I recall a while back a thread entitled "If GM fails?", I remember hearing some people say that domestic cars didn't carry parts for long periods of time and weren't as well built. This section was in "The Wall Street Journal" today and highlights the fact that most domestic cars are built better than foreign built brands, and the problem lies in the perception that the foreign automakers still make better quality cars. I urge those who haven't driven an American car in a while to go test drive one before making your next purchase(when ever that maybe since the economy SUCKS!).
Are foreign cars better made and safer than U.S. cars?
Years ago, the answer was a definitive yes. But quality surveys and statistics show that GM and Ford have dramatically closed the gap with foreign nameplates, and some of their vehicles now outclass Toyota or Lexus models.
Chrysler is a different story. It still lags in the most closely watched quality studies. In a J.D. Power & Associates survey of new owners last year, GM's Buick, Cadillac, Chevrolet, Pontiac and GMC brands, and Ford's Ford, Mercury and Lincoln brands scored higher on overall quality than Acura, Audi, BMW, Honda, Nissan, Scion and Volkswagen.
At the same time, some foreign companies have lost a bit of their quality edge. Last fall, Consumer Reports magazine lowered Toyota's rankings in its annual car-quality surveys, and stopped automatically recommending all Toyota models because of quality declines.
The problem for GM and Ford is what industry insiders refer to as a perception gap. Their quality has improved, but it hasn't yet sunk in with consumers.
Are foreign cars better made and safer than U.S. cars?
Years ago, the answer was a definitive yes. But quality surveys and statistics show that GM and Ford have dramatically closed the gap with foreign nameplates, and some of their vehicles now outclass Toyota or Lexus models.
Chrysler is a different story. It still lags in the most closely watched quality studies. In a J.D. Power & Associates survey of new owners last year, GM's Buick, Cadillac, Chevrolet, Pontiac and GMC brands, and Ford's Ford, Mercury and Lincoln brands scored higher on overall quality than Acura, Audi, BMW, Honda, Nissan, Scion and Volkswagen.
At the same time, some foreign companies have lost a bit of their quality edge. Last fall, Consumer Reports magazine lowered Toyota's rankings in its annual car-quality surveys, and stopped automatically recommending all Toyota models because of quality declines.
The problem for GM and Ford is what industry insiders refer to as a perception gap. Their quality has improved, but it hasn't yet sunk in with consumers.
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