Nobunaga wrote:... When you're driving down the highway, going wherever, take notice of the cars you see pulled over to the side of the road, with the hood up, with some hapless individual trying to figure out what the hell went wrong. Take a look at the maker's mark. You'll see a lot of Chevy and other GM vehicles, more than a few Buicks, some Fords cars, but very few Hondas and/or Toyotas.
... There's a reason for this. I thought it was just the predominance of US vehicles on the road, but here, about every 3rd car is a Japanese import... so that's not it.
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Nobunaga, it seems we seem to be agreeing on more and more as time goes on...
BigBallinStalin wrote:As for American cars? Fuch em, they're generally worse in quality than Japanese, and that's too bad, isn't it? Not only that but American car companies largely fell behind in the environmental scene, and now they're suffering mainly from their own faulty planning.
Also, anybody know how Japanese cars can be of such high quality from such a highly developed nation yet maintain lower prices than the United States? I'd like to easily blame high labor costs in America for this, but I'd like to hear what else may factor into that.
Healthcare is one major reason. I think it was a GM report which states that employee healthcare costs add around $1000-$1500 onto the price of every single car. Add onto this technological progress, with Japenese plants extremely reliant on robots and heavy machinery with labourers doing the more manual and individual jobs, whilst the hundreds of thousands employed by American companies to boost their US patriotism have just added onto their costs.
As for the actual quality of the cars, I can't go into too much detail as car engines is hardly my expert area, but East Asian companies have tended to design cars which would appeal to consumers worldwide, increase brand loyalty and would generally be a good buy, whilst American car companies have just attempted to cater to the home market and build the gas guzzlers and muscle cars and classic models so people can relive the dreams from the 50's and 60's when the USA was #1.