Home › Forums › Financial Markets/Economics › Time for Jeff Bridges to dump Hyundai
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June 21, 2009 at 10:55 AM #419042June 21, 2009 at 10:56 AM #418331Allan from FallbrookParticipant
Rt.66: I have never owned anything other than American made cars. However, I can honestly say that all of the American made cars I’ve owned have not come close to my 1969 Mustang Mach I, in terms of fit and finish and performance.
The “crazy reliable” Ford 500 I drive is now experiencing some sort of weird gremlin that is causing my dashboard electronics and gauges to intermittently die. Given that my speedo and fuel gauge reside there, it’s something of a problem. The service guys at Ford have tried several fixes, but none to seem to work for more than a week and the folks in Michigan seem just as befuddled claiming not “to have heard this one before”.
My wife’s Lincoln Navigator is junk, pure and simple. We’ve had everything from various plastic attachments on the seats and doors fall off to an improperly hung tail gate to a driver’s side power lock that only functions periodically. It looks great, but the performance and quality are another matter entirely. It’s a 2007 model, by the way, which is the same year as the 500 (we bought both within two weeks of each other).
The Ford Expeditions (1998 and 2003) we owned were excellent and we never had a problem with either. We kept them up, maintenance-wise, and they were both rock solid.
I leased a 2004 Ford F350 King Ranch for three years and loved it. Beautiful truck and the interior was to die for. However, I wound up replacing two sets of gears in my tranny at 19,000 miles and then the entire tranny at 34,000 miles. Sorry, but that’s a little soon to give up the ghost, especially on a $50,000 truck. I’d like to buy the new F450 King Ranch, but the service record and the $65,000 price tag make me a little leery.
My point is this: I love American cars and have been fiercely loyal, but quality and performance have been hit and miss and that’s what drives a purchase.
June 21, 2009 at 10:56 AM #418561Allan from FallbrookParticipantRt.66: I have never owned anything other than American made cars. However, I can honestly say that all of the American made cars I’ve owned have not come close to my 1969 Mustang Mach I, in terms of fit and finish and performance.
The “crazy reliable” Ford 500 I drive is now experiencing some sort of weird gremlin that is causing my dashboard electronics and gauges to intermittently die. Given that my speedo and fuel gauge reside there, it’s something of a problem. The service guys at Ford have tried several fixes, but none to seem to work for more than a week and the folks in Michigan seem just as befuddled claiming not “to have heard this one before”.
My wife’s Lincoln Navigator is junk, pure and simple. We’ve had everything from various plastic attachments on the seats and doors fall off to an improperly hung tail gate to a driver’s side power lock that only functions periodically. It looks great, but the performance and quality are another matter entirely. It’s a 2007 model, by the way, which is the same year as the 500 (we bought both within two weeks of each other).
The Ford Expeditions (1998 and 2003) we owned were excellent and we never had a problem with either. We kept them up, maintenance-wise, and they were both rock solid.
I leased a 2004 Ford F350 King Ranch for three years and loved it. Beautiful truck and the interior was to die for. However, I wound up replacing two sets of gears in my tranny at 19,000 miles and then the entire tranny at 34,000 miles. Sorry, but that’s a little soon to give up the ghost, especially on a $50,000 truck. I’d like to buy the new F450 King Ranch, but the service record and the $65,000 price tag make me a little leery.
My point is this: I love American cars and have been fiercely loyal, but quality and performance have been hit and miss and that’s what drives a purchase.
June 21, 2009 at 10:56 AM #418826Allan from FallbrookParticipantRt.66: I have never owned anything other than American made cars. However, I can honestly say that all of the American made cars I’ve owned have not come close to my 1969 Mustang Mach I, in terms of fit and finish and performance.
The “crazy reliable” Ford 500 I drive is now experiencing some sort of weird gremlin that is causing my dashboard electronics and gauges to intermittently die. Given that my speedo and fuel gauge reside there, it’s something of a problem. The service guys at Ford have tried several fixes, but none to seem to work for more than a week and the folks in Michigan seem just as befuddled claiming not “to have heard this one before”.
