General Motors discussions

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  • turboshadowturboshadow Member Posts: 338
    I agree wholeheartedly with you. I think the ADM will kill the Shelby the same way it killed the Thundrbird, the SSR, the GTO and the GT.
  • driver100driver100 Member Posts: 32,684
    Are they really going with that name Enclave? Hummm?

    Sounds like something you get done at the dentist's office!

    2017 MB E400 , 2015 MB GLK350, 2014 MB C250

  • lemkolemko Member Posts: 15,261
    Shoot, what's Delphi doing? Handing out applications at the door when the "Jerry Springer Show" lets out?
  • lweisslweiss Member Posts: 342
    I was reading the report on Rick Waggoner's performance at the annual meeting for GM Shareholders in Delaware this past week. And I still think that the GM Board and the stockholders are way too easy on GM's management. They have made so many errors of judgment over the past 10 years (like not anticipating the higher gasoline prices)- how can people think that the same management bozos won't make similar mistakes going forward?

    And let's be frank- most of the new product introductions of the past 5 years for GM have not been exactly big hits- the LaCrosse, the Malibu, the G6 come to mind- trucks and big SUV's are better, those seem to be in GM's core competancy, cars aren't. And it would seem to be naive to think that they Asians, Europeans, Ford, Daimler Chrysler will be sitting on their hands waiting for GM to come back- I still think that GM would do well to hang on to market share in North America, look to growth overseas and cutting costs all around. This is a company that "has its best future behind it"
  • chuck1959chuck1959 Member Posts: 654
    Isn't GM doing a lot better in China/Europe?
  • xrunner2xrunner2 Member Posts: 3,062
    All the SUV's are light years ahead of the competition

    "All"? Light years ahead?

    Would be interested in an enumeration of these GM models vs the competition.
  • geo9geo9 Member Posts: 735
    toyota has very FEW "stockholders" here in the USA
    most all of them are in japan.
    toyota "stock" is traded here as ADRs (American
    depository recipts)which equal 2 shares of actual
    toyota stock in their HOME country of japan NOT the
    USA !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
    Did you know BIG spending toyota only pays a .17 cent
    dividend per share SEMI-annually?

    Go to toyota.com to see the actual majority of "share"
    owners and where they live. Sure ain't the USA !

    Then take a trip over to one of the stockbroker forums
    and get the lowdown on why these companies that are
    here to "help and invest in the USA" use this ADR scam
    instead of being incorporated in good old Delaware USA!

    Quite the eyeopener !!!!!!!!!!! :cry:
  • driver100driver100 Member Posts: 32,684
    Hey LaCrosse Fans:

    For a very good review of the LaCrosse, as a comparison to a Camry check this sight. The writer usually knocks GM but he gave LaCrosse a very good review. Keep in mind the LaCrosse is called an Allure in Canada and this is the reason why;
    Confusing matters was the need to rename the car for the Canadian market, from the U.S. name LaCrosse, which describes a self-fulfilling sexual act in Quebecois teenage slang.


    link title

    One thing I found troubling was this;
    The Camry boasts standard side airbags, unavailable on the Allure and standard side-curtain airbags, optional on the Allure.
    I think all car companies should have enough respect for their customers that they should put as much safety in their vehicles as possible...even Hyundai does it.

    2017 MB E400 , 2015 MB GLK350, 2014 MB C250

  • fintailfintail Member Posts: 58,805
    I don't see how low dividends are an issue...investors aren't fleeing, now are they...

    Perhaps if GM had put all that dividend money into its products, it wouldn't be in such severe hurt...
  • m1miatam1miata Member Posts: 4,551
    Wonder why the press was so down on the LaCrosse style. Looks to me a lot better style wise than most of the competition. Smooth flowing lines are likely to look good for a long - long time. The car has done excellent in crash tests. May be one of those used car of the year cars. Yeah, the sad part is that many people, like me, would be incline to wait for the used car deal. Well, unless they offer like $5K off.
    -Loren
  • turboshadowturboshadow Member Posts: 338
    Yeah, the sad part is that many people, like me, would be incline to wait for the used car deal.

