Wolfe got me right.
For all our bellyaching about how computers take this or that away from us, a 90's era fuel-injected car is a great compromise between simplicity and convenience.
See, yesterday's newfangled, expensive high-tech is today's backyard fixer-upper.
ECUs last a hell of a long time unless you flood the car, and replacements don't cost that much. And if they blow, it's sometimes just a matter of finding the right capacitor (if you have the time and patience) to replace the one that fizzed out on the board.
I used to take stuff off the engine just to give it an OCD spray-down and brushing, all the tiime. Spark problem? You can still change a 90's dizzy cap, ignition coil or whatever in your garage. Fuel problem? Some electrical contact cleaner and a few minutes taking apart your Mass Airflow Sensor will do the trick. Doesn't work? Replacement MAFs are cheap.
Still have fuel issues? You don't need specialized equipment to dismantle a low-pressure fuel rail or to pull injectors to inspect them.
90's cars, with OBDI, distributor-driven ignition and fuel-injection... gives you some of the same simplicity as carbureted cars, without the complication of tuning, retuning and cursing at the carburetor itself.

But that just might be my background, I grew up fiddling with OBDI cars.
There are advantages to even newer, OBDII direct-ignition cars, no dizzy cap to wear out, for one thing, making the ignition system easier to work on... just a matter of checking spark-plugs and ignition coils, and timing fixes are just a matter of replacing a faulty O2 sensor or cam position sensor, but the increase in automation is giving manufacturers an
excuse to exclude the owners more and more from the process of maintenance... when, with a few simple electronic tools, 99% of what the dealership does can be done at home... cheaper... and better. I dread the day when even mass market manufacturers feel the need to eliminate such "useless" items as the dipstick. Then we will truly be in automotive hell...
Of course, this is talking about cars we "need"... older cars we want... sportscars... often have a ton of other stuff to worry about... turbos, tons of oil lines, pressure gauges and coolers (even non-turbo sportscars will have more heat exchangers than your regular car)... high-revvers will have extra sensors, solenoids and etcetera...
But at least a 90's Sportscar won't go into limp-home mode if you change the driver's seat...