My wife’s Lincoln Navigator is junk, pure and simple. We’ve had everything from various plastic attachments on the seats and doors fall off to an improperly hung tail gate to a driver’s side power lock that only functions periodically. It looks great, but the performance and quality are another matter entirely. It’s a 2007 model, by the way, which is the same year as the 500 (we bought both within two weeks of each other).
The Ford Expeditions (1998 and 2003) we owned were excellent and we never had a problem with either. We kept them up, maintenance-wise, and they were both rock solid.
I leased a 2004 Ford F350 King Ranch for three years and loved it. Beautiful truck and the interior was to die for. However, I wound up replacing two sets of gears in my tranny at 19,000 miles and then the entire tranny at 34,000 miles. Sorry, but that’s a little soon to give up the ghost, especially on a $50,000 truck. I’d like to buy the new F450 King Ranch, but the service record and the $65,000 price tag make me a little leery.
My point is this: I love American cars and have been fiercely loyal, but quality and performance have been hit and miss and that’s what drives a purchase.
June 21, 2009 at 10:56 AM #418892Allan from FallbrookParticipantRt.66: I have never owned anything other than American made cars. However, I can honestly say that all of the American made cars I’ve owned have not come close to my 1969 Mustang Mach I, in terms of fit and finish and performance.
The “crazy reliable” Ford 500 I drive is now experiencing some sort of weird gremlin that is causing my dashboard electronics and gauges to intermittently die. Given that my speedo and fuel gauge reside there, it’s something of a problem. The service guys at Ford have tried several fixes, but none to seem to work for more than a week and the folks in Michigan seem just as befuddled claiming not “to have heard this one before”.
My wife’s Lincoln Navigator is junk, pure and simple. We’ve had everything from various plastic attachments on the seats and doors fall off to an improperly hung tail gate to a driver’s side power lock that only functions periodically. It looks great, but the performance and quality are another matter entirely. It’s a 2007 model, by the way, which is the same year as the 500 (we bought both within two weeks of each other).
The Ford Expeditions (1998 and 2003) we owned were excellent and we never had a problem with either. We kept them up, maintenance-wise, and they were both rock solid.
I leased a 2004 Ford F350 King Ranch for three years and loved it. Beautiful truck and the interior was to die for. However, I wound up replacing two sets of gears in my tranny at 19,000 miles and then the entire tranny at 34,000 miles. Sorry, but that’s a little soon to give up the ghost, especially on a $50,000 truck. I’d like to buy the new F450 King Ranch, but the service record and the $65,000 price tag make me a little leery.
My point is this: I love American cars and have been fiercely loyal, but quality and performance have been hit and miss and that’s what drives a purchase.
June 21, 2009 at 10:56 AM #419052Allan from FallbrookParticipantRt.66: I have never owned anything other than American made cars. However, I can honestly say that all of the American made cars I’ve owned have not come close to my 1969 Mustang Mach I, in terms of fit and finish and performance.
The “crazy reliable” Ford 500 I drive is now experiencing some sort of weird gremlin that is causing my dashboard electronics and gauges to intermittently die. Given that my speedo and fuel gauge reside there, it’s something of a problem. The service guys at Ford have tried several fixes, but none to seem to work for more than a week and the folks in Michigan seem just as befuddled claiming not “to have heard this one before”.
My wife’s Lincoln Navigator is junk, pure and simple. We’ve had everything from various plastic attachments on the seats and doors fall off to an improperly hung tail gate to a driver’s side power lock that only functions periodically. It looks great, but the performance and quality are another matter entirely. It’s a 2007 model, by the way, which is the same year as the 500 (we bought both within two weeks of each other).
The Ford Expeditions (1998 and 2003) we owned were excellent and we never had a problem with either. We kept them up, maintenance-wise, and they were both rock solid.
I leased a 2004 Ford F350 King Ranch for three years and loved it. Beautiful truck and the interior was to die for. However, I wound up replacing two sets of gears in my tranny at 19,000 miles and then the entire tranny at 34,000 miles. Sorry, but that’s a little soon to give up the ghost, especially on a $50,000 truck. I’d like to buy the new F450 King Ranch, but the service record and the $65,000 price tag make me a little leery.
My point is this: I love American cars and have been fiercely loyal, but quality and performance have been hit and miss and that’s what drives a purchase.
