Tech To Blame For Ever-Growing Car Repair Costs, AAA Says (cnet.com) 294
A new study from AAA highlights the high repair costs associated with cars that have advanced safety technology. "[S]eemingly small damages to a vehicle's front end can incur costs nearing $3,000," CNET reports. From the report: The study looked at three solid sellers in multiple vehicle segments, including a small SUV, a midsize sedan and a pickup truck. It looked at repair costs using original equipment list prices and an established average for technician labor rates.
Let's use AAA's examples for some relatable horror stories. Mess up your rear bumper? Well, if you have ultrasonic parking sensors or radar back there, it could cost anywhere from $500 to $2,000 to fix. Knock off a side mirror equipped with a camera as part of a surround-view system? $500 to $1,100. Windshields are especially tricky. People who own cars with windshields that have embedded heating elements already have to pony up hundreds of dollars to replace what you might think is just a piece of glass. Factor complex camera systems (like autobrake) into the mix, and not only do folks get hit with the windshield replacement, they possibly have to find a trained professional to recalibrate all that tech behind it.
Let's use AAA's examples for some relatable horror stories. Mess up your rear bumper? Well, if you have ultrasonic parking sensors or radar back there, it could cost anywhere from $500 to $2,000 to fix. Knock off a side mirror equipped with a camera as part of a surround-view system? $500 to $1,100. Windshields are especially tricky. People who own cars with windshields that have embedded heating elements already have to pony up hundreds of dollars to replace what you might think is just a piece of glass. Factor complex camera systems (like autobrake) into the mix, and not only do folks get hit with the windshield replacement, they possibly have to find a trained professional to recalibrate all that tech behind it.
Tech? (Score:5, Insightful)
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It's the inefficiency of the supply chain to you that creates a rather high minimum cost to anything.
Subaru don't pay $57 for the knob, but they buy millions of them and get them delivered to the factory. To get to you it has to be picked out, packaged, sent (probably by international registered post), import fees paid, the dealer/vendor adds their mark-up...
Best thing is usually just to get a used one from a wreck for stuff like knobs and trim.
Re: Tech? (Score:3)
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It's the inefficiency of the supply chain to you that creates a rather high minimum cost to anything.
Horseshit. It's a very deliberate action on behalf of a company that is able to provide a shitload of parts to most countries of the world with incredible ease.
Re:Tech? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Not only that, but if you believe the mechanic I use, Subaru won't have the knob in stock. According to him they rarely have ANYTHING in stock. It will take 3 to 5 days to get it. And, I assume the actual charge will be $57 plus shipping.
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I had a bright idea to check parts for it's sister car, the Chrysler Crossfire. I could get a new lower seat assembly for $150 instead of $650 - cheaper th
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not always true, sometimes it gets really hard to find certain parts and then it gets expensive again.
just ask any retro car owner/lover how cheap his car parts are.
The days of the $5.00 headlamp replacement (Score:2)
are over. So get over it.
Re:The days of the $5.00 headlamp replacement (Score:5, Funny)
The 7 year old family car; I changed the bulb without any tools and I believe a two pack of bulbs for around $20.
p.s. - The bumpers on my car are real steel, not some fiberglass with foam backing. A few years ago someone backed into one of my bumpers and tore theirs all to shreds, mine just needed a little buffing to get the honda civic stain out.
Re: The days of the $5.00 headlamp replacement (Score:2, Insightful)
Those highly deforming materials you're laughing at are designed to absorb energy then distribute it slower and more equally to reduce shock in an accident to increase passenger safety and reduce bodily injury.
While it's true those materials ultimately increase the monetary cost related to vehicle damage in an accident, they reduce risk of fatality or medical costs of injuries to the passenger(s).
If I have to choose between my car and my life I'll set the thing in fire and roll it over a mountain in a heart
Changing headlight is a major operation (Score:3)
In modern cars. I could not do it myself in my Citroen. The mechanic had special tools and an endoscope. For a Reno, you need to pull off the bumper amongst other things.
(I like French cars. So cheap second hand.)
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In modern cars. I could not do it myself in my Citroen. The mechanic had special tools and an endoscope. For a Reno, you need to pull off the bumper amongst other things.
No in "modern" but not in recent cars. There was a period where it was especially problematic, but there are several places now where regulations were passed requiring lightbulbs in headlamps to be replacable without removing the assembly or what is behind it.