    Oh, I agree. No better deal than a two or three year old American sedan. Too bad for the domestics.
  • m1miatam1miata Member Posts: 4,551
    Hyundai is going to be a big headache for GM.
    JD Powers latest news on Initial Quality.
    Initial Quality Report

    -Loren
  • 62vetteefp62vetteefp Member Posts: 6,043
    Things are looking up for some of GM but not good for others.

    Toyota got 11 firsts out of 19 segments. Had 15 vehicles in the top 3 of the 19 segments (57 spots). Darn good.

    GM earned only 2 top spots with 11 vehicles in top 19 segments. Not great but better than most.

    Honda had no top spots and only 5 in top 3. Acura not anywhere except for TL.

    Hyundai is the big winner with 5 in the top 3.

    Really big winner is Hyundai now at spot #3 above Toyota and just below Lexus(which is now 2nd under Porsche).

    Cadillac still is up in the top 10 which now includes GMC. Chevrolet is now at industry average. Big loser is Buick dropping below industry average (but above MB/Scion/BMW/Mazda/VW). VW is still at the bottom just above Isuzu(they still here?) and Land Rover.

    What the hell happened to Buick??? Last year LaCrosse just missed the top 3 spots in the midsize but was still above the Camry/Accord. whoops. Looks like the W cars have been moved into the large segment leaving the Camry and Accord in the midsize to win? Rainier was #2 in Midsize MAV (Multi-Activity Vehicle). Maybe the Minivan and the Lucerne dragged them down.

    Grand Prix #1 in large car now and Impala not seen in top 3.

    Well maybe now JD matches CR. :surprise: JD did change the survey. They were just about problems, now they ask how features work. We will see what the data says.
  • 62vetteefp62vetteefp Member Posts: 6,043
    Oshawa Canada comes 2nd in quality.

    Actually Oshawa came in first.

    Means most everyone is doing well in Initial quality. Range is 91 PPH to 204 PPH. That is about one problem per vehicle vs. 2.
  • grbeckgrbeck Member Posts: 2,358
    imidazol97: Are you saying that the corporation does not move money back to the head company nor does the company use captive supplier setups that also move the money back to the head company location? I'm talking about after removing any offshore banking techniques and funny ownership setups are removed from the suppliers...

    No, I'm saying that the transplants - Toyota included - are investing their profits to expand design, engineering and production facilities in the U.S. This is well documented. These facilities employ thousands of Americans who spend their money in their communities.

    These companies make a significant contribution to the local economies where they locate facilities. Even more importantly, they contribute to the country's industrial base by bringing in new ideas and production methods. Honda, for example, has been quite willing to share its methods with other companies, even allowing GM personnel to tour its facilities to garner new ideas.

    If GM, Ford and the UAW can't learn from these competitors because of union contracts, past practice or plain old stubborness, that is their problem, not ours.

    Incidentally, if people are to be concerned about "where the money goes," I guess that Europeans should never buy an Opel/Vauxhall or Ford.

    At different times, profits generated by the European subisidiaries of GM and Ford have been used to keep the parent company afloat when the North American operations were in the red (i.e., Ford in the early 1980s).

    I certainly hope that Europeans don't decide to boycott Opels, Vauxhalls and Fords because of where the money they spend might go (i.e., out of Europe).

    You seem to be using answers that aren't to the same question I asked about where the money goes: "Lots of money stays here."

    Did you mean to say "all"?


    No, I meant to say "lots"

    You, in your prior post, said it would be best if the "more money" stayed here. I answered your question - lots of money is staying here, as the transplants are plowing money into American-based design, engineering and production facilities. This is well documented.

    In the future, as the American market becomes more important to the transplants (the Japanese market has been stagnant), even "more money" will stay here, as it will make sense to invest in a stronger American presence.

