Originally Posted By: Spazdog
Originally Posted By: ItsuMitsubishi
.
... This definitely includes thoughtful engineers that greatly consider ease of servicing, and not just the ease of assembly! *cough*GM*cough*
Well, that pretty much eliminates most German cars from the definition of "quality"
I beg to differ. I replaced my car's clutch with the car on jack stands on a garage floor. There are numerous newer BMWs among my other friends and almost all of them similarly easy to work on.
Originally Posted By: Spazdog
Mercedes Benz doesn't even let you check your own transmission fluid level. There is just a cap that says "MB WORKSHOP ONLY" on the transmission dipstick tube.
"
Oh nein, you are too ztupid to check ze fluid. "
Then there's the indecipherable pictograms on the controls. What does this one mean? Is that a Weber grill and a lightning bolt? Well I definitely don't want to push that button!
So they move everything to a screen in the center of the dash and give you a mouse-like control. Good idea except they think very little about navigating their interface and user friendliness. It's not very intuitive and generally a pain in the neck to use. ( neck is not the exact word I wanted to use but it will suffice instead of a
[censored] .)
BMW does the same thing now, and most other companies are starting to follow.
I think it's safe to say you do not represent most of their customers. However counterintuitive you find the computer, it's infinitely more intuitive than a dipstick to the kind of person who doesn't even know what transmission fluid is.
Originally Posted By: Spazdog
Then if you do decide to dive in you will find that they used 3 or 4 different sizes and styles of fasteners on one assembly. Completely unnecessary. For a nation that prides itself on efficiency in manufacturing it's a remarkably inefficient practice.
Different parts of an assembly may be subject to different forces or have different amounts of room in which to place the fasteners. Sounds like you would rather have them design the housings to use the same fasteners all around, rather than designing them to work well and choosing the fasteners afterward. That's fine, but it's not "efficient."
My transmission's bellhousing is like that. IIRC there are three different bolt sizes. It just means I have to change sockets twice while removing the bolts. In the context of a clutch job, that's not really a big deal.
By contrast, oil changes are easier and cleaner on my car than on my brother's eminently practical Honda.