Check under the bonnet of the latest Citroen of your model, you may find it is much easier to do now. Basically for everything between 2005-2015 you were screwed.
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My current car requires the battery to be removed to access one of the headlights. Doable, but it's far more of a pain in the ass than it needs to be. Replacing the actual bulb is pretty trivial to do, and doesn't require any tools if your fingernails are strong enough. Pulling out the battery, however? That requires a screwdriver, a wrench, and a fair bit of cussing.
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Oh, what a brave new world, that has uniquely shaped plastic headlights for every model of car on the road, that cost hundreds of dollars each to replace and throw light in shitty to moderately ok patterns until the plastic yellows and hazes up with age.
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On the other hand, LED headlights last the life of the car, so there is no need to replace them.
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I'm going on 21 years with one of my cars having halogen lamps. The other is 17 years old. None have burnt out yet.
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It's partially the Fed mandates and partly because you just have to have blind spot indicators, variable cruise control, front and back cameras, and all sorts of nannies to "enhance your driving experience." If you still drive a 1948 Fleetline with steel bumpers that can rip small trees out of the ground, great! That may sound cool, but you'll de in a crash.
And the headlamps? About $2K if the "igniter" fails. LEDs may be cheap, but what lights them up is not.
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Do they still make cars with anything other than many element LED head lamps?
Why would they? LED headlamps are superior in every way.
I own exactly one incandescent bulb. I use it to keep my chicken coop warm in the winter. So I guess there is one drawback of LED blubs: They don't make good space heaters.
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Other than that, everything is LED and dimmable; daylight intensity if I can get em.
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That has probably changed, as the Model 3 is using LED headlamps.
Of Printers and Cars (Score:4, Interesting)
I would be interested in knowing the breakdown of an automaker's sources of profit.
Are we now to a point where they sell a $25k car at a loss. However, they know the odds of a fender-bender are high, and it will cost the automaker $800 for the $8,000 repair.
Is the model moving to something closer to inkjet printers, banks and airlines? Get you in the door cheap, then nail you on the parts or fees.
The interactions I've had with people from parts suppliers indicate the mark-ups the automakers put on parts are insane.
Re:Of Printers and Cars (Score:4, Informative)
Then there are the routine maintenance items like oil filters, etc. Volumes for those are so high that it's much easier to keep the costs very low as purchasing power is high plus $.05 profit on an oil filter adds up when you sell millions each month.
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For farm machinery, parts are typically marked up 100%. Your average sensor, some of which are are just POTs, can be a couple hundred dollars a piece. Inductive sensors, about $400. A little bit of electronics knowledge can save a fair amount of money by making off-the-shelf parts from various automation retailers do the same job.
For cars, though, it's more complicated. The other day I learned that to change the headlight bulb on my sisters vehicle it requires removing part of the cowling inside the whe
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Your average sensor, some of which are are just POTs, can be a couple hundred dollars a piece. Inductive sensors, about $400. A little bit of electronics knowledge can save a fair amount of money by making off-the-shelf parts from various automation retailers do the same job
I had to fix the electric door lock on the passengers side of one of my cars a couple years ago. Of course the power locks, power windows and power mirrors all connected to the same door module. It was $500 for a new door module. It was a relay on the module that had gone bad. Since there were three of them on there I ordered 6 new relays from an electronics company for $20 for all 6 and removed the old relays and soldered in the new ones. I have three more in case the drivers side ones go bad. But saved $4
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Apparently removing the cowling to access the low beam bulbs is pretty common on crossover SUVs these days, regardless of make. Small hands to reach into these tight spots is always a bonus. This car was a Chevrolet Traverse SUV (same as the GMC Acadia. I'm not completely sure about the bumper removal for the other bulbs besides low beam, but that's what I gathered from the youtube videos on the subject. Was not terribly impressed.
My old GMC Envoy's headlight housings can remove with just a couple of cl
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If you're taking a loss to compete with the aftermarket, you're just inefficient since they are surely not taking a loss.
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Seems like an application for 3D printers. If they could just keep the CAD file around for 20 years and print spare parts in metal when needed it should reduce costs a lot.
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I call bullshit on logistics costs when talking about companies which have such an incredibly optimised supply and logistics chain.
Same with warehousing. They don't keep a building full of old parts, and the same markup exists on something current as well.