    (A manufacturer must eventually tailor its vehicles to local tastes if it wants long-term success. Hence, the need for design, engineering and production facilities in that particular country or region. GM and Ford found this out prior to World War II, and the big Japanese players have discovered it again.)

    The real problem is that some can't accept that the American automobile market is evolving, and some companies aren't doing well in adapting to this change.

    The American auto market is evolving in the direction of the European market. There will be five or six big players, and some of those players will be foreign companies with significant design and production facilities in the U.S. market.

    As in the European market, there is less room for badge engineering, brands without clear identities are fading away and companies must work hard to stand out from competitors.

    "Good enough" isn't good enough anymore.

    These trends will continue in the U.S.:

    An increasing number of cars will be assembled with non-union labor.

    No one company will dominate, especially as GM did from 1941-1981.

    Weaker brands - Pontiac, Mercury, Mitsubishi, maybe even Buick and Lincoln - will die.

    National origin will be a decreasing factor in buying decisions.

    Instead of manufacturing excuses - currency manipulation; evil doings at Consumer Reports; asking where the money goes; consumers too stupid to realize that selling large numbers of vehicles to Alamo is a good thing; etc., etc. - it would be better to demand that companies manufacture the best vehicles possible to compete in this changed market.
  • driver100driver100 Member Posts: 32,684
    link title

    The JD Powers award has an award for almost everybody. I don't see an award for GM but their car plant in Oshawa Canada comes 2nd in quality.
    Also, lets see the rankings! It's very confusing. As I said before, it does mean something, but not a whole lot...Mercedes says it gets knocked for excessive brake dust but it is because they need brakes that will work at faster speeds on the Autobon. And, cars like MB also add gadgets first in their new stages when problems can develop, however they have a 5 year bumper to bumper.
    So, the information is very useful....but has to be used carefully.

    2017 MB E400 , 2015 MB GLK350, 2014 MB C250

  • ace35ace35 Member Posts: 131
    All the SUV's are light years ahead of the competition, which makes the new trucks promising.

    While the new "utes" are nice, they're in no way light years ahead. I would actually give that crown to the blue oval guys. Ford in my opinion makes the best SUV's Now if only they could get the powertrains right, Ford SUV's would be killer. The new Expo seems promising with 6 spd auto, IRS, power liftgate, DVD nav, new interior. We'll see.
  • rockyleerockylee Member Posts: 14,017
    lemko, a great analogy, but rather the insane asylum :surprise: The veteran UAW members feel really bad for these folks wanting these jobs. We are talking about some folks that don't know how to flip a burger, but are rather gong to build car parts to meet spec measured in metrics. Like dad says "good luck. One guy asked if he would be allowed to smoke marjuania and not get tested for it since he's a temp. Dad said they've hired a case load of drug addicts, mingled in with a few good folks. I guess this hiring class willl rank right up there as being the worst. It's really ashame lemko, because pay me $18.00 to start with good medical benefits and I'm out of West Texas, and I'd get the opertunity to build some of the worlds finest pieces of car parts in the word and not feel like a slave doing it. ;)

    Rocky
  • rockyleerockylee Member Posts: 14,017
    Hey I respect that you like fords. OTOH there equipment levels, engine sophisticated technolohy, along with horsepower drop off longer than the Grand Canyon, I'll stick with a NEW GMER :P

    Rocky
  • nvbankernvbanker Member Posts: 7,239
    "Are they really going with that name Enclave? Hummm?"

    I like it better than Roundyvoo!!!
  • 210delray210delray Member Posts: 4,721
    90 days may mean something to the automakers, but not to the average consumer, and I have two Camrys! After all, it's not 1972 anymore, when your new ride might not start in the first 90 days!

    Having had the same car for 21 years (1980 Volvo 240, from 1982-2003), you can see where I'm coming from.
  • 210delray210delray Member Posts: 4,721
    Enclave: dumb name, but better the "ren-dez-vez," as I remember a kid in school pronouncing the word.

