Originally Posted by littlehulkster
Originally Posted by PandaBear
Ford Aspire count? What about Geo Metro?
Prius is nothing in comparison.
I don't know, I find it kind of hard to rag on the Metro/Aspire/Festiva because fundamentally, those were cars that were never built to go fast. They were city cars, designed for the streets of densley populated cities where space is at a premium and the fastest you'll ever go is 45. In that context, they were all fine, really. Great MPG, reliable, cheap to run and own, and you could park them anywhere. Surprisingly space efficient for such a small car, too. They weren't much good on the interstate, but that was never the point.
They were very good for what they were, it's just what they were was not really something Americans like.
I've worked with folks who used these little guys as long distance commuters.
As you said, cheap to buy, cheap to maintain and cheap to fuel.
These were never sold as comfortable or fast cars. They were always a less costly alternative to larger and thirstier vehicles and for those who got used to them they were just fine as daily drivers on hundred mile or more round trip commutes.
Never did that and never will, but there were always those willing to accept traveling for a promotion.
Originally Posted by PandaBear
Ford Aspire count? What about Geo Metro?
Prius is nothing in comparison.
I don't know, I find it kind of hard to rag on the Metro/Aspire/Festiva because fundamentally, those were cars that were never built to go fast. They were city cars, designed for the streets of densley populated cities where space is at a premium and the fastest you'll ever go is 45. In that context, they were all fine, really. Great MPG, reliable, cheap to run and own, and you could park them anywhere. Surprisingly space efficient for such a small car, too. They weren't much good on the interstate, but that was never the point.
They were very good for what they were, it's just what they were was not really something Americans like.
I've worked with folks who used these little guys as long distance commuters.
As you said, cheap to buy, cheap to maintain and cheap to fuel.
These were never sold as comfortable or fast cars. They were always a less costly alternative to larger and thirstier vehicles and for those who got used to them they were just fine as daily drivers on hundred mile or more round trip commutes.
Never did that and never will, but there were always those willing to accept traveling for a promotion.