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Warehousing and logistics costs to provide those extra parts for up to 2 decades after your vehicle is made isn't cheap. The markups may appear high but the profit per piece really isn't that much. I know we sell some stuff at a loss to remain competitive with aftermarket.
Then there are the routine maintenance items like oil filters, etc. Volumes for those are so high that it's much easier to keep the costs very low as purchasing power is high plus $.05 profit on an oil filter adds up when you sell millions each month.
Whilst this is true, a lot of manufacturers are just taking the piss on OEM parts. Honda has to be one of the worst for it. Genuine OEM Honda spark plugs were 4 times the price of NGK's... and I can almost guarantee that the genuine Honda parts were another brand.
Fortunately aftermarket parts for Hondas are cheap and easy to get. So when my Integra required new spark plugs, I just bought some NGK's.
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Is the model moving to something closer to inkjet printers, banks and airlines? Get you in the door cheap, then nail you on the parts or fees.
I get you with airlines and printers... but if the same is true for banks, your country needs better banking regulations. I've lived in the UK and Australia, nailing you with fees gets a bank nailed to the wall by the regulator. The ease of switching banks means its a highly competitive market that cant be completely dominated by ancient, existing players. Moving debt is only slightly more difficult. So-called "challenger banks" starting in the UK are making the big boys like Lloyds and Natwest take note. A
Yeah, it's tech's fault. (Score:3)
Yeah, everything's the techs' fault...
No, it is just one of the excuses, in fact any part, regardless of the "tech" it has will be sold to you for a ridiculous markup, especially if it is an original part. Take my Ford Focus for example, it has a known flaw in that the dashboard compartment lid plastic lock breaks easily. Then, for that plastic lid they charge you £90. That's probably a 10,000% markup. I wish someone would do a sort of "reverse-ifixit", i.e. calculate how much it would cost you to build a car if you bought all the parts separately. Bigger parts have a lower markup than that little piece, so the Focus won't end up costing £2 million as the lid might indicate, but still I expect parts sell several times their cost on average. A great consumer friendly law would be to limit the manufacturer part prices so that the cost of all the parts together are not more than say 2 times the cost of the car. Anyway, some wishful thinking there...
P.S. If you are curious, the grey market lids are still at around £30, because they just have to compete with a £90k part, so that opened a market for a little piece of plastic which you glue to replace the piece of the lock that breaks for everyone, and they charge you £15 for that!!! I.e. I have to go to a scrap yard to find something in my case...
Re:Yeah, it's tech's fault. (Score:5, Informative)
I did this with some broken door handles for a Ford Fusion. I was able to get OEM replacements for $16 (both sides) + about $5 shipping. Took about 5 minutes per side to switch them out. Dealer wanted almost $200 + $80/hr labor. New parts are still working after several years.
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I can't get it from ebay.com. I posted prices in £ because I am in the UK, so I (sadly) have a British version where dashboard parts are mirror-image. So, ebay.co.uk has the "repair kit" for £15, and 3rd party lid for £30. Which is why I'll have to go to a scrap yard to get something under £10.
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Another alternative, take the lid out (broken piece and all) then find a local college that has an engineering department. Talk to a professor and offer to pay a student £10 to 3D print (or metal cast) a new part and figure out a way to mount it to the lid with minimal modifications. Maybe a small metal plate
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Oh, actually I looked at the lock clip you searched for. That's not what breaks. The lid has a flimsy little plastic thingy that goes into this clip and that is what breaks. I can find that bottom clip part cheap, the lid it secures is the problem (which is UK specific as well).
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The king of expensive repairs (Score:4, Interesting)
$7000 for a small dent on the fender. [cleantechnica.com]
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Wow. So apparently now cars are going to be like smartphones or other electronic gadgets -- everything is too-cleverly designed such that you can't repair individual components (here a small dent in the quarter panel), so you have to remove and replace the whole piece (here thus having to disassemble much of that side of the car in the process). I suppose that's not a terribly surprising result for a car designed from the ground up by Silicon Valley.
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So apparently now cars are going to be like smartphones or other electronic gadgets -- everything is too-cleverly designed such that you can't repair individual components
There's something to what you say. But on the other hand, Tesla designed the Model 3 to have a greatly reduced parts count and simplified design.
