Originally posted by: sapiens74
Camry's, Toyota's best selling cars are all made here in the US.
They last long, are great cars and Toyota makes then here.
Originally posted by: Robor
Originally posted by: TruePaige
Originally posted by: Robor
Originally posted by: MIKEMIKE
Saturn, down 56.4 percent to 7,367
[/L]
<=== Saturn owner :brokenheart:
Same. It's because Saturn is being discontinued and it is shaking consumer confidence.![]()
Yep. Saturn always was the stepchild of GM. Now it's worse.![]()
Originally posted by: soccerballtux
Perhaps rednecks are being protectionist? Quality sure hasn't picked up in the last 5 years.
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: sapiens74
Camry's, Toyota's best selling cars are all made here in the US.
They last long, are great cars and Toyota makes then here.
Except the transmissions blow up.
Originally posted by: compuwiz1
Originally posted by: soccerballtux
Perhaps rednecks are being protectionist? Quality sure hasn't picked up in the last 5 years.
So Rednecks are the only one's buy Fords and GM's? No, people who want real trucks are buying them. Toyota does not have a real truck...close, but the frame is still not on par with GM or Ford. Crawl underneath one and they are still using a weaker c-channel frame, vs. the hydroformed fully boxed frame that GM and Ford have. Not to mention that Toyota took a hit over the Tundra engine failures.
Originally posted by: marincounty
The highest ranked truck for dependability, the 2006 Toyota Tundra.
"In its final year before a complete redesign for the 2007 model year, the 2006 Toyota Tundra is a repeat award recipient as the most dependable large pickup, according to verified owners who participated in the J.D. Power and Associates 2009 Vehicle Dependability Study."
The Tundra received ratings among the best in overall dependability and body and interior dependability.
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: marincounty
The highest ranked truck for dependability, the 2006 Toyota Tundra.
"In its final year before a complete redesign for the 2007 model year, the 2006 Toyota Tundra is a repeat award recipient as the most dependable large pickup, according to verified owners who participated in the J.D. Power and Associates 2009 Vehicle Dependability Study."
The Tundra received ratings among the best in overall dependability and body and interior dependability.
Except when the frames rust out.
Originally posted by: JeffreyLebowski
Originally posted by: soccerballtux
Perhaps rednecks are being protectionist? Quality sure hasn't picked up in the last 5 years.
What a fucking crock of shit. The quality of American vehicles (except Chrysler) is on par if not better than the imports.
Keep spewing you lies. Remind me again what vehicle of the year had it's title revoked. Oh, it was a Toyota.
Being a GM owner AND a Toyota owner, I will not buy a Toyota again. I shouldn't have to take my 2 week old Sienna back to the dealership 3 times to fix O2 sensors, imporperly formed exhaust manifolds and the tire pressure sensor system. It would have been 4 times, but the seat belt height adjuster broke right before we took it in to fix the tire pressure sensor system so we got a 2 for 1 on that one. My GM truck bought a month before the Toyota has been in once, and that was because I needed new brakes after 70K miles. Oh, the Yota needed new brakes after 35K miles.
Toyota quality is a myth. 95-00 Tacomas are being bought back because of frame FAILURES because the frames were not properly rust protected because toyota wanted to save a few bucks. Frames are literally being destroyed by rust. Now the problem is showing up on early model Tundra's.
You can keep thinking American vehicles are crap but we all know your farts stink just as bad as the rest of us, even if you do like your own aroma.
Originally posted by: bobsmith1492
Originally posted by: MIKEMIKE
Originally posted by: smashp
My Honda Civic has more US components and a larger portion of it was assembled here in the US than every GM car available on the Market
you are full of such bullshit it isnt funny.
Don't forget where the overall profits go... back to corporate.
Originally posted by: GroundedSailor
Originally posted by: JeffreyLebowski
Originally posted by: soccerballtux
Perhaps rednecks are being protectionist? Quality sure hasn't picked up in the last 5 years.
What a fucking crock of shit. The quality of American vehicles (except Chrysler) is on par if not better than the imports.
Keep spewing you lies. Remind me again what vehicle of the year had it's title revoked. Oh, it was a Toyota.
Being a GM owner AND a Toyota owner, I will not buy a Toyota again. I shouldn't have to take my 2 week old Sienna back to the dealership 3 times to fix O2 sensors, imporperly formed exhaust manifolds and the tire pressure sensor system. It would have been 4 times, but the seat belt height adjuster broke right before we took it in to fix the tire pressure sensor system so we got a 2 for 1 on that one. My GM truck bought a month before the Toyota has been in once, and that was because I needed new brakes after 70K miles. Oh, the Yota needed new brakes after 35K miles.
