vision-master wrote:The F-150 has been the best selling vehicle in the USA for 17 years straight. Then in May 2013, it was surpassed by four more fuel-efficient vehicles. Now it is rated fifth in sales following Honda Civic, Toyota Corolla, Toyota Camry, and Honda Accord.
Honda's?
Like that toad the Honda FIT with terrible gas mileage for a compact and slow as hell. Are they still running a 4 speed auto. lol
Hate to break it to ya but, Honda's are overpriced and if they are so great, where's the 100,000 mile power-train warranty?
Hondas do not need 100K-mile warranties because it is known that Hondas are well built.
Chryslers need 100K-mile warranties or no one will buy them because they have a poor reliability record.
Go pick on Toyotas or something, vision-muffler.
vision-master wrote:Hondas do not need 100K-mile warranties because it is known that Hondas are well built.
Chryslers need 100K-mile warranties or no one will buy them because they have a poor reliability record.
Go pick on Toyotas or something, vision-muffler.
Boring cheap cars, no thanks.
Too bad those Jap's can't build one of these.
Keith_McClary wrote:Will aluminum Ford F-150 be a rolling beer can?Is your local autobody shop ready to fix dents and fender-benders in these?Ford is going to announce in a couple of weeks that the next F-150 will have a body made mostly of aluminum instead of steel in a bid to save weight, and thus gas ...
Alfred Tennyson wrote:We are not now that strength which in old days
Moved earth and heaven, that which we are, we are;
One equal temper of heroic hearts,
Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will
To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.
ROCKMAN wrote:Ghung - Exactly. Anyone owning a real work truck that doesn't have a bed liner shouldn't be allowed to drtive. LOL. It's not like all that "extra weight" is going to hurt millage very much.
Tanada wrote:I saw a new truck ad from Dodge where they drop sharp heavy objects in the bed of a new F-150 aluminum and a steel Dodge and compare the damage.
Outcast_Searcher wrote:Tanada wrote:I saw a new truck ad from Dodge where they drop sharp heavy objects in the bed of a new F-150 aluminum and a steel Dodge and compare the damage.
Since when are car ads credible?
I know we have truth in advertising laws, but apparently they aren't enforced much, or there are enough loopholes to ... drive a truck through.
Return to Conservation & Efficiency
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 12 guests