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PostPosted: Fri Jan 30, 2009 11:10 
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Oh, and another thing, I would also alter the rules about "Company Cars". to ensure that the majority of new vehicles are bought by individuals rather than companies.

If this sounds radical consider this, If a mechanic wants to work in a garage or a carpenter on a building site he is expected to provide his own tools at his own expence! Why shouldnt an aspiring sales exec be expected to do the same with his car??

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PostPosted: Fri Jan 30, 2009 11:17 
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Dusty wrote:
Well, an idea I had recently is a "showroom Tax". But not one that is simply swallowed by the treasury.

...


A few issues this might raise:

Taxation on the scale you propose would wipe out new car sales. I know that's kind of what you were hoping for, but the economic ramifications would be collossal. Also, the effect it would have is forcing people to keep their existing cars now, rather than buy these amazing new ones that are easy and cheap to fix. Net result would be that more people would be running around in badly repaired, lashed up old bangers.

Meanwhile the manufacturers would be starved of revenue, right at the time when your brave new plan requires them to invest heavily in re-designing their attractive high tech cars into spartan, unattractive utilitarian ones.

Who would trust this Government not to lay their hands on this invested bond? Even if you did, what would stop the next government from spending it (probably on bailing out the failing car industry).

Even if it all worked, and everyone dutifully went out and bought their premium new car, what would happen to the car industry in 5-10 years time when nobody now needs a replacement? Who pays for all the job losses?

The bottom line is that you can have policies based on eco-babble, or you can have a strong economy. This idea that we can all be "green" and save the planet was always destined to plunge us into recession; the only reason it hasn't happened sooner is because many of the "industry reducing" schemes actually lead to more industrialisation not less. Perhaps we should be glad of the way they've hoodwinked everyone about recycling and so on, else we really would be in a mess!

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PostPosted: Fri Jan 30, 2009 11:23 
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Dusty wrote:
Oh, and another thing, I would also alter the rules about "Company Cars". to ensure that the majority of new vehicles are bought by individuals rather than companies.

How does that make any difference?

The bottom line is that most miles are done on behalf of companies rather than individuals - who owns the vehicle doesn't really matter. It's only a neater way of dealing with the taxation issues and differentiation between private (taxable) and business (tax deductable) usage.
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If this sounds radical consider this, If a mechanic wants to work in a garage or a carpenter on a building site he is expected to provide his own tools at his own expence! Why shouldnt an aspiring sales exec be expected to do the same with his car??

There's actually very little difference.

If a tradesman buys tools for his work then he can claim tax relief on them. If I buy a car and use it for business use I can claim tax relief on my expenses. If the company buys it they do the maths.

The point is that if you do 30,000 miles a year on behalf of you business you are going to want a reasonably new car for it, regardless of how miraculously well vehicles will age under your brave new world, or who's name is on the log book. That's why the majority of new cars will be bought for business use.

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PostPosted: Fri Jan 30, 2009 11:30 
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JT wrote:
How long are people like you going to continue blaming New Labour's bungling mismanagement on Margaret Thatcher?


We all know it's free markets (formerly known as "Thatcherism", as you well know) that have caused this.

But your other points are reasonable, and I'll get back to you on those.


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PostPosted: Fri Jan 30, 2009 11:40 
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JT wrote:
It's also worth noting that the cars that originate in more socialist parts of the world tend to be the worst of the lot for maintenance, and the very ones that most espouse all the reliability issues you are complaining about!


Nonsense, German cars were excellent.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_Dem ... of_Germany


Last edited by Abercrombie on Fri Jan 30, 2009 11:41, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Fri Jan 30, 2009 11:41 
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Abercrombie wrote:
JT wrote:
How long are people like you going to continue blaming New Labour's bungling mismanagement on Margaret Thatcher?


We all know it's free markets (formerly known as "Thatcherism", as you well know) that have caused this.

No it isn't.

It is what happens when people who don't really understand economics try to "cherry pick" the palatable and profitable parts from the Thatcher model, whilst leaving out the unpalatable (or perhaps politically incorrect) bits that actually made the whole system work.

