danoffHave you been to new york city!? You will certainly NOT find as many SUVs there as other places.
I admit that I have not been to New York City -- have you? Every movie, TV show, or photo I have ever seen of New York traffic has included plenty of SUVs, and Chicago, a big city that I have been to, has many SUVs driving around. Maybe not as many as in Michigan, as Blazin describes it, or in rural areas, but just as many (proportionately) as smaller cities and towns.
danoffSUVs have significantly more torque, and will more often than not blast a minivan out of the water.
Yes, SUVs have torque, because they're designed to be able to tow large, heavy things (honest, truck-based ones, anyway). Minivans are designed to haul people and stuff.
SUVs and minivans both tend to accelerate from 0-60 in about 7-8 seconds, which is on par with most family cars. SUVs that go any faster than that tend to be car-based, and/or sacrifice utility for speed/style.
Again, as I said before, SUVs, minivans, and family cars are all faster than they have to be anyway.
danoffThis one particular reason isn't valid for 5-seater SUVs (which is why I compared it against 5-seaters). It IS , however, valid for 7, 8 passenger SUVs.
I never said it wasn't. I was pointing out that most SUVs on the road are 5-seaters, and most SUVs available for purchase are 5-seaters. Therefore, buying an SUV for additional seating capacity isn't a valid reason for many SUV purchases.
I love how you twist and misinterpret what I say to make it sound like I'm talking nonsense...
danoffSure, passenger capacity doesn't apply to those who don't have passengers. Gas mileage doesn't apply to those who don't drive. What's your point? I posted reasons why people purchase SUVs, if people don't tow, they won't buy it for that reason.
I should have been more clear, there -- many people don't use their SUVs to tow things, so that reason does not apply to a significant portion of SUV drivers.
danoffIf by "serious" you mean insane, then you're wrong. It applies in any instance in which there are ruts or large rocks.
I've destroyed a transmission by driving on a perfectly flat bit of dirt because of the presence of a rock. I would certainly have not done that damage if I'd had more ground clearance.
Deep ruts and large rocks qualify as serious off-roading. Shallow ruts, gravel roads, and campsite driveways do not count.
You also wouldn't have done that damage if you had seen the rock -- if you were driving down a forgotten backroad and a low-hanging branch smacked your windshield, damaging it, does that mean that you should have had a shorter car? S*** happens.
danoffOk, then they're stupid. So what? Some people think astrology is real.
I take it you've never seen an SUV driver slam into (or almost slam into) another motorist because they were driving too fast in the snow, and/or thought they could start braking later?
danoffMan you like to make assumptions.
"I wouldn't be surprised if..." != an assumption.
...and until someone amongst us pulls out charts, graphs, data tables, and testimonies from a large sample of the population, everything in this thread is assumptions, generalizations, and opinions.
danoffAgreed. So what?
If 4WD is useless in warm conditions, it rules out the possibility of 4WD being a valid reason for purchasing an SUV in areas with those conditions. That's all. It's just a small, simple point.
danoffAgreed. What's your point?
Again I should have been more clear -- the cargo capacity advantage that an SUV offers over other types of vehicle is useless if you don't use it. And many people don't use it (the advantage, not just the space). Just because an SUV has X more cubic feet of space than a sedan doesn't automatically mean the SUV is a better choice for grocery shopping, or for going on a weekend trip.
danoffIn some combinations, but you certainly won't find all of those in ANY vehicle. Which combination the consumer is interested in will guide his purchase.
That's pretty much my point, there. Many consumers don't need an SUV because they don't need all of those things, and more often than not can get away with something smaller and more efficient.
danoffIt means I weighed the options and was more happy with the SUV. I will never purchase a vehicle that I don't find attractive - which pretty much rules out minivans. I consider it a phenomenal waste of money to buy an ugly car.
Anyway, you pretty much summed up my point -- you didn't need the SUV, you were simply more happy with it.
If it ended there, that would be fine, but there are SUV owners who have convinced themselves that they needed the SUV, and that the minivan wouldn't have been enough. Also, there are those who complain about gas prices when they could have bought something more efficient that still met their needs.
danoffHonda Odyssey, 25 mpg.
20/28mpg (Odyssey) is better than 15/19mpg (Tahoe), last time I checked.
danoffSorry that's pure B.S. The price difference alone pays for thousands of gallons of gasoline.
There is no price difference. I said "luxury SUVs." I'm not trying to claim that the E-class wagon is amazing -- the only one that is in my eyes is the AMG version, and that's simply because of the humor behind a hellishly fast wagon.
danoffNobody "needs" any car. Do you hate people who don't "need" their Ferrari?
I hate people who never drive them, or rarely ever push them anywhere near their limits, yes.
danoffHowabout "cars in general are not needed by most of their drivers".
You're absolutely right -- but that's a given. How about "SUVs are not needed as a replacement or alternative to smaller cars by most of their drivers?" Clear enough for you?
danoffScapegoats for what? What am I blaming on you? Not a goodd*mn thing.
You do enjoy twisting what I say to make it sound like I hate all SUV drivers, or that I hate SUVs, or that I'm discriminatory against SUV drivers and don't mind any other type of driver. You've also made blanket comments towards the members who are on the anti-SUV side of this argument.
danoffIf you don't read or listen to anything else in this post, just read this Wolfe. You don't make any sense. You're arguing nonsense, you won't stick to the point, you argue tangents that don't have any relevance. It's intellectually lazy and I'm tired of it. If you want to convince yourself that you're right by finding a way to retort to everything I say, go right ahead, I'm finished playing along. If you want to have a real discussion, try sticking to the original point when you respond.
The point was whether or not SUVs are "obsolete," which evolved into whether or not SUVs are really needed by their owners. Everything we've discussed has revolved around that, or has at least been related to it. Many of the tangents have been initiated by yourself, as you take something I say and twist it so that I'm insulting someone, or discriminating against a group of people, or making poor assumptions here or there.
Throughout this debate you've made assumptions about me, and made contradictory and hypocritical statements that really don't help the discussion at all. All along, you've maintained an "I am holier than thou" attitude, refusing to back down on even the smallest of points without at least belittling them first, so that they no longer matter.
I guess you have some sort of reputation around here, and I've seen some of your posts in the opinion forum, so I had high expectations for your argumentative skills here, and was looking forward to a healthy debate. I'm sorely disappointed.
Go back to arguing politics. You're better at that.