Originally Posted By: mclasser
Interestingly, ETCG posted a video recently about planned obsolescence. I'd say the powertrains of most (of course there are exceptions) modern cars are more reliable than they used to be. Unless you get a lemon, there's no reason an engine today shouldn't go 200K miles with proper maintenance. Will all the 'driver assistance' tech like lane departure warning, adaptive cruise control, cross traffic alert, blah blah last that long? Probably not.
Eric The Car Guy's video was totally on point. I would add just a few notes to his excellent video on the "planned obsolescence" conspiracy theory:
1) Engineering is possibly the only human endeavor that scales infinitely with money, i.e. the more money have, the better/bigger/faster you can build something. Refer to the space shuttle, oil tankers, suspension bridges, et cetera.
2) The only reason that Toyota, Honda, or Ford doesn't just build a perfectly reliable car is that it would cost too much money for most consumers. (Refer to airplanes, where every system is redundant. Two ignition systems, two fuel tanks, and so forth.) Even if someone engineered a perfect car, Nissan or Dodge would clean up by continuing to sell [censored] cars.
We live in a world where people think of cars as appliances and are primarily concerned with MSRP when car shopping, so there won't be any perfect cars available for purchase, like, ever. That's why we're all running synthetic oil.