Michael Scott
Member
No, but GLITZ will get you CHICKS!chrome won't get you home
No, but GLITZ will get you CHICKS!chrome won't get you home
Yep! Keeps the water off the drywall.I asked a dealer a while ago - they get next to no demand for short cab, long box trucks and its a 4 month wait for a build-to-order.
Contractors buy vans.
That experience mirrors mine in the toyota/honda camp. "We are the best. we sell at full price. Why would you even consider cross-shopping other brands". We were looking at a rav4 that was easily 5 years behind the competition and they refused to budge at all so we walked and have never been back.
For the rav4 I was looking at and a civic at another time they were not class leaders. They were clearly at the pack of the pack but maintained the belief that they were the best. Those particular generations were bought by people that looked nowhere else.That's how they weed out all the riff raff. Cheap customers looking for a bargain are a nightmare to deal with.
A brand should sell its self based on its merit. There is a reason why civics, crv, accord, Camry, Rav 's are all sales leaders in their class..
Toyota has a policy to never offer heavy discounts on new vehicles, partly because one of their selling features is maintaining resale. Nothing kills resale more than deep discounts on new vehicles.That experience mirrors mine in the toyota/honda camp. "We are the best. we sell at full price. Why would you even consider cross-shopping other brands". We were looking at a rav4 that was easily 5 years behind the competition and they refused to budge at all so we walked and have never been back.
Fair enough. In my case both honda and toyota said msrp. No movement at all. Their msrp was higher than their competition, mileage was worse, power was lower, features were less, utility was lower. The only compelling reason to buy was possibly longevity but that didnt offset them losing in every other column.Toyota has a policy to never offer heavy discounts on new vehicles, partly because one of their selling features is maintaining resale. Nothing kills resale more than deep discounts on new vehicles.
Honda less so, but more than the domestics. Margins on new vehicles are incredibly slim, so unless the factory is doing incentives etc, the dealership isn't going to have much room to move...
Fair enough. In my case both honda and toyota said msrp. No movement at all. Their msrp was higher than their competition, mileage was worse, power was lower, features were less, utility was lower. The only compelling reason to buy was possibly longevity but that didnt offset them losing in every other column.
Drove them all. Wanted to like them. Those particular vehicles at the time I was looking were duds. Maybe at the beginning of their cycle I would have felt differently.Sometimes competitors look good "on paper" spec wise.
With the Japanese brands you tend to get better engineered cars, better fit and finish, superior driving dynamics, better reliability.
Can't always see that from a spec sheet
A run-of-the-mill Honda or Toyota hasn't been anything special for a long time.
Depends on the model and where it sits in the refresh cycle. When I bought my Accord in 2016, it was well ahead of the competition for comfort, power and features. I tried the Fusion (decent but missing features, fast one was too expensive for what it was), Mazda6 (great looking, but no V6 and the i4 was anemic, terrible sight lines), Altima (huge and awful, particularly the CVT), and Sonata (definitely the closest). The Accord was noticeably nicer on the interior, too, approaching luxury levels of fit and finish.A run-of-the-mill Honda or Toyota hasn't been anything special for a long time.
For example, I love the Ridgeline, but the cost premium doesn't make sense over a traditional truck for me...
That may be true but if it costs much more than it's domestic competition, there is no compelling reason to buy it. At close to even money, I agree.Many dismiss the Ridgeline, but sadly what they don't realize is that it's all the "truck" they really need...
That may be true but if it costs much more than it's domestic competition, there is no compelling reason to buy it. At close to even money, I agree.
Incredibly. Cars like the CR-V and the Civic are nearing the end of their model cycle with redesigned models due soon and they are STILL top sellers in their category,. Without crazy incentives.
It’s worth noting that sales numbers don’t indicate the best product or best value etc.
Plenty of substandard products sell well for a multitude of reasons.
Sales do indicate the business model is working so you can respect that part of it.
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I love the 2.7 motor. I've had the 5.0, the 3.5 and the 2.7I bought my first truck 2 years ago and I can't look back. I use it for everything, and it hauls a family of 5 around nicely. I have the 2.7 eco boost and get about 1100km to a tank for daily use. Not to mention the real reason I bought it...
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