Toyota quality is a myth. 95-00 Tacomas are being bought back because of frame FAILURES because the frames were not properly rust protected because toyota wanted to save a few bucks. Frames are literally being destroyed by rust. Now the problem is showing up on early model Tundra's.
You can keep thinking American vehicles are crap but we all know your farts stink just as bad as the rest of us, even if you do like your own aroma.
And don;t forget in July 2007 Toyota took the title of 'Most no of cars recalled' away from Ford for the first time.
Originally posted by: Stunt
Hyundai didn't do their brand any favors in the early days. All the gains have been made very recently. Don't get me wrong I'm not down playing the effect of a strong brand but all it takes is a good product from any one of 10 companies for a product line to be completely slaughtered.Originally posted by: miketheidiot
and most of those companies entered the market in the 60's it took a generation for this to happenOriginally posted by: Stunt
By barriers to entry i mean it's pretty simple for any manufacturer develop a similar product or make a popular product. I mean look how fast market share has eroded over the last few years with massive incentives...hyundai, toyota, honda, nissan have all dominated the US car market as of late. Brand is less important these daysOriginally posted by: miketheidiot
Originally posted by: Stunt
Agreed...unfortunately you are attempting to correlate vehicle sales with cash flow; this is not the case. We have no idea from those numbers how much it cost to produce those vehicles or how much they sold for. Cash flow is defined as revenue minus costs. I agree the big 3 need to maximize cash flow...Originally posted by: Engineer
Originally posted by: Stunt
Sales are not indicative of profitability or sustainability...
While that's true, at this point, Ford and GM need cash flow to survive while trying to implement their "right sizing" and restructuring plans. Without the cash flow (regardless if they are making profits) from sales, liquidations of other units or borrowing (from the private sector or government loans, there is absolutely ZERO chance of survival. Ford has the best chance of survival right now. (Really wish I could have pulled the trigger when Ford stock sank to $1.01 earlier this year. I looked at it (live) and told a co-worker that this would be a great buy. It rose to as high as $5.99 during the last week!)
I would never buy auto or airline stock. Low barriers to entry, too much competition, capital intensive, products constantly change.
actually autos have very high barriers to entry; having a name brand is incredibly important. Thats why have countries like korea heavily subsidize your auto companies for decades is necessary to get people to buy you car just do you can have a name. On top of it the capital costs are enormous, and need large volumes to see decent economies of scale.
The new entrants have not been from start ups but trade...Originally posted by: miketheidiot
hyndai has been working their brand for at least a decade in the US, this isn't an overnight thing, and NOONE considers the auto industry an easy to enter market, which is why there hasn't been a new automaker in a generation. Hyundai was the last major player, and began selling cars in the US 1986 and was founded in 1967.
Originally posted by: Stunt
The new entrants have not been from start ups but trade...Originally posted by: miketheidiot
hyndai has been working their brand for at least a decade in the US, this isn't an overnight thing, and NOONE considers the auto industry an easy to enter market, which is why there hasn't been a new automaker in a generation. Hyundai was the last major player, and began selling cars in the US 1986 and was founded in 1967.
The market is saturated with brands and models; an indication of low barriers to entry.
Think of the number of cars available today and the full product lines of probably 20+ brands.
Originally posted by: marincounty
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: marincounty
The highest ranked truck for dependability, the 2006 Toyota Tundra.
"In its final year before a complete redesign for the 2007 model year, the 2006 Toyota Tundra is a repeat award recipient as the most dependable large pickup, according to verified owners who participated in the J.D. Power and Associates 2009 Vehicle Dependability Study."
The Tundra received ratings among the best in overall dependability and body and interior dependability.
Except when the frames rust out.
2nd place- 2006 Ford F-150
3rd place- 2006 GMC Sierra 1500
Sorry if the facts don't fit your ideology. In spite of rust problems, Toyota is still more dependable than Ford and GM.
Porter's 5 ForcesOriginally posted by: miketheidiot
jesus christ your wrong, get over it, move on.Originally posted by: Stunt
The new entrants have not been from start ups but trade...Originally posted by: miketheidiot
hyndai has been working their brand for at least a decade in the US, this isn't an overnight thing, and NOONE considers the auto industry an easy to enter market, which is why there hasn't been a new automaker in a generation. Hyundai was the last major player, and began selling cars in the US 1986 and was founded in 1967.
The market is saturated with brands and models; an indication of low barriers to entry.
Think of the number of cars available today and the full product lines of probably 20+ brands.
how many brands were there a decade ago? how long have these brands been around?
if the auto industry is so easy to get into, where are all the surging new automakers founded in the last 5-10 years?