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Thread: new cars suck
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07-18-2007 10:31 AM #1
new cars suck
I just bought a Subaru Impreza. It is a very nice car, after you disable the beeping from the lock transmitter, then disable the alarm system so you can unlock the car with the damn key without the alarm going off. There is no lock on the passenger side door nor on the trunk. The headlights go off and on when I apply and release the emergency brake. It will be a great car for the first 5 years. But in 10 years when things start to break, it is really going to be a [Oops!].
Why can't somebody make a solid car that drives well without power locks, alarm systems, power windows, cruise control, automatic headlights, and a stupidly silly amount of really unnecessary electrical "features"?
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07-18-2007 01:56 PM #2
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07-19-2007 01:03 PM #3
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07-19-2007 01:53 PM #4
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07-19-2007 04:42 PM #5
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07-19-2007 05:29 PM #6
GM cars run bad longer than most cars run at all.
You said you wanted something stripped, there it is. Your choices are pretty limited in that department. I know the Honda Fit comes nicely loaded with everything you don't want, so forget that. Pretty sure the same goes for the Nissan Versa and Toyota Yaris also. Kia Rio can probably be had stripped, but that's a horrible POS. Not sure about the new Hyundai Accent, the outgoing one was dreadful though. What's wrong with having a few convenience items anyway? When they break later on, you fix them. Just like our E30s.
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07-20-2007 09:57 AM #7
Re: GM cars run bad longer than most cars run at a
When convenience items stop working on my E30, I stop using them and keep driving. I'm just afraid that if my headlights are related to my e-brake, my turn signal lights are related to my locks, and my ECU is related to my lock transmitters, when something breaks, I won't be able to drive anymore.
I really like how the E30 has a separate computer for the engine.
I have several friends who are on their second or third Subaru, after racking up 200k+ miles without any major problems on all of their previous ones, and I've driven their 10 year old Subarus, which were sill nice driving cars after 10 years and 150k+ miles.
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07-20-2007 03:22 PM #8
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07-21-2007 08:19 AM #9
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10-24-2007 10:31 AM #10Registered Member
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but, you've got to put up with a shredded interior
My experience with GM agrees with your assertion, they still run even with a lot of broken parts. My biggest gripe is with the interior. That seems to disintegrate at an alarming rate. One of my favorite GM cars was a 1970 Caprice w/police package. I bought it from a neighbor for $100 as a beater & drove it for 10 years & only gave it a flywheel and a few bushings & bearings here and there. It had never actually been a police car, but the package rocked, tight suspension, H.O. 350 engine, drove it like I stole it and it never winced. I finally sold it for $300 due to my wife and kids being embarrassed to have it parked at the house, let alone being seen in it. I looked at it as an anti-theft package.
"The United States is a nation of laws: badly written and randomly enforced."
- Frank Zappa
Member ABAA #00014
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10-25-2007 12:46 PM #11
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10-08-2009 04:15 PM #12
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