JD Power has been a well known bs award for years.
Check some of their prior rankings to see how full of shit it is.
JD Power checks for the first 90 days.
It does not capture "reliability" or quality.
It's more a spot check on dealer prep and how well the final inspection at the factory went.
This. First 90 days of ownership.
Everything you assumed about the survey is wrong.It's still not clear to me when 100 vehicles were examined, how the quality metric was obtained, ie if one car had 2 problems, does that count as two different problems, or just one car having any number of problems.
I interpret that as 100 cars were examined, and the total number of problems were recorded. That means 50 cars could have had 2 problems, and 50 could have had 0, but the metric would make it seem like 100% of the cars examined had a problem.
Also, just looking at a sample size of 100 is incredibly small when considering the thousands and thousands of cars made by each auto maker per year. If you had a bad production run for some reason that lasted even just a day or two, that count skew results quite a bit. I would hope/assume they polled many thousand people, then divided by 100 to normalize the data to be "PP100".
Still, if year after year, certain car makers end up higher or lower on this, I think that still gives a pretty good indication of long term new car quality. Still doesn't address anything over 3 months, which I'd like to see.
The margin in quality differences between Korean automakers and other automakers is particularly striking:
1. Korean automakers: 90 problems per 100 vehicles
2. European automakers: 113 problems per 100 vehicles
3. American automakers: 114 problems per 100 vehicles
4. Japanese automakers: 114 problems per 100 vehicles
I couldn't care less about 'initial quality,' I care about quality down the road. CR can tell you that.
ok so besides the Koreans, all cars are basically equal in this department - ill go back to ignoring this as I normally do as it really does not matter
Everything you assumed about the survey is wrong.
And this is the initial quality survey, not the long term reliability survey. That's a three year survey (used to be longer, apparently with the rise of leasing they had a hard time getting enough survey results to keep the longer time period).
http://autos.jdpower.com/ratings/dependability.htm
If you grade/lump all cars from one country together? How is this even really useful?
There is a lot of variability and I do think ~80/100 is MUCH different than ~150. That's a huge difference. That's 2x the issues in just 90 days...
You have to really go brand to brand. All the country grouping is tell you that the playing field is a lot more level today than it was 10-15 years ago. 'Japanese car' isn't the same, nor is 'American'. That's a whole other rabbit hole though, as many 'Japanese' or 'Korean' cars are engineered and/or built here, or partially, or non at all. It all comes down to the brand and model.
I'd even say, look at VW Group, look at GM, look at Ford...all as a whole, not necessarily each individual make. Although there's a wide spread between Porsche and VW for example, you can assume that the manufacturing process is pretty much identical for all intents and purposes within each group, depending, of course, on the age of the line.
If you grade/lump all cars from one country together? How is this even really useful?
There is a lot of variability and I do think ~80/100 is MUCH different than ~150. That's a huge difference. That's 2x the issues in just 90 days...
You have to really go brand to brand. All the country grouping is tell you that the playing field is a lot more level today than it was 10-15 years ago. 'Japanese car' isn't the same, nor is 'American'. That's a whole other rabbit hole though, as many 'Japanese' or 'Korean' cars are engineered and/or built here, or partially, or non at all. It all comes down to the brand and model.
I agree.
Although it seems like the Japan-made cars have been doing poorly. For example, most of the Subaru's sold in the US are made in Japan. And yet, Subaru ranked at the bottom, the worst of the worst.[/QUO
Very true.
I definitely wonder about Subaru. Because of current demand, is this more dealers being lazy and not doing their due diligence when they take delivery prior to customer ownership, or a factory quality issue?
When I got my WRX 4 years ago, I literally took the car an hour after it rolled-off the semi-trailer. The dealer hasd pre-sold over 75 cars that were en-route and these went directly to the customers. It could be demand-related. Some smaller Subaru dealers may just not have the processes in-place yet to handle the increased number of cars rolling off. Would be interesting to dig into this issue.
...
[snicker]Does Porsche count if they've made the same car for 30 years? I think they'd have gotten it right by now[/snicker]
Chevrolet is better than Toyota and Honda? Everybody knows that's impossible.
This study is about as believable as the "chocolate diet" study.
That and the Porsche fan boys will never admit something they bought has a problem. LOL.
Very true.
I definitely wonder about Subaru. Because of current demand, is this more dealers being lazy and not doing their due diligence when they take delivery prior to customer ownership, or a factory quality issue?
When I got my WRX 4 years ago, I literally took the car an hour after it rolled-off the semi-trailer. The dealer hasd pre-sold over 75 cars that were en-route and these went directly to the customers. It could be demand-related. Some smaller Subaru dealers may just not have the processes in-place yet to handle the increased number of cars rolling off. Would be interesting to dig into this issue.
And Subaru claims that 95% of their cars sold in last 10 yrs are still on road.Well Subarus have always been infamous for transmission problems.
But it's very worrying that they rank at the bottom along with Fiat. Same goes with Mazda.
I am worried that this study is no longer indicator of mechanical quality (you know, the reason why your car goes to junk yard or becomes worthless)
And Subaru claims that 95% of their cars sold in last 10 yrs are still on road.
I am worried that this study is no longer indicator of mechanical quality (you know, the reason why your car goes to junk yard or becomes worthless)
THIS.
These results are BS as a person who can't figure out their radio counts the same as a engine blowing up.
I remember when Hummer was near dead last, H2 years. So I did some digging and found the 2 biggest things to drop them was 1: Gets bad gas mileage and 2: rides to rough; like a truck. No s__t its a 3/4 Tahoe with leather, its going to get bad gas mileage and ride rough. Yet dropped near the bottom.