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An oft assumed, but incorrect assumption.Modern vehicles ON A WHOLE (there are glorious f'up exceptions) are proven to be more reliable and longer lasting.
The tipping point for me was (a story I've told before) when my sister bought a brand new Chevy mini-van, 2010 or so.Two weeks after she bought it, it just stopped dead on the side of the road, all electrics out - I happened to be the one who picked her up to get home. The dealer came and got the car - a week later they returned it to her "fixed".Four days after that, it went dead again. This time she called the dealer to come pick her up and get ready to cut her a check for the full refund amount, which they did; I suppose the tone of her voice had undertones of "lemon law", "lawsuits", "bad publicity", etc which they recognized and reacted to. She went that day and bought a Toyota van, which did well for her.The Chevy dealer was on her route to work. One day, she saw her "old" van in the lot, with a guy looking at it, clipboard in hand. She (out of curiosity and a desire to help (!)) stopped in, and talked to him. Turns out he was a GM service rep, surveying the van for breaking up for parts. He said that the $20,000 wholesale value of the van could easily be used up in parts and labor trying to find the problem, and so the "brand new van" wasn't worth trying to diagnose and fix. Even by the factory, much less the factory-trained dealer.Summary for this "old man" who "doesn't appreciate computer technology" and makes "bad assumptions" about high-tech ...... "I Don't Want That Kind Of Vehicle Any More". Basically disposable, unfixable, doesn't do a thing that I really care about that the old ones won't do. I'm not a fanatic, though - our two-up 1930-s design bike, the Norton MkIII has disc brakes, and I've done TLS brake upgrades on the BSAs.Probably 300,000 of the almost 500K lifetime miles that I have on bikes are on 50's - 70's technology bikes. Of the 7 bikes in my shed, two of them have fuel injection, but the others work just fine for me. I not only remember the differences from "the old days", but I have "the old days" in my shed, and Fay and I ride them.Note that since this opinion of mine was developed by experience and not by debate, I can't be debated into a different position, and there are no "assumptions" being made, none at all. Folks are just going to have to understand that people can look at the same data and come to a completely different conclusion than they did, and live by that conclusion. That can be hard, I know.YUP!!!Lannis
I drive way too much to have a car with carbs/points etc. anymore. My current Audi is near to 200,000 miles and runs beautifully Still looks good too.
Just took a ride on one of my low tech bikes. No ECU, no carbs, no motor.Some years I put more miles on pedaled bikes.I drive way too much to have a car with carbs/points etc. anymore. My current Audi is near to 200,000 miles and runs beautifully Still looks good too. 2 ends of the rope, I guess.
Bob Corfield's got a firm grip on one end of that rope. He showed up at our Virginia Guzzi lunch (350 mile trip for him) on his 1000SP, which turned over 200,000 miles on the journey. Still running points, sees no reason to change, never had any problem with them. That's some real miles.Lannis
Oh well I've been corrected then, I must have been ASS-uming.Thanks for the benefit of your wisdom and taking the time to set me straight, appreciated
This horse has been beaten on a multi yearly basis.
No problem. No charge either. But fwiw it's common comment I've found over the years so I've looked into it and statistically (lies, damn lies) seem to show the assumption isn't a good one. And that's not really surprising if you look at so many other things in life, science, physics, where you might want to assume one thing and then are surprised by the other.But the good news is that in this endeavor we call life Humana seem to continue to make strides. Yeah we go sideways sometimes, but largely the quality of manufacturing and its results have gone up and up.Materials, capabilities, etc.I know this, I see this, and then I still look at my wife and ask if she REALLY wants all those features on her next car she wants to keep 10 years... Cause it's so easy to think the other way.
I hear where you're coming from, but God help you if you spend 20k on a new motorcycle with all the whistles and bells and you get the Lemon (or worse you buy the second hand lemon with none of the warranty.) Statisically there is no doubt that stuff is getting better and more reliable, but, and it applies a lot more to motorcycles than cars that rogue bikes still exist. Motorcycle volumes are far lower and, here anyway, the trade is nowhere near as slick or under the same scrutiny as it is with car manufacture. Just 2 days back a guy I know just bought an electric Jag which broke down, probably less than a few months old. Turns out it developed an unexplained voltage spike. Blew the high Voltage fuses, fried several batteries, and blew quite a bit of the low voltage circuitry for good measure too. He's fine it's brand new he's just gotta decide if he wants a brand new one from the factory or use the UK's version of your Lemon Laws.What happens though if it developed that same fault outta warranty? If you do get the lemon you'll probably not be able to fix it yourself and even the shop might not, and you'll be in a circle of pain trying to put it right and no doubt spend time and effort arguing with the manufacturer.I'd just rather not take the chance that's all, when it comes to motorcycles the older tech has all I need and I can understand the machine take it apart and (probably) fix it. A modern machine I won't have the diagnostic tools or know how, so I get it to the shop, pay 70-90 GBP pr hour for a mechanic's time and pray he knows what he is doing.Thanks but no thanks Kev you walk your street and I'll walk mine, but I'm not going to be nipping out to purchase a new overpriced, overpowered, overcomplex, oversize plastic training shoe anytime soon
Security keys (chipped keys) suck!!! Since they first popped up on cars I’d hazard a guess that car and motorcycle thefts haven’t dropped at all
I submit to you that a carb system would not do this to me. Yes, it might leak. Yes, it might wear and slowly get crappier gas mileage, gently telling me it needs attention. Yes, it might ask for a more extended warm up period or use of a choke. Yes, if I suddenly take a day trip from sea level Texas to Leadville, TX I might have sub-optimal fueling in Colorado. But at least it would always try to put friggin’ gas into my gas powered engine, and I’d be running on the road!! In contrast, a Prima Donna FI system might just decide it doesn’t want to play.