    Great looks, but does the world really need another nearly 5000-pound SUV?
  • torque_rtorque_r Member Posts: 500
    For those of you who couldn't access the site:

    Sedans:
    Sub-Compact:-------- Kia Rio/Rio Cinco
    Compact:------------ Toyota Corolla
    Mid-size:----------- Toyota Camry
    Large cars: -------- Pontiac Grand Prix
    Entry Premium: ----- Lexus IS 250/350
    Midsize Premium:---- Lexus ES330
    Large Premium: ----- Lexus LS430

    Coupes/Sports:
    Compact Sporty: ---- Mazda MX-5
    Compact Premium: --- Porche Cayman
    Midsize Sporty: ---- Toyota Solara
    Premium Sporty: ---- Lexus SC430

    SUV
    Compact:------------ Hyundai Tucson
    Midsize: ----------- Toyota Highlander
    Large: ------------- Toyota Sequoia
    Midsize Premium: --- Lexus GX470
    Large Premium: ----- Lexus LX 470

    Minivans: ---------- Chrysler Town & Country

    Trucks:
    Midsize: ----------- Ford Ranger
    Preium: ------------ Chevrolet Silvarado
  • torque_rtorque_r Member Posts: 500
    Among the 19 segments: 11 Toyotas, 2 GM's, 1 Porche, 1 Kia, 1 Hyundai, 1 Mazda, 1 Chrysler, 1 Ford

    - Unfortunately, one of GM's is toward the end of its cycle. The other might be discontinued in 2 years.

    - Rumors about Toyota loosing quality have been greatly exaggerated. Toyota is still tops. However, some quality issues with new models like the Avalon puts it down to second mainstream brand behind Hyundai.
  • grbeckgrbeck Member Posts: 2,358
    For Buick's sake, it better. If the Enclave fails, the divison will probably be gone within five years.
  • nvbankernvbanker Member Posts: 7,239
    "All the SUV's are light years ahead of the competition

    "All"? Light years ahead?

    Would be interested in an enumeration of these GM models vs the competition."

    Good call, xrunner... Rocky has a proclivity toward speaking in hyperbole. IMO, the GM SUVs, all of them, haven't yet caught up to the 03 Ford SUVs yet, and this new generation of GMSUVs look great, but are the same old SUVs under the hood and frame, basically. They are among the oldest tech trucks on the road.
  • plektoplekto Member Posts: 3,738
    Other than Canada's national sport, what does LaCrosse mean to the average American?

    I think this might very well be the true "national sport" of most every country. :P

    I don't think he meant it the way it came out. Heh.
  • alp8alp8 Member Posts: 656
    no GM SUV is as good as the Volvo XC90

    is any GM SUV as good as the X5 (for what the X5 does)? Maybe the SRX. I'll give GM the nod on that.

    Of course, if all you want is a truck, buy GM, by all means
  • m1miatam1miata Member Posts: 4,551
    Behold within the boundaries of the great General there is an Enclave in the land of Buick! Something about that name just doesn't roll off the tongue well.

    If the Lucerne can not be milked for enough sales, then Buick is finished. Need a couple hits, like the ummm, I have to say it, Caddy SUV, then the CTS which were a good 1-2 punch. Really Escaladed the sales. Cadillac climbed the ladder to success.

    Has someone forgotten the Eldorado? Seek the Eldorado and break free of the Enclave, there is gold beyond the life of the ordinary life within the city of boxy SUVs. The power, the sleekness, and prestige of the great coupe should return. Sadly Elvis can not.
    :shades: -Loren
  • 62vetteefp62vetteefp Member Posts: 6,043
    Absolutely. All OEM's have come light years from 35 years ago. 1 or 2 problem spread is not much from best to worst. Surveys like JDP helped quantify, root cause and resolve the issues.
  • 62vetteefp62vetteefp Member Posts: 6,043
    Funny but the sport (the one using the stick errr, ball, errr nets) is getting prety popular here. Sorta like soccer 30 years ago. It was some british sport and never played here but now every kid starts at 5.
  • 62vetteefp62vetteefp Member Posts: 6,043
    Can either the Volvo or X5 pull a large boat/trailer? They are glorified, handling wagons.
  • rockyleerockylee Member Posts: 14,017
    I like your style Loren, but sadly the Eldorado din't sell well enough, just like the mid 95-99 Buick Rivera's. :cry: Coupes either have to be muscle cars, or "fast and furious" types to do well. Look at the poor Acura RSX. It was a very nice coupe, and it's getting the axe. :surprise: The Cobalt I think we all agree could use some better styling and a big upgrade in quality. hell if it had the RSX interior and styling it would do very well. ;)