For instance you can't simultaneously deregulate and privatise major industries, whilst at the same time deluging them with red tape and nanny state legislation that removes their profitability.

What we are seeing now is the result of a botched hybrid of Laissez Faire and Nanny State.

And the reason for the banking crisis is that there was apparently no-one in the Government who actually understood economics to the extent to be able to predict the obvious consequences of a credit spree.

I don't think it would have happened in Thatcher's day because her Government fully understood economics and would have quietly leaned on the right people at the right time to prevent the worst excesses; where New Labour just saw them as a way of generating more tax revenue to waste. Running a country is like running a business - you can go so far by applying rules but ultimately you need the flair, feel and subtle judgement so that you make the right calls more times than you make the wrong ones.

Thatcher had this judgement. This lot don't.

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PostPosted: Fri Jan 30, 2009 11:44 
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JT wrote:
Abercrombie wrote:
Thatcher had this judgement. This lot don't.


Ha, don't make me laugh, JT. She had a jumbo recession the start, and another one
at the end, with a few years between while she wrecked our manufacturing industries.
I'd rather give a state funeral to the Yorkshire Ripper!

Sorry, again, this is getting out of hand. Let's talk about cars, instead.

PS: the above is way too harsh. But you have to remember that I was born
in a northern steel mill town. We hate Mrs Thatcher, big time. It's just a
bit of fun, like some people hate Europe etc. Helps get you through the day etc.


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PostPosted: Fri Jan 30, 2009 12:55 
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Abercrombie wrote:
JT wrote:
It's also worth noting that the cars that originate in more socialist parts of the world tend to be the worst of the lot for maintenance, and the very ones that most espouse all the reliability issues you are complaining about!


Nonsense, German cars were excellent.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_Dem ... of_Germany



But those German manufacturer' such a VW and Audi, had an advantage in that they were allowed Jewish slaves during the Nazi era. These slaves were worked to death, many dropped dead on th factory floor, and those that could no longer work were sent off for murdering - not exactly Schindler List!

The amazing thing is that today, these companies still have not made an appology for their actions, although forced to pay compensation. Would you want to buy a car from them?

If that's how they value a human life, how will they deal with your problems?

I'm all for forgive qnd forget, but I think a sorry would help things get startingin that direction or some gesture to show they have changed their ways.


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PostPosted: Fri Jan 30, 2009 13:07 
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So Besingwerk blames it all on Thatcher, whilst Lucy blames it all on the Nazis.

Time to invoke Godwin's law, methinks.... :roll:

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PostPosted: Fri Jan 30, 2009 13:50 
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JT wrote:
Lucy blames it all on the Nazis.


Well, it is surprising how the losers of the war kept their car industries, while ours went to pot.
Now even the Mini is German. If I had to guess why, I'd say it relates to the rational rebuilding
that comes after a great loss. The new infrastructure is so superior that it surpasses the
old infrastructure in a very short period.

We have been stuck with our class-ridden infrastructure for a long time now. Good
luck to the Scottish, who are close to dumping it. If things go well after
independence, it might give English people the guts to clean up our own act.


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PostPosted: Fri Jan 30, 2009 14:00 
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I'm not sure we can blame the war for our woes - not now anyway! The Bristol car company was offered BMW after the war but turned it down - no future, see?!

I'm afriad the British car industry's demise was down to a lot of things - and knackered tooling after the war was just one of them. Arrogance was another!


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PostPosted: Fri Jan 30, 2009 14:04 
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Abercrombie wrote:
Move back to the subject: I suppose reliability + repairability = durability. As Dusty says,
only one of those components is being considered, due to planned obsolescence. If
the makers won't do what we ask, we have to make them do what we say. That
is what legislation is for.


When you say "we", that's "you and Dusty" then?! :D

I think you need to understand that in the great car-buying scheme of things, you're a very small minority that doesn't want to spend much money. That's fine, of course, (I don't spend much on my cars either!) but neither you nor I are going to be targeted by manufactuers as potential customers whose tastes need to be catered for. There isn't a living to be had out of us!


