ... the effort required to keep it at that level of reliability is much greater than newer cars.
Fine, but it was no effort when it was new, if it was like my Cortina. I'm trying to compare "old new cars" with "new new cars", if you can see what I am saying! New new cars are the worst of all - look at that fuel fiasco, where all the lemons were the new ones with the lambda sensors (as usual).
Smithy wrote:
Do people even want to do this anymore?
No, but I want "new old" cars, not lemons. That is to say - I want new cars that have the advantages of new new cars (decent heater, CD, air bags … ) with the simplicity and reliability of the old ones, before planned obsolescence won out. If I had to guess, the best were Japanese cars of the late 80's/early 90's. They had it all, just before the computer, lambda sensor and catalytic converter started the big decline to what we have now, i.e. punters paying £600 quid to stop the dash board warning lights!