GM out, Toyota IN as worlds largest automaker

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posol

RETIRED
bye bye GM, you just got lapped by Toyota, who after 1st quarter sales figures now is the worlds #1 automaker,
 
reliable, affordable, low-cost maintenance, high mpg. why would anyone buy a toyota over a chevy?
 
reliable, affordable, low-cost maintenance, high mpg. why would anyone buy a toyota over a chevy?

I just bought a Chevy. Toyota line up sucks, affordable sometimes, how low is low maintenance, not all cars are made in USA (sometimes visa versa tho).
 
I just bought a Chevy. Toyota line up sucks, affordable sometimes, how low is low maintenance, not all cars are made in USA (sometimes visa versa tho).

low maintenance like the last toyota i owned went 20,000 miles without an oil change (91 corolla). but in all seriousness, new toyotas are pretty reliable, and 4 people at my office drive 03+ camrys....they just get oil changes every 5k.
 
well shit, isnt gm made in taiwan??? ford is made in mexico, honda and toyota have more plants in america than any other car company (except maybe chrysler, idk) so who employs more americans to build these cars???
 
well shit, isnt gm made in taiwan??? ford is made in mexico, honda and toyota have more plants in america than any other car company (except maybe chrysler, idk) so who employs more americans to build these cars???

Again on what grounds. While some of the cars and parts are in fact being made in America where is the majority of the work coming from. There is more to a car than just it being assembled. The car must be engineered somewhere, tested somewhere. Then there are the parts, who makes the engine, engine parts (bearings, pistons, rings, washers), who makes the sensors, hvac parts, interior fabric, plastic peices, moulding, exauhst, electronics, computer, solenoids, relays, battery, filters. I wouldn't be surprised if there were close to 100 companies that put parts into ONE car. Each company who makes a part could have hundreds to thousands of employees. Each one of these companies have outside servicemen, outside contractors, they give ALOT of tax dollars, each employee puts more money into the economy. Then there is advertising, the salesman, etc.

I don't care who the manufacture is, if the sales sticker doesn't say its built in the US, I won't buy it, no matter how pretty the car is, how good the gas mileage or how fast it is. There are imports that support the economy more than some domestic. I heard the Toyota minivan is more American than a Mustang, which is really sad. But at the same time, is there a more American minivan than the Toyota? For me this applies to most products, I try to buy American if I can, why, because it supports our country not some guy in China or Mexico. It supports my future.

http://www.levelfieldinstitute.org/docs/scorecards/american-v-all-scorecard.pdf
 
I don't care who the manufacture is, if the sales sticker doesn't say its built in the US, I won't buy it, no matter how pretty the car is, how good the gas mileage or how fast it is.

That's all well and good (and I don't mean that sarcastically, that really is ok), but I'm not going to lower my standard of living or inconvenience myself with mechanical hassles or extra expenses just to buy something that says 'Made in America' on it. If our car companies can't compete, the market is going to push that companies' genes out of existence. They will either adapt and improve their lineup, or go the way of the dodo. Eventually then, another American company would fill the gap for their shot.
 
nearly all japanesse cars are ASSEMBLED here in the states.
the parts are mfg'ed mostly in japan, but its cheaper for them to ship boxes of parts and assemble here than whole cars.
 
International manufacturing and processing is such a complex world that no number of posts here can ever scratch the surface. The methods and techniques - each of them - are so intricate that we couldn't understand them after years of evaluation. The cost-per-minute aspects, cost per pound, deliverables, support, it's got a life of it's own.
 
I don't care who the manufacture is, if the sales sticker doesn't say its built in the US, I won't buy it, no matter how pretty the car is, how good the gas mileage or how fast it is.

companies will slap anything on there product to get people to buy from them. congratulations on being sucked in by the "made in america" ad campaign

i used to work in a textile factory. every single box of materials and supplies that came in that place was from asia. every single box of product that left had a sticker that said made in america.
it took about 5 minutes to completely assemble the product and pack it and send it out.
how does that possibly warrant being made in america.

thats like buying a bookshelf from an asian import store and taking it home and putting it together and putting a made in america sticker on it because you "made" it in your living room.

its bullshit and its a marketing scheme.
 
but it still puts 1 american to work to assemble it, 1 american to sell it, 1 american to service it, 1 american to offer to insure it, and 1 american to drive it.

foreign parts aren't that bad.

the only thing missing is the "1 american to make the part" really.

and no one here wants to press out bolts for 30 cents a day :D
 
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