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| 01-16-2026, 01:03 PM | #67 | |
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They occasionally bring a truck with bed-mounted generators to the lot to put some juice into the vehicles. Hilarious.
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| 01-16-2026, 01:22 PM | #68 |
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Maaaan i love the new m2. ik it isnt for everyone tho. Biggest mistake of all time was the diesel version of the 350. It blackballed all of america on diesel engines in cars. Now we dont have 3 and 5 series m57 cars. If someone totals my e90 335d im gonna buy a nice roller e39 and make one
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| 01-17-2026, 11:07 PM | #69 | |
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| 01-18-2026, 09:43 AM | #70 |
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Ford and Bosch messed up with the CP4 HPFP on the 6.7 Power Stroke diesel. Failure mode means metal shavings are created in the pump and the engine goes to Heaven. The fuel system is not returnless so the bad stuff gets spread around the engine.
As of early 2025 builds, the problem is still ongoing, but anecdotally seems less prevalent. p.s. CP4 threads on the Ford truck sites point out the diesel fuel quality differences (particulate size) between Europe and the US. Both Bosch and car companies are abjectly failing to put diesel engines in the U.S. market that can cope with the prevailing fuel quality. Yes, the other side of the coin is better fuel quality but the chances of that happening are less than a better fuel pump design. The required design change is trivial for Bosch, transparent to Ford and consumers would willingly pay $50 more per truck for a fuel pump that doesn't grenade their 500k mile engine. p.p.s. Fuel quality and DPF quality are contributing factors, but not the root cause, of CP4 failures. |
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| 01-18-2026, 10:36 PM | #71 |
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I rent a lot of cars, so I usually have my own list of stuff that annoys me straight away.
Haptic controls vs buttons as appropriate. Displays are fine and can add a lot of flexibility, but as noted in many threads, some of the application is downright lazy and stupid, especially the stuff where it's haptic off a screen. Climate control systems with manual temp selectors for L and R seats...but no sync button. If you're going go give the ability to do this with buttons, the sync should be there too. Drive mode and CC-on settings that don't "remember" when you shut off the car. Drive mode is sometimes forgivable, but not when it is your preferred mode and you deem that to be fairly important to how the car acts, like it's the suspension setting you prefer that should be run all the time. CC-on is never forgivable, why the hell do I need to "turn it on" every time I start the car? Camera-based ACC. This sucks balls compared to radar and while radar is not 100%, it's damn near in my experience in snow and wet weather, while camera is easily foiled by stupid shit like rain/snow/ice on the windshield and ****ing hills with signs on it for some reason. It seems like they do this to wrap lane-assist and ACC all into one, vs. having to have a separate radar. The one advantage of camera ACC is it can detect stationary objects, but that's not enough of an advantage when it won't even work in the first place, like in fog. And on the same theme, not making lane-assist/keeping an on/off button easily identifiable and in-reach, rather than buried in some stupid menu/setting. And on the CC theme, CCs that slow down for turns when the car is perfectly capable of taking the turn. I tried for a while to find where this was a setting on a Mazda and it just seemed to be integrated into it...I know other cars, cars I've owned, have it as a setting. Granted, these are features, not vehicles, but I'm sure I could come up with a dozen more in a few minutes.
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| 01-18-2026, 10:40 PM | #72 | |
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| 01-19-2026, 08:35 AM | #73 | |
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That car got the most compliments of any car I have owned. I had people taking pictures of the car at stop lights, videoing the car as I drove through parking lots, or taking pics when I gassing the car. (The only other time I got that much attention in a car was when I drove my new 2002 Boxster in southern MO and ended up in Branson MO during the tourist season.) November 2024 I traded the M2 in for a new 2024 M8 Comp Coupe. The M8 is an awesome car but I am sort of thinking about getting another M2 with a 6-speed manual and shedding the M8 with its AWD/transfer case and 8-speed automatic. |
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| 01-19-2026, 01:02 PM | #74 |
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You guys are missing a lot;
GM keeping the CT5-V RWD and not making a AWD M5 killing variant GM's shitty DCT in the C8 generation corvette GM making the c8 mid engine and in general making it not a corvette anymore Tesla STILL not fixing the shitty bushings in their cars that degrade after a few thousand miles BMW with the huge heavy M5 BMW reducing their build quality and features on every single model since COVID BMW with the garbage XM BMW making the S68 appear in everything versus the clear delineation between the Msport and M models previously BMW with the garbage duct-taped on iDrive8/8.5ui BMW with the questionable design of the G87 M2 that apparently polarizes people - which is great you can have people that like both things but the real business goal should of been to appease both parties Which brings me to... BMW Neue Klass garbage, I don't even know what to say here. BMW -- Idrive x... Audi - Have you guys been seeing with they're doing to their entire lineup with EVs and killing a lot of models? Lucid - I don't have to say anything here that isn't obvious Mercedes - someone touched on the c63 being a hybrid 4 how about the GLC63? Gimped. Mercedes - All the AMG43/53 cars, what a joke Lamborghini - Killing the v10 for the shittiest sounding v8 I've ever heard Ferrari - The halo F car is a v6tt. No. Porsche - The price increases on all their models + cowtowing to china + then getting wrecked, love it, other members have touched on it, but it's even bigger than the EV stuff summary: This EV/hybrid stuff combined with the deindustrialization of Germany due to their idiotic ideology is proving to be disastrous for car enthusiasts worldwide.
