coachditka
Thread starter
Originally Posted By: Trinh
Originally Posted By: dishdude
Originally Posted By: Trinh
Originally Posted By: Chris142
It does seem that Americans buy expensive cars then dont want to pay the price for proper lubes and repairs. It is common at my shop to have a snowball effect on European cars. Touch one thing and 3 unrelated things break before it gets out of the door.
That is the most ridiculous thing I have heard today and also ignorant/racist. Answer me this: why are audi/VW CONSISTENTLY at the bottom of Consumer Reports' reliability surveys? Poor engineering and quality. It took them until 2013 to finally gain some ground. Were BMW's notorious fuel pump problems due to "lack of maintenance"?
No one is bemoaning maintenance and repair bills, the proper context is during the lifespan of the automobile. You shouldn't have to fork over MAJOR repair money at fewer than, let's say, 50,000 miles.
I would argue the posters who have experienced few problems are the exception, not the norm.
Racist? Where did you get that from? This entire thread is ridiculous.
Why does he assume they're Americans? Why not Asian or European owners?
It's not ridiculous. I was really wondering why Euro cars seem to be more problematic than their [censored] and American counterparts.
Why do BMW radiators fail at 50k? Why did the 1st gen XC90 shred transmissions? Why do VW's seem to have more electrical gremlins? And Land Rover in general? The Euro cars drive and perform great, but the housekeeping on them is a pain.
Our V50 grocery getter and kid hauler should not have had all suspension components replaced under 60k miles. I would expect a sport sedan that is driven hard to have more suspension issues, but a daily driver..no way.
Originally Posted By: dishdude
Originally Posted By: Trinh
Originally Posted By: Chris142
It does seem that Americans buy expensive cars then dont want to pay the price for proper lubes and repairs. It is common at my shop to have a snowball effect on European cars. Touch one thing and 3 unrelated things break before it gets out of the door.
That is the most ridiculous thing I have heard today and also ignorant/racist. Answer me this: why are audi/VW CONSISTENTLY at the bottom of Consumer Reports' reliability surveys? Poor engineering and quality. It took them until 2013 to finally gain some ground. Were BMW's notorious fuel pump problems due to "lack of maintenance"?
No one is bemoaning maintenance and repair bills, the proper context is during the lifespan of the automobile. You shouldn't have to fork over MAJOR repair money at fewer than, let's say, 50,000 miles.
I would argue the posters who have experienced few problems are the exception, not the norm.
Racist? Where did you get that from? This entire thread is ridiculous.
Why does he assume they're Americans? Why not Asian or European owners?
It's not ridiculous. I was really wondering why Euro cars seem to be more problematic than their [censored] and American counterparts.
Why do BMW radiators fail at 50k? Why did the 1st gen XC90 shred transmissions? Why do VW's seem to have more electrical gremlins? And Land Rover in general? The Euro cars drive and perform great, but the housekeeping on them is a pain.
Our V50 grocery getter and kid hauler should not have had all suspension components replaced under 60k miles. I would expect a sport sedan that is driven hard to have more suspension issues, but a daily driver..no way.