June 21, 2009 at 11:03 AM #418347Allan from FallbrookParticipantRt.66: As far as the remainder of your argument: You’re cherry picking your facts and ignoring history. Simple repeating the mantra that GM is out of business due to government policies and no fault of it’s own is to ignore history and facts.
That’s not an argument, that’s propaganda. It also doesn’t advance your cause one iota.
I don’t argue that Japan was allowed to build their industries inside a US protected (militarily and economically) bubble. However, GM had the opportunity to easily crush the Japanese, both in the 1970s and the 1980s. They chose to remain with outdated, stodgy designs and pooh-poohed the notion of improved fuel efficiency. And if you want to talk about government protection and policies, how about the US government giving GM a free pass on the CAFE standards?
This isn’t a “let’s bash UAW” post. However, you seem as completely unwilling to discuss the CBAs as Obama does. There’s a reason for that and on both fronts: The CBAs, combined with chronic mismanagement of an iconic US brand, brought down GM. Yes, there were other contributing factors, including deceptive/unfair trade practices and poor US policies, but those practices and policies were contributing factors not the MOTIVE factors. Unless and until you’re willing to admit that, your arguments will continue to ring both false and hollow.
June 21, 2009 at 11:03 AM #418576Allan from FallbrookParticipantRt.66: As far as the remainder of your argument: You’re cherry picking your facts and ignoring history. Simple repeating the mantra that GM is out of business due to government policies and no fault of it’s own is to ignore history and facts.
That’s not an argument, that’s propaganda. It also doesn’t advance your cause one iota.
I don’t argue that Japan was allowed to build their industries inside a US protected (militarily and economically) bubble. However, GM had the opportunity to easily crush the Japanese, both in the 1970s and the 1980s. They chose to remain with outdated, stodgy designs and pooh-poohed the notion of improved fuel efficiency. And if you want to talk about government protection and policies, how about the US government giving GM a free pass on the CAFE standards?
This isn’t a “let’s bash UAW” post. However, you seem as completely unwilling to discuss the CBAs as Obama does. There’s a reason for that and on both fronts: The CBAs, combined with chronic mismanagement of an iconic US brand, brought down GM. Yes, there were other contributing factors, including deceptive/unfair trade practices and poor US policies, but those practices and policies were contributing factors not the MOTIVE factors. Unless and until you’re willing to admit that, your arguments will continue to ring both false and hollow.
June 21, 2009 at 11:03 AM #418841Allan from FallbrookParticipantRt.66: As far as the remainder of your argument: You’re cherry picking your facts and ignoring history. Simple repeating the mantra that GM is out of business due to government policies and no fault of it’s own is to ignore history and facts.
That’s not an argument, that’s propaganda. It also doesn’t advance your cause one iota.
I don’t argue that Japan was allowed to build their industries inside a US protected (militarily and economically) bubble. However, GM had the opportunity to easily crush the Japanese, both in the 1970s and the 1980s. They chose to remain with outdated, stodgy designs and pooh-poohed the notion of improved fuel efficiency. And if you want to talk about government protection and policies, how about the US government giving GM a free pass on the CAFE standards?
This isn’t a “let’s bash UAW” post. However, you seem as completely unwilling to discuss the CBAs as Obama does. There’s a reason for that and on both fronts: The CBAs, combined with chronic mismanagement of an iconic US brand, brought down GM. Yes, there were other contributing factors, including deceptive/unfair trade practices and poor US policies, but those practices and policies were contributing factors not the MOTIVE factors. Unless and until you’re willing to admit that, your arguments will continue to ring both false and hollow.
June 21, 2009 at 11:03 AM #418907Allan from FallbrookParticipantRt.66: As far as the remainder of your argument: You’re cherry picking your facts and ignoring history. Simple repeating the mantra that GM is out of business due to government policies and no fault of it’s own is to ignore history and facts.
That’s not an argument, that’s propaganda. It also doesn’t advance your cause one iota.
I don’t argue that Japan was allowed to build their industries inside a US protected (militarily and economically) bubble. However, GM had the opportunity to easily crush the Japanese, both in the 1970s and the 1980s. They chose to remain with outdated, stodgy designs and pooh-poohed the notion of improved fuel efficiency. And if you want to talk about government protection and policies, how about the US government giving GM a free pass on the CAFE standards?
