What does Japan and freedom have to do with Mexican made "American" trucks and American made "Japanese" trucks.Freedom. Or the lack of for the Japanese.
What does Japan and freedom have to do with Mexican made "American" trucks and American made "Japanese" trucks.Freedom. Or the lack of for the Japanese.
I must disagree. Japanese work ethic/culture is totally different, as is their approach to manufacturing and product. Visit a Japanese manufacturing plant as opposed to some others and the differences are glaringly obvious. Lots of problems with US imports into Australia as buying bigger SUVs from the states is becoming more common. I might add we down under pay 3 and a half times as much for the same vehicles as you do. . They are particularly popular for towing boats, and avoid needing things like GVM upgrades so popular (and necessary) on vehicles such as 200 & 300 series landcruisers.country of origin does not dictate quality.
I own a business that fixes this stuff everyday.Conversely, why are Japanese trucks and vehicles so reliable?
What is your reliability experience with both American and Japanese trucks?
Thank you Sapcut.
I don't profess to know every defect or recall situation but based on experience there are 3-4 things that can cause problematic vehicle issues.
1) A design with features that allow a product to fail. I know at Nissan we, (like most other OEM's) review the designs, test the designs in a lab environment subjecting it to specified performance requirements, and also send engineers out in the field with our first build vehicles to see how they do. We drive the mess out of them and send them to places like Alaska to the deserts in Arizona - attempting to find any potential concerns. All requirements are met before the vehicle is released. How poor designs make it past this type of testing.......I really don't know.
2) Manufacturing parts outside the design specification. If this happens, obviously it's possible that the part can fail. OEM's try to assure proper testing and inspection are being done during the manufacture or vehicle parts but whenever people are involved with a process, there is the possibility for something to go wrong.
3) Improper install at the assembly plant. Again, whenever people are involved with a process, it's possible for something to not be done properly. Nissan tests every vehicle on a performance track before it leaves the plant (at least in the US - can't speak for other plants, and they go through a shower test in an effort to determine is all of the door seals and other items are working properly before the vehicle ships.) I'm sure other OEM's do this but I can't say for certain.
It is my personal opinion no one should purchase a new vehicle and have any issues for the first 100,00 miles other than normal maintenance. After that is kind of depends on what was purchased and how it was treated and maintained. That part of the vehicle purchase equation is on the vehicle company.
To me, the second part of the equation belongs to the consumer. If a consumer goes out and purchases a vehicle without doing any homework ahead of time to see what people are saying about a product they are interested in, that's not a good practice. If they do their research and hear of issues but purchase the vehicle anyway - it is not their fault if something bad happens, but at the same time, they should not be surprised to run into those type of issues. An informed consumer can decide what risk/reward they are most comfortable with before making a vehicle purchase decision.
A simple example of what I'm trying to say is this. I was interested in a Fierce rifle. It looked cool, had the accuracy and weight requirements I was looking for in the price range I was comfortable with. After doing some research I saw where some people loved them, and some people hated them. I weighted all of that out and decided for myself to get a different rifle. Had I bought one, I still deserved a good, solid rifle but had I had issues, I should not have been shocked by having that experience (my opinion).
In the end - consumers decide if a company stays in business or not.
Maybe that was the case, but everyone knows they're rolling in the $85 billion with of military vehicles brandon just abandon there these days.. upgrade I guess.4 runners/tundras are terrorists trucks and Toyota knowingly and purposely sold new trucks to ISIS and other terrorist organizations on many occasions. All you anti Americans need take a closer look in the mirror and decide if your anti American/union logic suits you or the people who would rather not see people unionize or demand better. The Japanese don't even make full size trucks? Man bun sized tonka trucks? Some of y'all living life back in 80s tv commercials
If you want to look at numbers...Think about a jar full of 1000000 marbles, a mix of white ones and red ones. Say I don't let you peek at the jar but I let you pick 3 marbles out of the jar and then tell you, based solely on those 3, to estimate the percentage of marbles in the jar that are red. Even if the entire jar is well mixed and 70% white, you could still happen to pull out 2 or 3 reds, which would give you a very inaccurate picture of what's actually in the jar. In the same way, your handful of ford trucks that work great don't provide any usable information about the reliability of all ford trucks sold in the timespan in which you bought yours. It makes sense to use personal information if that's all you have, but when it comes to comparing reliability of two groups of many millions of cars each it's basically irrelevant. As the number of data points increases you slowly approach greater probability that your dataset represents the whole thing, and you certainly don't need to get anywhere near 1000000 to make accurate reliability estimates. This is supposed to be informative, not combative, hopefully it comes across that way, but the internet is a bastard when it comes to conveying tone and nuance, so I'm just gonna state it plainly. I'm certainly happy you've had good luck with your trucks, and not implying Ford is terrible. My view is that in the last 10-15 years American manufacturers have closed the gap quite a bit and that while they're not blowing Japanese cars out of the water like Japanese cars did to US made ones 25-30 years ago, they're probably more or less on par.
The UAW work rules pushed GM and Chrysler into bankruptcy and Obama bailed them out with our tax dollarsI've worked with a lot of great people that were in unions. I've also had some pretty bad experiences. So has my father. He's also been threatened. I would bet the majority of people take pride in their work and do a good job. It's the people who don't that are protected by the union that give the whole thing a bad wrap. My biggest problem with the unions is that sometimes the pay does not line up with the skill needed for the job. That's where the $50/hr lug nut guy comes to mind. I also don't buy into seniority is king. That doesn't matter, It's just my opinion. God bless the guy making $50/hr to do something stupid. I could have chose to do the same thing and retired with a fat pension. I'm the "smart" one. I'll probably be eating cat food when my 401k tanks.
LOL...The UAW work rules pushed GM and Chrysler into bankruptcy and Obama bailed them out with our tax dollars
it looks like the newly elected UAW president is planning to repeat the process
No, your question is completely understandable. I don't take offense. Honestly - as an employee with a passion for quality, this is a thought for me as well. Keep in mind I'm one person out of a sea of executives and engineers. I don't know all of the details on every concern or JD Power negative feedback but I do have an opinion (like everyone).So I have a question for you, given your considerable experience and expertise with Nissan products and their quality control processes and the like. This is not a shot at you or anything, just an honest question. In November of 2022 Consumer Reports posted an article about the most reliable new cars, as they do every year. Their data for the study came from owners of over 300,000 cars amongst 24 brands made between the years of 2000 and 2022. Nissan was rated the 15th most-reliable brand. So if data/studies like that (and maybe others) exist with those Nissan results, why does Nissan not make improvements and be a more reliable brand? Is it because their sales are enough to please management and so they're content to be where they are, quality-wise? Just thought I'd see what an "insider" might have to say on that.