opinion

It is my opinion that vehicle manufacturers have hidden behind emission regulation, and over complicated modern vehicles to the point where the only choice the consumer(with a problem in their vehicle) has is to take it to the dealer. O and that dealer is our dealer. Keep it all "in house"- dollars and cents
We have so many very qualified mechanics, who now cant fix problems because the company who manufactured the item wont let the mechanic get access to the codes, whatever, because they are not a dealer...And the dealer is nowhere close to where you break down.

Met a nice bloke in Yetman, he has an old troopie with a 350 Chev in it, and 660,000 klms on it. It barks, and it bites. And the motor has 5 wires on it...And no computers And everyone north and south of the border CAN fix it when it needs it.
OK she uses some fuel. Accepted. Not my cup of tea, but 660,000 klms on it?
But you wouldn't have to consider, for too long, to work out a commercial interest in environment legislation, compliance, complexity, propriety, etc. Smart lawyers, the top end of town. And who is paying? You and me. But only to save the environment, honestly.

Well, we afford service day? Can we afford breakdown day? Can we afford transport of dead truck day? No

Show me one...Just one new vehicle that does not fit the mould... Engine, or whole of vehicle computers, and no one who can fix it..except the dealer. And O yes, it is a bit costly as the parts had to come from overseas. Diesel motors are a simple thing, the world has been using them for years.
Lets not get conned.
Rebuild, or renew, that is the question? And a question well worth asking
Is an older vehicle well restored or modified a better vehicle than buying a new one better? Or have we been all conned?
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