This isn’t a “let’s bash UAW” post. However, you seem as completely unwilling to discuss the CBAs as Obama does. There’s a reason for that and on both fronts: The CBAs, combined with chronic mismanagement of an iconic US brand, brought down GM. Yes, there were other contributing factors, including deceptive/unfair trade practices and poor US policies, but those practices and policies were contributing factors not the MOTIVE factors. Unless and until you’re willing to admit that, your arguments will continue to ring both false and hollow.
June 21, 2009 at 11:03 AM #419068Allan from FallbrookParticipantRt.66: As far as the remainder of your argument: You’re cherry picking your facts and ignoring history. Simple repeating the mantra that GM is out of business due to government policies and no fault of it’s own is to ignore history and facts.
That’s not an argument, that’s propaganda. It also doesn’t advance your cause one iota.
I don’t argue that Japan was allowed to build their industries inside a US protected (militarily and economically) bubble. However, GM had the opportunity to easily crush the Japanese, both in the 1970s and the 1980s. They chose to remain with outdated, stodgy designs and pooh-poohed the notion of improved fuel efficiency. And if you want to talk about government protection and policies, how about the US government giving GM a free pass on the CAFE standards?
This isn’t a “let’s bash UAW” post. However, you seem as completely unwilling to discuss the CBAs as Obama does. There’s a reason for that and on both fronts: The CBAs, combined with chronic mismanagement of an iconic US brand, brought down GM. Yes, there were other contributing factors, including deceptive/unfair trade practices and poor US policies, but those practices and policies were contributing factors not the MOTIVE factors. Unless and until you’re willing to admit that, your arguments will continue to ring both false and hollow.
June 21, 2009 at 11:07 AM #418357Rt.66ParticipantAre you suggesting that Japanese or Korean cars do not experience problems like you’ve experienced with some of your US cars?
They do, and with pretty much equall instances if you spead out reliablity reports across an entire line.
Ford makes/has made really succesful models and some with issues sometimes. The same goes for Toyota (the Tundra comes to mind quickly).
Dirty little secret here…I used to work a multi-line Japanese dealership when I was younger. I witnessed every kind of crazy failure you can think of, we never wanted for work in the service department, these are machines.
Still I would never say they build junk, that would be dumb, these are machines.
June 21, 2009 at 11:07 AM #418586Rt.66ParticipantAre you suggesting that Japanese or Korean cars do not experience problems like you’ve experienced with some of your US cars?
They do, and with pretty much equall instances if you spead out reliablity reports across an entire line.
Ford makes/has made really succesful models and some with issues sometimes. The same goes for Toyota (the Tundra comes to mind quickly).
Dirty little secret here…I used to work a multi-line Japanese dealership when I was younger. I witnessed every kind of crazy failure you can think of, we never wanted for work in the service department, these are machines.
Still I would never say they build junk, that would be dumb, these are machines.
June 21, 2009 at 11:07 AM #418851Rt.66ParticipantAre you suggesting that Japanese or Korean cars do not experience problems like you’ve experienced with some of your US cars?
They do, and with pretty much equall instances if you spead out reliablity reports across an entire line.
Ford makes/has made really succesful models and some with issues sometimes. The same goes for Toyota (the Tundra comes to mind quickly).
Dirty little secret here…I used to work a multi-line Japanese dealership when I was younger. I witnessed every kind of crazy failure you can think of, we never wanted for work in the service department, these are machines.
Still I would never say they build junk, that would be dumb, these are machines.
June 21, 2009 at 11:07 AM #418917Rt.66ParticipantAre you suggesting that Japanese or Korean cars do not experience problems like you’ve experienced with some of your US cars?
They do, and with pretty much equall instances if you spead out reliablity reports across an entire line.
Ford makes/has made really succesful models and some with issues sometimes. The same goes for Toyota (the Tundra comes to mind quickly).
Dirty little secret here…I used to work a multi-line Japanese dealership when I was younger. I witnessed every kind of crazy failure you can think of, we never wanted for work in the service department, these are machines.
Still I would never say they build junk, that would be dumb, these are machines.
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