Sandy Munro and his team famously tore down and analyzed a Tesla Model 3, and he was quite impressed by the design. Initially he made some negative comments but lately he said he "had to eat cro
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That's all very interesting but doesn't appear to speak to the sort of issue raised in GP's article, where the repair shop (1) had to replace an entire body panel rather than just fixing the dent as would be the case with just about any other automobile, and (2) to replace that panel, had to disassemble a substantial portion of that side of the car. The estimate had over 25 hours for body labor -- over 3 days -- and another 16 hours -- 2 days -- to paint it. That's utterly ridiculous for a minor dent in a
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Oooo, they are now?
[...]
Oh, no, seems like they are trying to provide a LOCK-IN repair experience.
Wow, such drama.
You're right of course that if you want to fix your own car, Tesla is the wrong brand to buy.
Tesla promised they were "working on" opening up repairs. They said this 22 months ago and there has been no news about it since then as far as I know.
https://electrek.co/2017/01/30/tesla-opening-up-service-replacement-parts/ [electrek.co]
The good news is that Teslas are quite easy to repair, assuming you can get the
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Many cars can be repaired just fine, it just requires a slightly different skill and tool set than a 1970s Chevy Nova.
I have a Land Rover that was giving me air suspension issues, which causes most people to groan and take to the dealer to get billed a couple thousand dollars for diagnostic time and repair. I spent $400 on a used diagnostic tool I was going to buy anyway [gap-diagnostic.com], used it to trace the issue to a ride height sensor that was giving invalid values to the body computer, purchased a new sensor online fo
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I don't disagree with a thing you just said, but I take it you didn't read the article GP linked to or read my comment particularly closely since both were focused on mechanical assembly/repair, not electronic issues.
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Sounds to me like the estimator didn't want to do the work, either because he's not convinced his body and paint guys can get it done, or because they don't want the hassle from the insurance company. I've talked to body shop owners in the past that didn't want to deal with fixing a car, so they're looking to write the repair order as high as they can in order to get the insurance company to total out the car, or get the owner to take it somewhere else. Body shops live and die by come-backs - you fix it r
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I am impressed that you know more about repair costs than the insurance company's own adjuster (and without even seeing the car!). Please let me know how to contact you so that the next time I need to have one of my cars repaired, I can have you assess the real repair costs.
Note, the Model 3 doesn't use much aluminum, it's mostly steel, unlike the S and X.
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I am impressed that you didn't read what I wrote, or at least didn't even try to comprehend. If it's not aluminum, then there's no way that repair should have cost $7000+ because any body man that knows what the fuck he's doing should be able to repair that using known conventional techniques that have been around for decades.
Insurance companies are famous for requiring repair centers to jump through hoops like demanding aftermarket panels to be fitted first before they will pay for OEM in any jurisdiction
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I am impressed that you think that, on the one hand, insurance companies try to reduce repair costs as much as possible ("Insurance companies are famous for requiring repair centers to jump through hoops like demanding aftermarket panels to be fitted first before they will pay for OEM"), while on the other hand thinking that insurance companies will accept unreasonably high repair costs.
Is that doublethink hard or easy for you?
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I'm sure to fix it shitty would be cheaper, but its a brand new car. Personally, if i cant bang it out with a hammer, or suck it out with a suction cup, then it stays dented.
In this case, they were fixing it perfect, mint, on a brand new one day sold car. You gotta pay for quality in that situation. Sure my cousin can do it cheaper for cash under the table but i guarantee you get what you pay for with body work. Its pure time and care.
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Note how a lot of the cost is due to the fancy paint which prevented them from doing a repair. Rather than tech, it's expensive paint jobs and aftermarket wraps that are adding a lot to these kinds of repairs.
That was relatively cheap for a Tesla, since he damaged the car himself and wasn't claiming from someone else's insurance. If it had been someone else's fault there would have been rental fees and loss of value on top.
Tangentially this accident demonstrates why the current Tesla autopilot hardware in i
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This is a scam job by a collision center. Putting new fender over such minor dent is outright fraud.
The cheap way to fix this is to massage back metal (i.e. paintless dent removal) then polish it. There will be minor scratches visible, but it will be only couple hundred to fix.
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$7000 for a small dent on the fender. [cleantechnica.com]
To be 100% fair, the more tech you pack into a car the more expensive it does get for basic repairs.