    Rocky

    P.S. I do miss the Eldorado, and if I wasn't going to buy my grandma's Aurora, I was going to seriously consider one.
  • turboshadowturboshadow Member Posts: 338
    Hey, Rock! Maybe GM should buy the tool and dies from Honda and build the Chevy RSX! I'd buy one!
  • 62vetteefp62vetteefp Member Posts: 6,043
    The data has not been thourgly analyzed yet but the reason for its fall from the top 5 is not a manufacturing related issue but a result of the design elements in this year’s study.

    Things are not breaking but buyers are not happy with the way something works.
  • driver100driver100 Member Posts: 32,684
    Funny but the sport (the one using the stick errr, ball, errr nets) is getting prety popular here.

    That's funny! But now I can't look at a LaCrosse without breaking out in laughter. I hope the name "Enclave" doesn't have some meaning in French!

    For those who missed it (a LaCrosse is called an Allure in Canada);
    Confusing matters was the need to rename the car for the Canadian market, from the U.S. name LaCrosse, which describes a self-fulfilling sexual act in Quebecois teenage slang.

    2017 MB E400 , 2015 MB GLK350, 2014 MB C250

  • rockyleerockylee Member Posts: 14,017
    LOL, well atleast copy it's best points atleast. I will miss seeing those lil' RSX's and love em'. I might someday buy one used as a work car since they are very fuel efficient and would be fun to drive. I wished GM would make a 8,000 rpm engine that get's good MPG and power. It's ashame the Type-R high performance model that so many Acura fans requested never got made. If I was a betting man though I'd say that RDX turbo 4 will see production in a Civic Type-R someday. ;) GM needs to take a few lesson from Honda on it's entry level cars and I do know Socala will back me on this claim. :)

    Rocky
  • rockyleerockylee Member Posts: 14,017
    COOPERSVILLE -- For 25 years, the United Auto Workers union has been an unshakeable pillar of the middle class in this small city in western Michigan.

    http://www.detroitnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060608/AUTO01/606080379

    Rocky

    P.S. Story about Dad and Aunt's plant. :cry:
  • lemkolemko Member Posts: 15,261
    I have a part-time inventory job I do on the side. They changed the welfare laws which booted a lot of recipients off the rolls. One year they hired a bunch of these people because the economy was so good back in the pre-Dubya days we had a labor shortage.

    One of the requirements of the job was to have reliable transportation - i.e. a vehicle that runs. A lot of these guys didn't have cars and were relying on public transportation. That summer, SEPTA went on strike and our manager had to send taxis at the company's expense to get these people to various jobs. Not that it mattered. These guys were so incredibly dumb and lazy many hours were spent after the job was completed correcting all their mistakes. It really doesn't take a rocket scientist to do this job. I was a veteran after three weeks and am still doing it nearly 13 years later.

    A lot of these guys had such a poor work ethic, just getting them to come in was a Herculean task. We could've paid them $25 a hour and they'd still have preferred to stay at home and smoke crack. Needless to say, they all got fired or quit in a short time. Bums!
  • imidazol97imidazol97 Member Posts: 27,753
    Toyota is working hard to direct the problems with the 07 to keep them from becoming complaint centers. First the assembly error on who knows how many thousands of transmissions (160?) and now the shift problems (hesitation again). A representative is on the boards giving long explanations of why it's the driver's fault the tranmission isn't shifting the way previous transmissions did so well.
    tmsusa, "2007 Toyota Camry Woes" #230, 7 Jun 2006 10:57 pm

    I always found the shorter the explanation to a hypothesis (problem) the more likely it is the correct explanation. This one is really long. My Judge Judy like thinking is that there's something else going on here.

