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VW Group, BMW and Daimler Are Under Investigation For Collusion In Europe (cnet.com)

The European Commission has launched an antitrust investigation into the Volkswagen Group, BMW and Daimler, over allegations they colluded to keep certain emissions control devices from reaching the market in Europe, according to a statement the Commission released on Tuesday. CNET reports: The technologies the group allegedly sought to bury include a selective catalytic reduction system for diesel vehicles, which would help to reduce environmentally problematic oxides of nitrogen in passenger cars, and "Otto" particulate filters that trap particulate matter from gasoline combustion engines.

"The Commission is investigating whether BMW, Daimler and VW agreed not to compete against each other on the development and roll-out of important systems to reduce harmful emissions from petrol and diesel passenger cars," said Commissioner Margrethe Vestager, head of competition policy for the European Commission, in a statement. "These technologies aim at making passenger cars less damaging to the environment. If proven, this collusion may have denied consumers the opportunity to buy less polluting cars, despite the technology being available to the manufacturers."

151 comments

  1. Bloody Europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's shocking how Europe is always so biased against these American companies and never investigates any of it's own.

    Oh wait.

    1. Re:Bloody Europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're the only one here who's made that insinuation so I guess this is directed toward you?

    2. Re:Bloody Europe by neutrino38 · · Score: 1

      Excellent!

    3. Re:Bloody Europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Isn't the claim usually the other way around, that the US is far more agressive against foreign (especially European) companies than against their own?

    4. Re:Bloody Europe by cthulhu11 · · Score: 1

      They came up with PAL just to be contrarian, after all.

  2. Nobody wants underpowered fart boxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nobody wants these underpowered 1L engines that they try to compensate for by putting in a turbocharger. What they don't like to tell you is when your turbo or your intercooler shit itself is you're stuck with a $4000 repair bill. Then on top of that, they want to attach all sorts of non sense to the exhaust system. I don't blame these guys for going, "We're not going to develop this crap, our customers don't want it anyways."

    1. Re:Nobody wants underpowered fart boxes by MadKeithV · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty happy with my second 1L turbo petrol thanks very much, so that rules out "nobody".

    2. Re:Nobody wants underpowered fart boxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Nobody wants these underpowered 1L engines that they try to compensate for by putting in a turbocharger. What they don't like to tell you is when your turbo or your intercooler shit itself is you're stuck with a $4000 repair bill. Then on top of that, they want to attach all sorts of non sense to the exhaust system. I don't blame these guys for going, "We're not going to develop this crap, our customers don't want it anyways."

      There is a considerable difference between emissions control systems and a turbo or supercharger when it comes to performance and purpose.

      So much so that it tends to make your entire comment pointless.

    3. Re:Nobody wants underpowered fart boxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Calm down Yanmar.

    4. Re:Nobody wants underpowered fart boxes by fbobraga · · Score: 1

      Nobody wants

      I want!

    5. Re:Nobody wants underpowered fart boxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What happened to the first one?

    6. Re:Nobody wants underpowered fart boxes by Bearhouse · · Score: 1

      Well, the OP was pretty wild, for sure, but you're not exactly bang on target either:

      1. Most private automobiles are driven at light load and part throttle most of the time,
      2. But people like good power for acceleration / overtaking safely and top speed (where allowed)
      3. Making high-displacement engines fuel efficient and therefore low-emissions is hard; (for certain types of emissions)
      4. Making small, forced-induction engines give plenty of power when required, but consume not much the rest of the time is expensive, but doable
          (But note the special case of blown 2-strokes, where they've never been able to fix the oxides of nitrogen problem; shame, they're fun to drive...)

      Hence the trend towards smaller-capacity, forced-induction engines, which go fine when you rev them, but to my mind don't give the same overall driving satisfaction as a big old V8; especially a forced-induction big old V8, but that's another story...(disclaimer: my daily driver is a CL55)

    7. Re: Nobody wants underpowered fart boxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Argument still stands.

    8. Re:Nobody wants underpowered fart boxes by MadKeithV · · Score: 1

      I got a bigger one.

    9. Re:Nobody wants underpowered fart boxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I drove a 1.0 ford eco boost focus (rental for 4 weeks).

      It was crap and dangerous

      If you forget to really stamp on the accelerator and allow the turbo to spool up coming out of a junction they just stall leaving you sitting there in the middle of a lane with cars coming at you.

      Never buy one they are shit and not nearly as economical as they suggest as well.

    10. Re:Nobody wants underpowered fart boxes by Wolfier · · Score: 1

      > If you forget

      It's the problem. Take some more driving lessons.