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PostPosted: Fri Jan 30, 2009 14:14 
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Abercrombie wrote:

1) Lack of cooperation.
.

It's happening more and more. There are all sorts of strategic partnerships to share "core" components and technologies that the punter doesn't see. Ford and Peugeot working are on diesel technology jointly...

Abercrombie wrote:
2) Lack of standards.
.

:rotfl: :rotfl: :rotfl: Unless you're talking about moral standards, I'd have thought there were few industries more heavily regulated than the automotive industry!

Abercrombie wrote:
3) Lack of design reuse.
.

I think that's happening at unprecedented levels these days. Peuget / Fiat / Citroen regularly share complete vehicles - never mind components. Fiat / Saab / Alfa / GM also share technologies. WV / Skoda / SEAT... Ford / Mazda...

Many of the budget priced Far Eastern offerings do precisely that - Ssangyong use Mercedes hand-me-downs etc etc.


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PostPosted: Fri Jan 30, 2009 14:32 
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Dusty wrote:
And, of course, the manufacturers want to carry on manufacturing cars! (the clue is in the name)

Which is why, with all the improvements in materials, design and build quality, cars still, on average, only last as long (give or take a few years) as they did 35 years ago when they only botherd to paint the bits you could see and they (quite literally) fell to bits after 12 years or so. The fact of the matter is that it would NOT actually cost that much more to make cars more durable and repairable.


14.25 years on the last stats I saw. Might have been 12 years 5 or 10 years ago. Cars really are more durable. The problem is that in times of plenty, people get rid of them quicker just to have the latest model. I think (but could never prove it) that a survey of scrapyards today might find MORE cars capable of being put back on the road than it would have done (say) 20 years ago.

Dusty wrote:
To take the Rover P6 example that I keep harking back to, it would have taken, quite literally, only ONE design change and we would still be seeing many of these late 60's , early 70's cars in daily use! All it would have taken would have been to have dip galvenised the base unit, the rest could have been left as it was.

(well, apart from the need for a complete change of engine design and engine management system to meet emissions requirements and a total structural redesign to meet current safety requirements)! You could still keep the lousy wind noise and poor refinement, wind-up windows, LW/MW push-button radio, sponge-like handling, and you'd have had to put up with a pretty awful paint finish if the exterior panels were hot-dip galvanised, it's just that nobody (except you and Abercrombie!) would buy one!

Dusty wrote:
(If you wanted to be really posh, the base unit could have been made out of stainless steel. This would have been a bit more expensive but really not by that much. (I actually know somebody who built a replacement chassis for a series landrover out of stainless steel. Funnily enough he ran into some unexpected minor problems because it didnt rust! :lol:


I can imagine. John DeLorean found out the hard way about the lousy fatigue properties of stainless! It really is the devil's own material! Your old P6 would have just fatigued to death instead of rusted.

Dusty wrote:
He also has photos of somebody who stripped doyn the body shell of an old range rover and dip galvenised ALL the steel sections!. An expensive project, but if it had been done at the time of construction it would not have added much to the overall construction cost) and would have ensured that they would really have lasted indefinitly)

Now there, we have to agree. It's pretty possible to galvanise a simple Landrover-type chassis and I think they COULD have altered the design such that this could have been done - that and the bulkhead. If I was looking for a Landie, I'd happily pay another £500 for that option if they offered it.

Dusty wrote:
Which really does have to change. The planet simply does not have the resources to continue with an economic model that relies on digging stuff out of the ground and turning it into tat (even well built tat) that is designed to be thrown away after a couple of years only to be replaced with an esentially identical product!

It is one of the reasons why we are in the mess we are in (economically speaking)

(but, of course you know all that :) )

How to change the model??

Well, an idea I had recently is a "showroom Tax". But not one that is simply swallowed by the treasury.

