Hallu wrote:Except that now the Falcon and its Holden counter-part are rubbish. They are a self-parody of their old ancestors, the symbol of boganism (or cocks, as Top Gear would put it), of bling, of stupidity (at least in Australia). Yeah they can be fun to drive, but to buy ? Forget it. Aussies have absolutely no taste in cars : X5, Cayenne, the last bling bling landrovers, a huge number of awful and cheap kias and hyundais, a mass of ridiculous vauxhall/holden/opel (buy Aussie ? No those are German cars, and not the good ones...)... They're only saved by some Hilux (but it's mostly for practicality and durability) and a couple of Subarus.
wander wrote:Australia as a whole is only a large city in the context of Europe, the USA, China and Japan so it is bizarre (and a huge credit to those involved that that have kept going so long) that we have a car industry at all never mind 3 factory set ups with holden ford and toyota. We need to get a grip appreciate the we are really a very very small player.
Hallu wrote:I've never understood something : in mainland Europe, automatic gearboxes are for old rich people, buying BMWs and Mercs. Nobody has an automatic. In English speaking countries on the other hand, that seems to be the norm, and you can choose to get your driving licence on an automatic or a manual O_o Why is that ?
Nuts wrote:What is your preferred ride Hallu?
Strider wrote:Auto's are stronger and are usually found behind bigger engines. European engines are typically small, with the exception of those BMW's and Mercs.
Apart from snow driving, I can't imagine why anyone would actually choose a front-wheel-drive vehicle. Particularly for mountain rounds where understeer = death.
Hallu wrote:Auto transmissions have nothing to do with big cars or not
Hallu wrote:there's no tendency for small European engines
Hallu wrote:just about 90% of vehicles on the market right now are front-wheel drive.
Hallu wrote:Oversteer = death too you know.
Hallu wrote:Front engine rear wheel drive have less grip than front engine front wheel drive, why did you think they made them ?
Hallu wrote:So unless you have a Porsche with the engine at the back pressing on the wheel, or a high end rear wheel drive perfectly balanced, a regular priced front wheel drive vehicle IS better in corners (you won't find a regular priced rear wheel drive car nowadays anyway).
Nuts wrote:What is your preferred ride Hallu?
walkinTas wrote:Ford (and Holden) knew as early as 1998 that the market was shifting away from the large family sedan. Ford responded in Europe with the Mondeo, but marched on in Australia like Lemmings towards the cliff top seemingly unable or unwilling to change course.
Hallu wrote:lol so your argument towards rear wheel drive is that when things go wrong it's better ? Apart from sport and muscle cars, there's no rear wheel drive cars on the market for regular guys, so the debate is pretty useless. And European engines are the same as Japanese engines or the rubbish Korean ones. So unless you call Aussie and US muscle car or 4WD the norm, I can't see how you could argue, because there are simply no car makers left... "Apart from performance cars name one", well can you name a non-performance Aussie car with a big engine ? lol Do you know Aussie family saloons or hatchbacks with a V8 or a V10 ? Compare what's comparable. All companies make pretty much the same size of engine nowadays anyway. You find more small cars in Europe, simply because that's what you drive when you have small streets and real corners, but there's not trend to make small engines...
The way it puts the power down, the way it transfers torque to the driving wheels, is so clean and tidy it's a wonder more people haven't tacked on to the vehicle's biggest draw card (and no, I don't have Mitsubishi shares). The 380 VRX's powertrain is surprisingly good, and for power down and tractability, the Commodore and Falcon come in second and third places respectively.
ive driven four different makes of front wheel drive medium size jap cars on windy hill country roads for decades . none of them could hold a candle to the falcon for road holding
They sure have. In exactly the same way they've spoken about heavy, big, rear wheel drive Ford cars. When they were looking at trying to save Mitsubishi in the early 2000s, the biggest thought was that Australians demanded front wheel drives weren't suitable or safe enough for Australian roads. So they made an AWD Magna (large, powerful, six cylinder) which stuck like GLUE and it sold like crap. The drivetrain was not the problem.The 380 also only lasted a couple of years before being discontinued - the customers have spoken.
When it comes to maintaining grip on a slippery, windy road, basic physics suggests completely the opposite!half the mitsi 380's benefit is its size
Rear-wheel drive vs front-wheel drive! V8 vs V6 engines! You are arguing over technology that belongs in the past. Even the Internal combustion engines is ancient technology. The whole car industry needs a very big shake up. Right around the globe car manufacturers only survive on massive government handouts. IMHO any car manufacturer will struggle in the future without a global market for their product. I hope we can continue to have manufactures in Australia, but I also hope there is a big rethink of the products they make and the technologies we use.
We've been conditioned by the car industry to accept certain technologies while they have regurgitated a 150 year old paradigm. Hopefully our dinosaurs will disappear from our roads sooner rather than later, and the sheer pleasure of driving them will be an enthusiast weekend hobby.
Hopefully somewhere in the not too distant future we will have urban transport that actually addresses the many problems caused by using personal cars as a means of getting from A to B.
Take a look at this video. Don't look at the car - look at the technology - and the possibilities. Its a concept of what 2030 might bring. Vehicles that don't run into each other or run off the road, vehicles that park themselves and return to you when needed, vehicles that can drive themselves while you do productive work (working in your commute time). (read more) Simple truth is we have the technology to do much better than just stick with the old paradigm.
South_Aussie_Hiker wrote:They sure have. In exactly the same way they've spoken about heavy, big, rear wheel drive Ford cars. When they were looking at trying to save Mitsubishi in the early 2000s, the biggest thought was that Australians demanded front wheel drives weren't suitable or safe enough for Australian roads. So they made an AWD Magna (large, powerful, six cylinder) which stuck like GLUE and it sold like crap. The drivetrain was not the problem.
It's only a matter of time for Holden, recent announcements have just delayed the inevitable. The car manufacturers all demand that Australians want large, powerful, rear wheel drive cars. Australians don't buy them. Car companies close up shop. It's very, very simple. Ford made good mileage with the boom in SUVs by making the Territory here, and it delayed the inevitable. Holden have moved in the right direction by building the Cruze in Australia. But it's too little, too late - Holden Australia have lost over $100million per year for the last two years.
I'm glad we agree on Zebralight headlights, Strider - doesn't seem like we agree on much else![]()
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