is it can be endtiems now plees?

Jun 12, 2007 19:16

So, today, I foolishly started to play FF12. Clearly, the planets have aligned to keep me from playing (WE GOT IT IN DECEMBER AND I'M ONLY 8 HOURS IN. *CRY*) because about ten minutes in, when I had just remembered the story and how to play, Mom and Dad come home and go "If you want your oil changed, you'd better come now, because we're going ( Read more... )

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Comments 14

kawaiiguy June 13 2007, 02:58:35 UTC
Here's a recommendation... buy a Japanese car. They don't break :)

My last car was a Toyota Corolla. I drove it back to New York after I bought my new car last fall (the Mazda).

...it was a '93 with over 170k miles on it.

My sister is now driving it to and from college, and the only "issue" it has is that it burns a little oil. Other than that, it's fine. It also still gets around 40MPG. Damn that car is awesome.

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4ti3k4t35 June 13 2007, 06:17:28 UTC
Back in the day, Mom and Dad drove a Korean car. It broke down. The parts where nowhere to be found. Mom said, "Next car we buy will have parts available at 2AM." Dad said, "Right, we're buying Ford then."

We've had Fords ever since. I think the issue here mainly is that my car is older than I am. I think I will try next to have a car that is younger than me. That sounds good.

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kawaiiguy June 13 2007, 12:26:46 UTC
Korean != Japanese.

Many Korean manufacturers save on R&D by purchasing the rejected design plans from other manufacturers (Japanese, US, etc.) There were probably reasons why these designs were rejected. To cut additional cost, car makers skimp on parts quality. This ultimately means a low price, which makes them more attractive to consumers who are concerned about initial investment.

...then they break a year after driving them.

Personally, I would say that Korean cars are the only cars with worse reliability than American cars. That is, barring cars made in Russia, the Middle East, and Malaysia (though Proton is actually not bad).

My recommendation still stands. Buy Japanese. Buy a Toyota, especially. You won't need parts at 2AM, because it won't break. The only way it'll break is if you crash it or do stupid things to it. :)

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4ti3k4t35 June 13 2007, 22:09:31 UTC
Ha ha, please forget I wrote Korean and replace it with French as the car was a Peugeot, not some ancient Hyundai Excel, as I somehow remembered.

>_o

You won't need parts at 2AM, because it won't break.

I call bullshit! All cars break. That's as reliable as gravity on Earth. I'd prefer to fix mine myself as fast as possible rather then send off for a part or send the car to a shop. :|

I wonder if there are any Japanese part shops nearby. I live in Seattle for fuck's sake. >_o

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webwormx June 14 2007, 07:23:51 UTC
I recall telling you that you needed to get a new starter around a year ago :-)

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4ti3k4t35 June 14 2007, 07:34:03 UTC
Heh, we can't believe it lasted as long as it did. Dad thought we'd have to replace it when we first got the car up and running two years ago.

Also, that's the method Dad used to get the car started after the four years of sitting on the lawn.

And the method he used again in the lube place, right before it started smoking. =D

I swear, the car has NEVER started so good. And it only cost around $45. Plus! Dad got some new battery cables. I am so thrilled. ;_; Turning the key isn't like playing Ignition Roulette anymore!

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