My current one gets 29-30 miles per gallon and I have had it up to 138 mph. I know of no other car in the world that combines the luxury, spottiness, quality, and economy of this one.
I have a 1987(87!) Buick(Buick!) Grand National that gets 29mpg, tops out at 147(only because it runs out of gear...), pulls 0-60 in under 5 flat, the air is still cold, 19 years after being built, all power accesories still work fine, car still has no rust, and is tight as a drum.
My 1989(89!) GMC runs so flawlessly that I forget to even change the oil way too often for my own good. My tax accountant was here Wednesday to gather our stuff, and he asked for the truck repair receipts. Ain't none. I've hopped in it at -59f(minus fity nine!) to drive my neighbor/brother to work one morning when his two year old Honda would even as much as cough.
My newest vehicle is a '95 GMC Safari van. Not as sexy or fun as the GN, but it goes everywhere we point it.
Watching a motoring show a couple months ago, they were raving of the new KIA's... I have a friend who runs a tow truck, and I asked him a few weeks ago if our overly mild winter was hurting his business, and he said "nah, there's plenty of KIA's around here to keep us plenty busy".
Honda's are fine cars, as are Toyotas and what all else, and they do seem to run and run, but dammit, my plain'ol, north American cars and trucks aren't exactly leaving me by the roadside every second day, and while you can't give away a 15 year old Honda or Toyota, I can still get over 12k for the GN, 3-4k for the truck, and who knows what for the van(4-5k?)(though I tend to buy and hold until they die, which, may be a good while yet...). Cost of ownership for my truck and GN work out to around $1,000/year, initial purchase included.
The lemons of the 70's and early 80's were what killed detroit, not the last 20 year's offerings..... Mario38765.4953356481
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