    Anybody think GM should be having company reps get on the boards to explain problems early on with on say the LaCrose/Allure, Lucerne, Enclave, etc.?

    2014 Malibu 2LT, 2015 Cruze 2LT,

  • imidazol97imidazol97 Member Posts: 27,753
    A newspaper reporter (opinioner) just wrote a column about how urban sprawl is the fault of the wealthy who can move away from the city center where the poor who have made bad choices are left. It's the fault of those who moved that the city has bad people living in it.

    So they seem concentrated there, his explanation. Those are the ones getting hired in your example. I thought they stayed there because that's where the drugs and free benefits were.

    They aren't going to make good labor. Lack of mental ability from lifetime of bad choices. I've worked with them also. When they're the ones in the parts factories, there will be more problems with quality and supplies.

    2014 Malibu 2LT, 2015 Cruze 2LT,

  • rockyleerockylee Member Posts: 14,017
  • 210delray210delray Member Posts: 4,721
    As Reagan used to say, "there you go again." First of all, if you read the posts, you'll find some people with genuine issues, and we know Toyota did have a problem with some of the new 6-speed trannies.

    But IMO, a lot of people posting have "car hypochondria" (and I've said as much), worrying about every little bump that emanates from the transmission. It's as if they believe they should NEVER feel a transmission shifting at all. Maybe they need 2-speed Chevy Powerglides! ;) Speaking of which -- didn't GM go from 4-speed Hydramatics to 3-speed units in the early 60s for that very reason (and undoubtedly cost saving also)?

    There's a lot of dumping on "drive-by-wire" also; these posters must be too young to remember the bad old days of sticking mechanical throttle linkages and the attendant problems.

    WARNING: ANECDOTE AHEAD. I have two Camrys, both with the adaptive transmissions and drive-by-wire. No problems, smooth as silk, and I love the way they downshift when they sense you're descending a steep grade.

    BTW, I don't go trolling through the Buick LeSabre or other GM Problems and Solutions boards looking for "proof" of defects. And what's wrong with company reps posting here? If nothing else, it will ease the concerns of the hypochondriacs.
  • rockyleerockylee Member Posts: 14,017
    Yeah it would also make a great new buy. Boy this vehicle in Denali trim will be tempting. :)

    Rocky
  • andre1969andre1969 Member Posts: 26,120
    But IMO, a lot of people posting have "car hypochondria" (and I've said as much), worrying about every little bump that emanates from the transmission.

    My buddy's '06 Xterra has a 5-speed automatic, and I don't like it because I CAN'T feel it shift! I think all the gear ratios are pretty close together too, so even trying to watch the tachometer, you don't see much of a drop. It's more like watching the tach drop after you let off the gas for a moment, but staying in the same gear.

    I guess I'd get used to it though, if I drove it regularly.

    I've never had a transmission smart enough to downshift by itself on a steep grade, but on my Intrepid, if you set the cruise control on, and come to a steep grade, it'll downshift to keep you from going over that speed. Personally I don't like it, but again, it's probably just something I'd have to get used to.