Heres how it works. Each new car has a surcharge on it. Quite a swinging one actually. The figure of £5,000 or 20% of the sale price (which ever is greater) came to mind but no doubt one could come up with a diferent formula that would achive the same ends.

This charge would not simply go to the treasury. It would go into Bonds that would be tied to the vehicle (ie transferable on resale) the bonds would attract interest and would pay out in two tranches, one (say) after 15 years, the other after (say) 30 years provided the vehicle is still roadworthy! . If the vehicle is written off or scrapped within these times, the bonds revert to the treasury.

The aim of this is to eliminate depreciation. While the first buyer pays a higher price, when he sells the car the value of the bonds will ensure that he will likly get as much as he paid for it.

But only if the new buyers are confident that the car will last the course. This ,in turn, will force the manufacturers to think in terms of 30 year plus design lives. and behave accordingly.

(this would also have the effect of increacing the "Savings Ratio" which while unrelated to motoring matters would aslo be a good thing)

On another note, what would be interesting to see is a list of manufacturers ordererd by the pecentage of vehicles that they have ever made that are still in use (there would have to be allowence made for verry old manufacturers and very young ones ISWIM)

I understand that the top of the list will be Land Rover with a figure of around 80%, further down will be Rolls Royce and Porche whith figures somewhere in the 60's. I am not sure about the others though!


I think the cruel irony is that the list would be topped by the very vehicles you and Abercrombie despise so much!
Bugatti, McLaren, Lotus, TVR, Ferrari, Aston Martin...

.. all the really fancy collectable ones! In fact, it would be great - if I were lucky enough to find a basket case one, I'd have a nice little government restoration fund to spend on it)!

Things like Abercrombie's Fiat 500 would never be valuable enough to become collectable - but at least under your sceme, the owner wouldn't loose too much money!


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PostPosted: Fri Jan 30, 2009 15:33 
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that a survey of scrapyards today might find MORE cars capable of being put back on the road than it would have done (say) 20 years ago.


I agree, its actually my point. unlike 20 years ago whn scrapped cars really were at the end of their lives modern scrappers rarely have anything serious wrong with them, Just expence because the design makes "simple" faults expensive to repair. If those "simple" faults were as cheap to repair (relativly spaking) as they were 25 years ago people would keep the modern ones untill they fell to bits too, which would take about 40 years (or more) with modern build quality. all those reasonably sound vehicles towed for scrap is a terrible waste and the campaigners bang on about a couple of MPG's :roll:

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(well, apart from the need for a complete change of engine design and engine management system to meet emissions requirements and a total structural redesign to meet current safety requirements)! You could still keep the lousy wind noise and poor refinement, wind-up windows, LW/MW push-button radio, sponge-like handling, and you'd have had to put up with a pretty awful paint finish if the exterior panels were hot-dip galvanised, it's just that nobody (except you and Abercrombie!) would buy one!


You miss my point. I am not suggesting that we build "new" P6's, simply that a had the base units been galvanised originally, a good many of the vehicles built back in 1970 would still be in use. Base unit corrosion was the vehicles only real weak point

Actually the handeling on the P6 was pretty good, it had a de-dion independent rear suspension, disks all round with inboard rear disks (to keep down unsprung mass) It had a safety cage design, they were actually quite refined and had nothing like the amout of road noise/vibration that you get on many modern vehicles. and Radios can be upgraded. :lol: (Oh and if I had wind up windows on my Jag I'd still be able to open them!)

Galvanising the base unit would not have affected the exterior appearance since all visible panels were attached to it as separate componats, and were also designed to be easily replaced in the event of minor damage (Rover oringinall stocked pre-painted wings so that damaged panels could be quickly swapped over without all that hassle with welders and paintshops)

I take your point about fategue, though my contack hasnt had any probs with his landie, rather the problem was that without surface corrosion to act as "glue" he had difficulty making the suspension bushes stay put!

Quote:
I think the cruel irony is that the list would be topped by the very vehicles you and Abercrombie despise so much!
Bugatti, McLaren, Lotus, TVR, Ferrari, Aston Martin...


