I dunno, my airplane is 54 years old. The car is just a mechanical device that still drives just fine, and is more comfortable, more responsive and less annoying than many new cars. Well maintained vehicles should last a very long time.Well, Brit electrics have never been noted for their excellence.
Also, this thing is beyond any reasonable life expectancy at its age and miles.
Any idea who made the electronic modules in that car? There are really only a handful - Denso, Hitachi, Bosch, Continental....That is only true if you are not a Jaguar owner
My 2003 X-Type has the largest set of weird electronic failures I've ever seen. I don't think there is one electronic component on the car that is unaffected. 235K miles of mechanical supremacy, coupled with the doors locking when blinkers or brake pedal is used and the interior lights refusing to power down, despite all doors closed. And the ECU goes into hard limp mode when cruise is engaged sometimes. Not to mention the dash going "all alarm red" for no apparent reason. Fixed by a shutdown restart on the fly. Absolutely bizarre, oh the latest is the electronic heating and AC going absolutely Egyptian, with hieroglyphics on display, and full heat for 30 seconds every half hour. And plenty more!!!
No, sorry I did not notice who made it. I took the dash apart to see if it had cracked solder joints. Tried cleaning it up and reflowing/touching up some solder joints. I saw nothing wrong under the microscope and nothing I did helped or changed anything.Any idea who made the electronic modules in that car? There are really only a handful - Denso, Hitachi, Bosch, Continental....
When a friend, neighbor or family member needs a ride to pick up their new vehicle thats always in the shop I usually show up in my old 2005 hemi RAM that never breaks down. If something does break on it I can fix it for next to nothing and do it myself. These new cars are nothing but electronic modules and a ton of copper wiring.Saw this anonymous hit piece.
Problem I have with it is that everything points to vehicles lasting longer with fewer problems than was the case in past decades.
It is common for vehicles with typically indifferent maintenance to go fifteen years and 200K before they are deemed unworthy of repair, something unheard of in past decades, when 100K without major repair was considered quite good.
Also, don't try to tell me about electronics. They are less failure prone than are mechanical systems and they either die an early under warranty death in a handful of cases or accompany the vehicle in which they're installed on its last ride to the scrap yard working just fine.
Finally, if cars really were engineered to die an early death, do you really think there'd be so many lenders willing to buy seven year paper?
I'm keeping all my carbed and mechanical injected engines.Saw this anonymous hit piece.
Problem I have with it is that everything points to vehicles lasting longer with fewer problems than was the case in past decades.
It is common for vehicles with typically indifferent maintenance to go fifteen years and 200K before they are deemed unworthy of repair, something unheard of in past decades, when 100K without major repair was considered quite good.
Also, don't try to tell me about electronics. They are less failure prone than are mechanical systems and they either die an early under warranty death in a handful of cases or accompany the vehicle in which they're installed on its last ride to the scrap yard working just fine.
Finally, if cars really were engineered to die an early death, do you really think there'd be so many lenders willing to buy seven year paper?
You're not supposed to drive metric cars on imperial roads.That is only true if you are not a Jaguar owner
My 2003 X-Type has the largest set of weird electronic failures I've ever seen. I don't think there is one electronic component on the car that is unaffected. 235K miles of mechanical supremacy, coupled with the doors locking when blinkers or brake pedal is used and the interior lights refusing to power down, despite all doors closed. And the ECU goes into hard limp mode when cruise is engaged sometimes. Not to mention the dash going "all alarm red" for no apparent reason. Fixed by a shutdown restart on the fly. Absolutely bizarre, oh the latest is the electronic heating and AC going absolutely Egyptian, with hieroglyphics on display, and full heat for 30 seconds every half hour. And plenty more!!!
I agree with this, you just don't know the cost.......might be $xxx a vehicle to upgrade materials, but to gm that's $xxx X a million units.The cost increase for a much longer service life may not be very much. Did you watch the planned obsolescence video above? They're trying to save a few pennies here and there.
Would you accept your surgeon using a hip prosthesis that was predicted to have a shorter service life because the hospital could save a few bucks? I'll have the good one, thank you very much.
And even more units than are sold now when people figure out that GM is making great cars again. They used to. (Some) GM products were very stylish, had good performance and were about as reliable as the best products made anywhere.I agree with this, you just don't know the cost.......might be $xxx a vehicle to upgrade materials, but to gm that's $xxx X a million units.
How far back are you going?And even more units than are sold now when people figure out that GM is making great cars again. They used to. (Some) GM products were very stylish, had good performance and were about as reliable as the best products made anywhere.
I've heard people say that GM's high-water mark was 1965 - hard to believe that's now 60 years ago.How far back are you going?
GM churned out millions of cars over the past fifty years that were a hot mess.
I can name some GM models going back to 1970 that were sold in the millions that were junk from delivery.
GM could be making the modern iteration of the W123 with better rust resistance and it would still take them decades to recover their reputation with many buyers.
There is not a single one of these clowns I trust …EVs are being likened to smartphones. As for this video, I'm not blindly believing a faceless unidentified individual.
Let's try 1963 - 1968: Buick, Pontiac, Chevrolet, Oldsmobile, Cadillac, Camaro, Chevelle, Firebird, etc. I'd take any one of them.How far back are you going?
GM churned out millions of cars over the past fifty years that were a hot mess.
I can name some GM models going back to 1970 that were sold in the millions that were junk from delivery.
GM could be making the modern iteration of the W123 with better rust resistance and it would still take them decades to recover their reputation with many buyers.
https://www.thetruthaboutcars.com/c...-planned-obsolescence-and-disposable-44514856
Wonder how they have saved by skating to close to the edge then spending millions on recalls.
These were some attractive cars and you can actually take the era of GM building nice looking cars into the seventies.Let's try 1963 - 1968: Buick, Pontiac, Chevrolet, Oldsmobile, Cadillac, Camaro, Chevelle, Firebird, etc. I'd take any one of them.
Almost all of them classics. Beautiful lines, good or better performance, durable. Not such great rust resistance but okay for the times.
A '65, '66, '67 Chevrolet SS or Chevelle SS clone (or a Pontiac/Buick/Oldsmoble for that matter) with a modern V8 and a modern automatic transmission/ 4 speed manual would be a masterpiece.
Funny how that works- decades to build something, a few years to tear it down.How far back are you going?
GM churned out millions of cars over the past fifty years that were a hot mess.
I can name some GM models going back to 1970 that were sold in the millions that were junk from delivery.
GM could be making the modern iteration of the W123 with better rust resistance and it would still take them decades to recover their reputation with many buyers.
Here's mine: 1965 442 and 1968 CorvetteLet's try 1963 - 1968: Buick, Pontiac, Chevrolet, Oldsmobile, Cadillac, Camaro, Chevelle, Firebird, etc. I'd take any one of them.