A lovely old lady scrapped the front off side corner of my 2 series the other week. The initial quote for repairs wast over £1,500 until I read it and told them there were no forward parking sensors (honestly, if you need forward parking sensors, driving is not for you). The smart bumper then became a stock standard dumb bumper and the quote dropped to £350 because the repair shop didn't need t
No, Inexpensive (Score:5, Insightful)
Let's go back to no crumple zones where you can pound out a front end collision with a hammer and clean out the passengers with a fire hose.
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Let's go back to no crumple zones
I could just ride a motorcycle.
So give me a motorcycle with two more wheels, an enclosed passenger cabin, heat, air conditioning and a comfy bench seat.
Re: No, Inexpensive (Score:3)
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I agree, cars are so much safer its not even funny. People under 40 have no idea how much the industry has improved in safety, mileage, HP and comfort.
But what does have to happen is going back to the 5 mph bumper rules. The current 2.5 mph is a joke. A parking lot bumper bump that barely exchanged paint costing $3k+ and slamming your insurance rates is insane and hits the less well off unfairly. The poor shouldn't have their rates jacked because someone else decides they want to drive a $100k car and bump
Re: No, Inexpensive (Score:2)
5mph RUBBER bumpers. Painted bumpers are BULLSHIT... graze something, $500 minimum paint job to fix. I went out of my way to get black rubber bumpers on my truck, and it's the best thing I ever did. Small scuff? Fine-grit sandpaper, 2 minutes of rubbing, fixed.
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I agree, cars are so much safer its not even funny. People under 40 have no idea how much the industry has improved in safety, mileage, HP and comfort.
I had no idea cars have more hit points than they used to. But I've definitely seen improved reliability. I seem to remember when cars used to be nearly worthless at 100K miles. It's pretty much expected they'll last that long these days, plus quite a bit longer. And they spend far less time in the shop being tweaked and tuned than I remember as a kid. Granted, I'm a data point of one, but from what I hear, that's the general experience as well. On occasion people get stuck with a lemon, but that's al
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Timing belt should be replaced every 60k - 100k depending but if you like your car do it before it goes out and save yourself some money.
I didn't need AAA to tell me that it's more expensive to replace a bumper with a back up camera and sensors than one with out it's no brainer the more complex you make it the more it will cost to repair. I see a lot of expensive cars out there with all the trimming but that doesn't make them a quality vehicle.
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Move to somewhere with free healthcare and then it's a choice between an expensive repair bill on the car, or a few weeks paid leave from work sitting in a hospital bed.
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Places with free healthcare tend to have mandatory insurance as well.
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The article isn't about the cost of body work. It's about the cost of buying, installing, and (possibly) calibrating sensor devices.
Bullshit (Score:4, Interesting)
Cars are more expensive because fewer and fewer people can afford them. That means fewer used cars. That means higher used car prices, which the car manufacturers see as cue to raise prices. Cars are also a necessity in most places. Even most major cities lack viable public transportation. When the commutes 90 minutes by car it's 3 hours by bus. That's not an inconvenience, that's a life altering event. The car companies decided how our cities were built before any of us were born (assuming there's nobody under 70 reading this). We're living with the consequences.
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Cars are more expensive because fewer and fewer people can afford them.
I think my head just exploded.
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it's 2018, a CD player costs $5 bucks to make
Curious as to your source for this.
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CD
? What is that?
Seriously the last time I had a car and played one of those things on it was pre-2001. Try looking for a decent radio that plays mp3s or blue tooth, even a 3.5mm jack is pretty old school.
Plus side with mp3s you can have 16+ hours of tunes and no inane dj chatter on a long drive.
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https://d3fy651gv2fhd3.cloudfr... [cloudfront.net] sure doesn't look like a graph of fewer and fewer people being able to afford new cars to me.
Used car sales appear flat but not plummeting as well: https://www.thoughtco.com/used... [thoughtco.com]
Ahoy there, AC! (Score:2)
The damage done by cash for clunkers was 9 years ago. The effects are long gone.
Not gay, but if I was Obama'd be a better choice then our current president.
Re:Ahoy there, AC! (Score:4, Insightful)
The effects are not long gone. There are many cars that were purposefully destroyed under Cash for Clunkers that could have otherwise been dismantled and resold as used parts. Instead our lovely government had dealerships pouring sand into the engine and running it until it seized in order to qualify for the subsidy.
The amount of engines destroyed for no purpose was ludicrous, and the remaining fleet of cars where people could have gotten used parts to keep their car running now have much more expensive repairs, if they can find parts at all, for cars that really aren't that old and definitely were not uncommon.