I dont despise them, I dont despise technolgy

I despise planned obsilessance.

The vehicles you name are all from very low volume specialist manufacturers and as such they can afford to buck the current Post war economic model (henceforth I will use PWEM) by not building them with the intention that they should all be scrap after 15 years or so Obviously I am refering to volume producers (even listing Rolls Royce is a bit of a cheat) but Porche manufacture in significant numbers so their success in producing reasonably durable cars is worthy of note and it doesnt seem to have harmd thier buisness model too much has it?

Quote:
Things like Abercrombie's Fiat 500 would never be valuable enough to become collectable - but at least under your sceme, the owner wouldn't loose too much money!


And, rather more to the point, the owner will be far less likly to face the modern dilemma that any owner of a 7+ year old modern car with anything more serious than a blown headlight bulb of "Is it worth fixing" because it almost always will be! That is the aim of my scheme!

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Last edited by Dusty on Fri Jan 30, 2009 15:41, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Fri Jan 30, 2009 15:35 
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But those German manufacturer' such a VW and Audi, had an advantage in that they were allowed Jewish slaves during the Nazi era. These slaves were worked to death, many dropped dead on th factory floor, and those that could no longer work were sent off for murdering - not exactly Schindler List!

The amazing thing is that today, these companies still have not made an appology for their actions, although forced to pay compensation. Would you want to buy a car from them?


Considering the way that present day Zionists are treating the displaced Arabs in Palestine it might well be time to re-evalute the Nazi era :bunker:

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PostPosted: Fri Jan 30, 2009 16:33 
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dcbwhaley wrote:
Quote:
But those German manufacturer' such a VW and Audi, had an advantage in that they were allowed Jewish slaves during the Nazi era. These slaves were worked to death, many dropped dead on th factory floor, and those that could no longer work were sent off for murdering - not exactly Schindler List!

The amazing thing is that today, these companies still have not made an appology for their actions, although forced to pay compensation. Would you want to buy a car from them?


Considering the way that present day Zionists are treating the displaced Arabs in Palestine it might well be time to re-evalute the Nazi era :bunker:


Well rush out and buy a VW, one of Hitlers better ideas, with a little help from his chum Mr Porsche.

Do you remember in the 80s when it was cool to have "16V" on the boot of your car? Well in France the french translation was "SS" (sesiem souphlet or somthing like that) and all the French cars had "SS" on the boot - except VW who must have thought VW's entering France with "SS" badges on them might be a bit insensitive, after the last VW's entering France with "SS" on them 40 years previously, where driven by bit of a rough bunch! So VW used "16V" in France!


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PostPosted: Fri Jan 30, 2009 16:44 
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Mole wrote:
Abercrombie wrote:
2) Lack of standards.

there were few industries more heavily regulated than the automotive industry!


Then how come there are some many types of head light bulb, windscreen blade,
belt, radiator hose, tyre size, indicator glass, fuel cap, battery fittings,
speedo, instrument cluster, exhaust pipes, clamps, brake pads and shoes, steering
wheels, blah blah blah. You could go on all day. They all do the exact same thing on all cars,
yet they are all different. What a waste of time. Is it really necessary to have hundreds of
different types of hose clips? And all sorts of different starter motors, and alternators?
And all manner of different screws, bolts, fasteners, handles, catches, springs,
shock absorbers and what have you?

And is it necessary to change any of that with each new release of planned obsolescence?
Does a Audi XYZb really need different wheel nuts from the XYZa? They make me sick with
their pettiness.


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PostPosted: Fri Jan 30, 2009 16:54 
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the last VW's entering France with "SS" on them 40 years previously, where driven by bit of a rough bunch!


:rotfl:

Reminds about the difficulty that Toyota had with the MR2 n France

M-R-Deux sounds like something not very nice in French! :lol:

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PostPosted: Fri Jan 30, 2009 17:49 
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Quote:
Does a Audi XYZb really need different wheel nuts from the XYZa?

I can actually get optional titanium wheel nuts for my car to save unsprung weight!!

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