If an auto manufacturer released a car today that had minimal electronic bloat, just went from A to B in simplicity, and was easy to maintain they would sell a lot of them to the like of us that want a basic vehicle.
Remember back in the day when EFI came out? Might as well weld the hood shut, you can't even turn the air cleaner lid upside down anymore (except TBI lol). To be fair though I would not want to work on an electronic Quadrajet carb either.
I think the OP also means ease of maintenance as well as affordability of replacement parts. Why should a mechanic have to remove timing chains and such to access a water pump? $5,000 tail lights on a truck?
Let me list what I think is the best combination.
- One ECU.
- Port injection.
- Timing belt or chain is fine.
- Ecvt or standard automatic with gears.
- HVAC controls with knobs operated by cables, not electric motors.
- Single bulb lights (LEDs are fine, but not integrated units where once they die, you need replace the whole headlight housing)
- One computer that handles all the body controls.
- emissions regulations complexity circa early 2000s
- backup camera
-ABS
- Cruise control.
- naturally aspirated.
- NO driving assists that require radar sensors. Like lane assist, automatic braking.
- no connectivity over the networks.
- simple gear shift maps that doesn’t require software updates.
- basically, something like a Panther, a Jeep inline 6, 2005 Camry or suburban.