Cash for Clunkers was a corporate giveaway to the auto industry with a very thin whitewash of "raising overall fuel efficiency" applied to sell it. It was wasteful in practically every way.
CFC myths deconstructed. (Score:3)
CFC was in 2009 and that's ancient history in the salvage business. The crushed vehicles were typically over ten years old. Who drives that ancient shit today? What parts shortage?
I worked in the used car/auction/salvage biz at the time and nothing about CFC rules required crushing the good components. Buyers had a limited time to strip profitable parts then were required to crush the hull, long block (engine sans accessories) and transmission.
Most yards bought CFC cars at auction then parted them out. Whol
Yep (Score:2)
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However, I also blame the ignorant members of Congress, past and present, who ONLY considered that higher MPG might mean less air pollution, not the extra expenses we all quietly pay to get our rolling computers fixed, the complexity that befuddles the average person/mechanic and the extra wasted man-hours dealing with that complexity.
You're blaming the wrong people, well mostly. Governments (its a first world thing) are responsible for pushing clean and efficient, people demanded clean, as the city air used to be horrible, at least here. And there is only so much oil. Getting it can involve supporting horrible people, making a big mess digging it up now a days and there is a chance that CO2 affects the climate.
Car companies come up with all this other expensive shit. A car company decided to make the heating and air conditioning push bu
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It's also the construction. (Score:3)
The technology is one bit, but is there any reason why there has to be a single unit which encompasses the front end around to the wheels, and integrates the lights and grill? As a result, you can't easily just replace a broken piece, you have to replace the entire assembly.
[One reason is fuel efficiency. The assembly has fewer gaps to catch the wind. Another reason is reliability, the assembly is constructed as a unit and doesn't rely on as many people being successful. But there are probably alternative approaches which could give similar results.]
Standard parts is the answer. (Score:5, Informative)
3000? thats just the start (Score:2)
The radar sensor on the front of my car is over $3k just for that one part, let alone the rest of the front.
It's expensive because of dealers. (Score:3)
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There are less and less expectations on owners to change consumables themselves...
It used to be that the driving tests in some countries required you to do things like check the coolant and change a wheel. Things like light bulbs are becoming increasingly difficult to replace on some modern cars, and a lot of people don't even know how to do simple things like change lightbulbs at home.
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Cars are inefficient (Score:2)
Complexity due to safety and emissions (Score:2)
You legislated 40MPG, 5 star offset crash rating, collision avoidance-equipped car and you go it. Only it costs an arm and a leg to buy and repair.
LED turnlight replacement cost, someone? (Score:3)
You don't even need to look for überadvanced tech on today's cars.
On all new cars these last years, the use of LEDs instead of bulbs allowed to install super cool, super fancy lights everywhere -for instance the fashion for turnlights recently was to wrap a luminous line of LEDs all around the stoplights, or even with ultra-zen shape inflections.
Very sillily, I just thought 'Ahh, fashion...' in the beginning.
This, until I understood that, from now on, whenever one of your stoplight or turlight dies, you cannot switch a 20-cent bulb there*.
You now MUST get back to the original automaker, to politely ask for this complex plastic element, ultra-zen-shaped, that, obviously, no one else than them can provide.
(Oh, and the left side isn't the same as the right side, mind you, don't confuse!)
I'd say, you'll pay it not ten times, but one hundred times the bulb cost.
Ahh, but this is for fashion, isn't it?
(*) and even, have a complete light repair set within the volume of a smartphone, slipped somewhere in the car, allowing you to repair in 5mn straight in front of the cop if need be...
Only tech? (Score:3)
Lessee, about 15 or so years ago, I had a Grand Voyager. One day, a window fell down. Took it to a mechanic, and he replaced the belt that raises and lowers it. $160. 8 or so years later, newer Grand Voyager, same thing: nope, the mechanic said, "we both know it's only the belt, but they've made it a sealeed unit, which includes the motro, but I have no choice now but to replace the whole thing (for twice the price).
Oh, and about needing computers... my ancient, deally beloved Toyota Tercel wagon, an '86, with a carburetor, no computer, was a) still passing emission tests and b) getting 35-36mpg in 2000.
Blame the car companies. They want you to buy a new car every two years, like back in the late fifties.