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| 01-19-2026, 03:29 PM | #75 | |
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The Tundra 5.7 was very outdated and wasn't even DI. Direct injection alone is worth around 10% in power. That alone would have taken the 5.7 from 381hp/401tq to around 420hp/450tq. Add in newer gen valve timing and a variable plane intake runner manifold and they could have squeezed another 5-10% in power. Then team that with a well geared 8 speed auto vs the long geared and lazy 6 speed auto plus the 10-20% improvement in MPGs from DI, and you're looking at one hell of a solid performer with exceptional performance at all rpms and much better mpgs. And the engine would have far less parts than that quite complex and almost Audi/VW levels of complexity with that 3.5 twin turbo V6. They could have offered a smaller displacement V8 and the 5.7.
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| 01-19-2026, 03:36 PM | #76 | |
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A 2025 Civic hybrid weighs around 3200-3250 and uses a hybrid, direct drive trans and layout and gets 50/47 mpg. A Civic Si with the 1.5 turbo and no hybrid system weighs ~2950lbs and get 27/37 mpg. The Civic hybrid is also slightly quicker too. The Prius hybrid is about 250lbs lighter than the Prius plug in hybrid which has a much larger battery. The plug in hybrid weighs around 3500lbs. A RWD Tesla Model 3 weighs around 3900lbs. The much more common AWD Model 3 is around 4100lbs.
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| 01-19-2026, 03:39 PM | #77 |
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Probably another thread. It would be good to see what carmakers are getting right now. Not what used to be good in the days of yore.
But rather what cars are in production today that have a fair number of universally accepted positive characteristics. |
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| 01-19-2026, 06:17 PM | #79 | |
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Family cars, Toyota's Rav4 Hybris is a compelling everyman vehicle with great MPG if you just need a reliable family car with solid space and cheap to run economics. |
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| 01-20-2026, 08:41 AM | #81 | |
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And while you might reach those torque numbers you quote, it's the curve that becomes most important, not necessarily peak. I have my doubts as to whether you'd easily reach them (with independent dyno testing) with the normal hardware that has to meet reliability standards for mass-production. I think around a GM DI 6.2 is the minimum, where mine makes about 460tq and around 300lb/ft at ~1000rpm. If you can't match those types of numbers, turbo/hybrid is a great way to go and it gets you the pull when you need it. The giant engine gets thirsty when you add the drag and weight of a truck. Fords issue for years has been not boring over 3.6. Mustang is a great example of an engine that is not suitable for a truck, needs to be wrang way out to make decent torque. Basically the opposite of the GM. People want torque and pull, apart from going bigger and bigger, turbo and hybrid is the way to do it. Smaller ICE is never going to make sense, except for situations where you don't intend to ever have much load.
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| 01-20-2026, 08:48 AM | #82 | |
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A manual transmission can be set to "comfort", "sport", and "track" modes simply by the technique and speed at which you shift it; it doesn't need "modes", modes are for manumatics that try to behave like a real 3-pedal manual transmission. If you can money-shift it, it's a manual transmission. "Yeah, but NO ONE puts an automatic trans shift knob on a manual transmission."
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| 01-20-2026, 09:14 AM | #83 |
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Weight has a linear effect on energy requirement. Frontal area (drag coefficient) has a cubic effect on energy requirement. Agree that 500lbs of weight isn't explaining the difference in fuel economy.
The 5.3 V8 is a less efficient machine, period. Pushrod, NA, no DI, heavier/more friction rotating assembly, etc. The fuel economy illustrates this. The example given is a pretty good one with similar output and similar size/weight vehicles. |
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| 01-20-2026, 10:15 AM | #84 |
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"Easy to maintain", like an E92 M3, with rod bearings at 20,000-miles and throttle bodies on a regular basis?
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| 01-20-2026, 11:36 AM | #86 | |
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| 01-20-2026, 12:18 PM | #87 |
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VAG (mostly Audi, some Porsche) early build failures of rocker arm roller follower needle bearings, EA839 3.0T and 2.9TTV6. Needle bearings were too small, wore and created wear on the roller center pin. Needles fell out, rocker arm got loose and went voyaging through the cam chest. No bueno. Mainly 2017-2018 build years for RS5, Q7/Q8, Macan, Panamera and Cayenne. Has since been fixed by VAG via larger needle bearings.
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| 01-20-2026, 02:44 PM | #88 | |
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