    As for back when GM went from the 4-speed automatic to a 3-speed with a torque converter, I'm not sure if it was for smoothness or performance. I think a torque converter helps out with the multiplication? They also started lowering car floors in the early 60's, and the old 4-speed Hydramatic was a big unit, so it started cutting more noticeably into the passenger area, resulting into a bigger tranmission hump. The 3-speed units were smaller and shorter, and took up less space. Probably cheaper to make, too.
  • 62vetteefp62vetteefp Member Posts: 6,043
    GM RESULTS
    J. D. POWER 2006 Initial Quality Study
    · 2 Segment Winners
    o Pontiac Grand Prix
    o Chevrolet Silverado LD

    · 11 Models – Top 3 (includes winners) – second only to Toyota
    o Chevrolet Monte Carlo, Corvette, Tahoe, Silverado HD
    o GMC Savana, Yukon, Sierra HD
    o HUMMER H2
    o Buick Rainier

    · Gold North/South America Plant & Gold Europe Plant
    o Oshawa 2 – Gold plant for 2nd consecutive year
    o GM has led in manufacturing quality (North/South America) for
    five consecutive years
    o 7 of top 15 plants in North/South America are GM
    o Magna Steyr plant in Graz, Austria earned Gold Europe Plant
    award – produces Saab 9-3 Convertible

    · Cadillac & GMC in top 10 brands
    · 3 GM brands above industry average – Cadillac, GMC & Chevrolet
    · Chevrolet Corvette – Top 10 of all industry leading models
    · GM swept Large Pick-up segment – Chevrolet Silverado LD & HD models,
    Sierra HD
    · 22 GM models above average
    · GM’s overall improvement – 25% over past five years; 11% improvement
    this year alone
    · GM’s warranty performance at an all time low – 40% improvement over
    past few years
  • imidazol97imidazol97 Member Posts: 27,753
    210, put down that double latte with the extra caffeine. I think company reps would be a good thing--as long as they are known company reps rather than casual posters. It would do a lot to lower the complain level. That's what GM hasn't been doing the last 10 years or so about the minor problems. Image hurt.

    Instead we have people constantly dumping on the cars because they had a 1988 Olds and the trans went out at 80K mi. Never mind the service/usage history but it went out. So we agree that cars will have problems, unless it's Porsche or Lexus 430, by the JD Powers review yesterday. How major the problems are we can't discuss. But the Camry and Avalon seem to both have problems like others cars.

    I'm not sure why you want to go back to Powerglide days but those trans did serve well, didn't they. I had a 1961 Chev that I bought at a driver when a woman totaled my car and that thing was still running great when I dumped it in 1981. Trans was never serviced. Of course those were the days when trans usually went 60-80K mi and needed work. People traded cars before 100K because they just didn't last longer than that without problems. Darned US automakers just didn't know how to build them.

    It sounds like the adaptive transmissions new in the Lexus, Avalon, and Camry are different than previous ones. I infer that by reading the company rep's comments between the lines. I'm glad you have had good luck with your cars; I wouldn't wish bad luck on anyone (well, almost no one-email me for a short list) grin.

    Didn't Reagan do a good job managing the country. Nice analogy there. :blush:

    2014 Malibu 2LT, 2015 Cruze 2LT,

  • anythngbutgmanythngbutgm Member Posts: 4,277
    Um, WAY more than the SRX can...

    http://www.edmunds.com/apps/nvc/edmunds/VehicleComparison;jsessionid=GLnZTpdpSWy- 3LhfNc5vTdZxs4yHMGGHrtLm1vql13Xy9TdGMqqPZ!-773041096?styleid=100553064&styleid=1- 00653451&styleid=100565659&styleid=100650682&maxvehicles=5&refid=&op=3&tab=specs-

    XC90- 5000 lbs
    X5- 6000 lbs
    SRX- 1000 lbs

    Note: all are speced out with V8's

    And just for kicks, I looked up my MDX. Towing capacity is 4500 lbs... with a V6. ;)
  • wvgasguywvgasguy Member Posts: 1,405
    My Judge Judy like thinking is that there's something else going on here.

    You lost my confidence with that one. A lot of times She simply looks at the situation and forms an opinion without hearing the facts. That's what a lot of posters do here.
  • driver100driver100 Member Posts: 32,684
    Ya'll gotta see this.....i> :shades:

    Yeh, I know it will make a great used buy in 3 years time.

    2017 MB E400 , 2015 MB GLK350, 2014 MB C250

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