Re: It's a choice (Score:2, Funny)
So, you like a man tranny?
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I like the Hispanic ones too.
Total Cost of Ownership. (Score:2)
When I was a kid, my Father was always working on the car, Tuning the Engine, replacing parts that had seemed to fall off, welding parts back on, Cutting off rust and putty and painting it back again....
So now it cost $3000 to replace something that you could do yourself. However you had normally had that car for much longer then the life of the cars before that, So other then paying $5000 of maintenance over the life time you are paying $3000 once.
Bolt On Safety Systems (Score:2)
You can buy many of these built in safety systems and bolt them on. [usatoday.com]
Lane departure [amazon.com]
Back up cameras [amazon.com]
Collision Avoidance [mobileye.com]
Sure...maybe suspect or poor quality at the moment, but it will only get better,
Re:Luddites!! (Score:4, Interesting)
My son is 16 and already looking into micro-houses for when he gets older. We're considering buying a plot of land and populating it with 4-10 micro houses with parking for a single shared self driving car. We're hoping to be able to sell them for $25,000 a piece. We'll use a single centralized heater, have a single parking spot for cars, room for one electric moped per house, etc...
The idea is that at least until they have children (a LONG WAY OFF I hope) this would allow them to live with very little debt and spend the vast majority of their income on socializing and enjoying live while saving money for their eventual houses to raise children in... which may also be somewhat minimalist.
If food is readily accessible via delivery services and restaurants, and clothing can be washed by service (which will become increasingly more popular as the job market shrinks) and most forms of entertainment at home is computer rather than large sitting room oriented, what's the point of a big house or apartment?
I would move into one as well if I were single. I have an office where I spend most of my time (even recreational) and have little need for much space at home. I think 30m^2 would be far more than enough for me. I'm in a room about that big right now and can easily mentally design the room to meet all my needs.
So, yeh... cheaper housing would make perfect sense.
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" then she can live in China..."
There's the downside. Quite why anyone would want to live in a polluted authoritarian dictatorship beats me. Obviously money is king with her.
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What would you use a vehicle like that for? I drive a BMW i3 which is a gigantic family car and when my kids get older, I'm looking forward to hopefully switching to self-driving Uber as my main transport.
So back to that truck.
I can imagine that it's good for farming, but it's very high up, so without loading docks, it seems very impractical. I'm also guessing it has a huge engine (didn't check), so you're probably hauling car parts or othe
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Hauling stuff (firewood, etc).
Dropping a boat in the lake for a day and hauling it out....
Those are just a couple of quick things that come to mind.
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It's nice not to have to lift each piece of firewood over your head to put it in the truck. Also nice to be able to drop the firewood out of the truck without it bouncing away and having to move it again.
I'm probably getting old, but I like to minimize the work rather then maximize it and most new trucks are way too high and hard enough to get in, little well put anything else in. Nice to be able to see that boat that you're towing, especially when backing up to the lake.
Re:For these reasons and more (Score:5, Interesting)
There are people that buy Ford F-series trucks for work purposes - a whole lot of them. However, there are plenty of people that buy them for image, and rarely actually use the vehicle for it's intended purpose of hauling things around. Some will use them on the weekend for towing other recreational equipment - camping stuff, boats, etc.
Also, many people that buy an F-series truck for a business may be better served by an E-series van - it's cheaper, and has roughly the same cargo capacity without the thievery and cargo getting wet if it rains. Any business working in agriculture or other outdoor work is probably served best by the truck, but construction contractors usually go with the van, because they can lock up all their tools and still have room for several 4x8 sheets of wood, wallboard, boxes of tile, etc. without the risk of having all of it ruined should there be weather.
But vans aren't "cool" so the F-150 is the best selling vehicle in the world by a long way.
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"Moreover whoda thunk it - we humans are motivated by status. What morons! Obeying their instincts instead of suppressing them. That's so bad for their mental health!"
The amusing thing is that anyone thinks a pick-up truck confers status. If its not being used by a real blue collar worker then just says wannabe trailer trash to me.
YMMV indeed (Score:5, Funny)
> I also drive an F250 Super Duty King Ranch ... YMMV
Your Mileage May Vary indeed.
It may vary between 10 mpg and 16 mpg.
Re:For these reasons and more (Score:4, Funny)
The news I just heard is that we found the guy with the PT cruiser that hasn't rusted to shit, and actually still runs.