dcbwhaley wrote:
Quote:
10 years ago, nobody in their right mind would have bought a 10 year old Escort with (say) 100k on the clock. Nowadays, such a vehicle would almost certainly still have useful life left in it!
!0 years ago, or even ten minutes ago, no one in their right minds would have bought a NEW Escort
Seriously now, I think that the increased longevity of modern cars is more down to better corrosion protection than anything else and so not really germane to this argument. (In the past it was common to scrap a car because, for example, the jack went through the sill when trying to change a wheel bearing). Modern oils are the real reason why modern engines have lives well in excess of 100K.
No, it's everything. Better design, better materials, better lubricants, better corrosion protection, (cough) more electronics!
My first car was a Vauxhall Viva. I could work on virtually everything about it myself. Which was just as well, as over the 2 years / 15,000 miles of ownership it needed extensive bodywork repairs, a full engine rebuild, frequent tinkering with the carb / ignition system, brakes, suspension, exhaust, and yes,
electrics. It had an awful 3 bearing crank engine which used to do about 35mpg, 0-60 in about 3 weeks and was flat out at 75mph. Despite many hundreds of man hours being spent on it all I was really doing was prolonging its terminal illness, and in the end I scrapped it at about 65,000 miles. The pristine examples you see now at shows and rallies aren't typical - they have usually had thousands of hours spent on them and do about 1000 miles a year, spending the rest of the time in a dry garage.
No. Give me a modern car every time. Quoting a Range Rover needing expensive electrical work is not typical, it is the worst of all worlds. It is a complex luxury car with a dreadful reputation for build quality and reliability. It's harsh I know, but I'd regard it as a sort of throwback to earlier times and not to be bracketed as a typical modern car.
More comparable to my Viva example might be a Vauxhall Corsa. Simple, cheap, reliable, economical and with relatively simple modern electrics, solid state where possible and in truth far more dependable than the electrics that came out of the same stable 30 years ago.
And even if we do go for the high end luxury / complexity option - say a Beemer or a Range Rover - you can still maintain most of it relatively cheaply if you ignore all the complaints and just use your nous when something goes wrong. If an ecu goes pop you can work this out for yourself with a laptop and a bit of research, and typically get it fixed by posting it to a specialist who will charge about £100. Or you can go round the scrappies and get a replacement.
Ironically, most of the work my 155,000 miles BMW has needed has been suspension parts and the like, as bushes and ball joints have worn out. Of course they never did that 30 years ago did they?
Nor do I think we've passed some critical point in development. Car design will continue to be led by the desires of the market. If money is tight and everone wants cheap simple and reliable, then cars will go that way far better than ever before. Only while there is a desire for cars with all the bells and whistles will manufacturers continue to make them. And if repair costs at franchised dealers are prohibitive as they get older then a network of efficient independent experts will spring up, and of course some of them will be clueless and / or rip you off. Was it ever thus?
No, just like 30 years ago if you've any sense you don't go to certain rip-off chains when your brakes wear out, you choose a decent reputable independent, ideally by personal recommendation, and you get value for money like you've never had before.
T'is True!