Geeky1
Hey, I'm sorry you don't like my opinion. Bite me.
Okay. You've both had a word in now. Let's not escalate this, please.
Geeky1
As far as I'm concerned, most Cadillacs, like the vast majority of American cars in general, always have been, are now, and likely always will be vastly inferior to their European and Japanese counterparts. But that's just my opinion... I have reasons for why I feel that way (which I don't really feel like going into right now), but you are obviously entitled to disagree with me.
Geeky1
G.M., Ford, and Chrysler are run by bean counters... which results in cutting corners a lot of the time. The Corvette, the Viper, the GT, 300C, Magnum, and *maybe* the GTO are the exceptions here... they're all excellent cars. But for the most part, they're trying to cut costs and maximize profits as much as possible. And the result, more often than not, is a car that's not up to competing with the rest of the world.
I'm going to let you in on something. Mercedes-Benz, BMW, VAG Group, etc. answer to the same type of bean counters that Ford and GM do. In fact, Chrysler answers to the same EXACT GERMAN bean counters as Mercedes since they have been the same company for some time now. What do you think? That Germans don't want to make money??
I hate to burst your bubble, but any knowledgable German car enthusiast will tell you cost cutting measures are all over their beloved vehicles.
My 1995 BMW M3, at the time, flagship of the M brand in the US and recipient of countless awards had a water pump with a impeller shaft made of PLASTIC. That's right. A critical engine component exposed to high stress and extreme temperate in the Ultimate Driving Machine was made of the same stuff they make Happy Meal toys out of. Why? They were too cheap to use aluminum. The result? Water pump failure ~50,000 miles. BMW didn't fix this until MY1997,
6 model years after they've been used in six-cylinder E36s.
I could make a list a mile long with other examples of frugalty and poor engineering choices in numerous BMWs (and Benzs and even Porsches). Ask a 318 owner about his/her profile gasket. Or a Boxster owner about the cheap plastic rear window or shoddily designed top mechanism or main crank seal that leaks oil. Or a 540i E34 V8 owner about his disintegrating nikasil engine block.
Mechanical reliability? I picked up my current car, a 2004 330i ZHP with 3 miles on the odometer. By 800 miles, both front brake rotors were warped. 800 Easy Break In Miles. At 3500 miles, a faulty ignition coil caused the car to run on 5 cylinders and scared the bejesus out of my wife because she thought she'd killed my brand new car. Don't even get me started on the ECU programming that causes the car to randomly STALL after a warm start on a hot day, which they just now fixed after the ZHP has been available for 1.5 years. Before you think that I bought a lemon, any cursory glance at a BMW website will show that plenty of late model BMW owners have little dumb problems like this. Ridiculous on a $40,000+ car that is near the end of it's model cycle. Ridiculous.
Yes, it drives like no other car and I love it despite it's shortcomings. Fact of the matter is BMW still designs cars that I want to
drive. Putting it together well seems to be an issue for them, however. MB, Audi, etc have the same problems. GM, Ford and Chysler have come a long way since the '70s and '80s. If you think German build quality and mechanical reliability is far beyond US and Japanese counterparts, you really should get out in the real world sometime.
Geeky1
However, nothing you can say or do- no amount of studies, papers, articles or posts- will change my position. My mind is made up, the issue is closed for me.
Truth > Dogma.
M