    11. Re:Nobody wants underpowered fart boxes by MadKeithV · · Score: 1

      I'm on my second (C-Max this time, regular Focus hatch the first). It does need to be revved fairly high for torque, but I have never stalled unless I was driving it like it's a 2 litre diesel (as in "expecting it to take off from a standing start in second gear"). You do have to shift gears a bit more often, and I have made my displeasure known to the car verbally when I was in the "suggested" gear for the car and tried to accelerate. It seems to love suggesting going to 6th gear from 40MPH upwards. ONLY if you're doing a constant speed on a level, because even a slight hill will completely take the oomph out until you downshift, usually by at least two gears. I easily hit 45-47MPG with the first one on longish journeys, closer to 40MPG when I was doing lots of tiny trips. About 2-3 MPG less with the heavier, bulkier C-Max. Is it as fun/easy to drive as a bigger engine with more torque? Hell no, it's quite dull, but then it's more or less the textbook "family" car, and I quite like how it seems designed to prevent me from doing anything stupid in a fit of road-rage with my family in the car.

    12. Re:Nobody wants underpowered fart boxes by drinkypoo · · Score: 2

      Nobody wants these underpowered 1L engines that they try to compensate for by putting in a turbocharger. What they don't like to tell you is when your turbo or your intercooler shit itself is you're stuck with a $4000 repair bill.

      Then maybe you should nerd up and learn to replace the turbocharger yourself. It's a trivial job as such things are measured and you should be able to get a reman under $1000 including gaskets. Intercoolers are quite reliable as a rule, unless you hit something.

      Then on top of that, they want to attach all sorts of non sense to the exhaust system.

      Improving automobile emissions makes excellent sense for those of us who like to breathe.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    13. Re:Nobody wants underpowered fart boxes by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Never buy one they are shit and not nearly as economical as they suggest as well.

      Shit, probably not. Ford's quality figures are similar to other automakers. Not as economical as they suggest, that part is true. The vehicle needs mild hybridization in order to actually be efficient, since it has to struggle to come up to speed. Acceleration is where hybrid systems really help mileage, besides regen of course.

      All vehicles will be hybrids soon enough, and then the ecoboost may actually deliver the promised mileage.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    14. Re:Nobody wants underpowered fart boxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A turbocharger is generally required a) to make the SCR function and b) to make up for the lost energy output that the SCR causes.

      In order for an SCR to function, it requires extremely high EGTs. A naturally aspirated diesel motor cannot produce EGTs high enough for an SCR system to function, especially when using an EGR system to reduce NOx emissions. (I won't even get into all of the other emissions problems introduced by an EGR).

      Really, in the presence of all of these absurd emission control laws written by idealistic recent political science graduates who have no practical knowledge of anything to speak of, there's no point in using a diesel motor for direct locomotion. They are no longer any more efficient than gasoline motors. The best way to leverage the higher efficiency of a diesel motor over a gas motor is to constantly operate it at a point where the EGT is high, which will be close to the maximum power output, and use that to turn a generator to either drive electric motors and/or charge a large battery.

  3. People deride Elon Musk and Tesla... by Viol8 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ... sometimes with good reason, but we need people like him to force innovation on these dinosaurs otherwise nothing will change even if at the end of the day the maverick loses and the dinosaurs survive but producing much better vehicles.

    1. Re:People deride Elon Musk and Tesla... by fbobraga · · Score: 1

      yeap (and we can see he's very tired in the last interviews: maybe it's related to it and "all work and no play makes jack a dull boy" :P)

    2. Re:People deride Elon Musk and Tesla... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Elon isn't changing jack shit. And you people do realize that there are several new auto and truck makers, don't you?

      Here are some shipping now. Not vaporware or pie-in-the-sky promises.

      I know, I know - If Musk isn't doing it, it doesn't exist.

    3. Re:People deride Elon Musk and Tesla... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Interesting. The Wrightspeed section caught my attention the most.

      Looks like we have an automotive repeat of Apple. Two founders, one who knows tech and one who somehow has an alarmingly large fanclub.

    4. Re:People deride Elon Musk and Tesla... by 110010001000 · · Score: 0

      He isn't innovating anything. He is producing a car that only the 1% can afford. There are other manufacturers producing affordable EVs today, not Tesla.

    5. Re:People deride Elon Musk and Tesla... by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 4, Informative
      In August more Model 3 were sold than Altima, Accent, Legacy, Impreza, Sentra, Focus, the Fiats, Chryslers, ....all these "affordable" middle class cars. Of course it also outsold all BMW cars combined, all Lexus cars combined, all MB cars combined, so it is definitely breaking out of the luxury, high end markets and reaching outside.

      Only Accord, Civic, Corolla and Camry outsold Model 3 in August. It is not a 1% 's car. More like 2%'s car. Very few outside the 5% buy brand new cars. 95% of Americans buy used vehicles. 90% of the Americans are driving used vehicles they bought below 20K.

      Model S and X can be legitimately called 1%'s car. But Model 3 is affordable for about 30% of the people who buy new cars. https://cleantechnica.com/2018...

      --
      sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
    6. Re:People deride Elon Musk and Tesla... by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 1
      Thanks for reading Cleantechnica. Good for you.

      Tesla semi is still a vaporware, these speciality makers are getting into the market ahead of it. It is good. It was Tesla's announcement that legitimized this segment and got them VC funding for many of them. Many of these are actually headed by Tesla Alumni engineers.

      But why are you suddenly mixing up heavy duty trucks and cars? The segment that Tesla is actually shipping products, competition is still announcing vaporware no-compromise cars or selling deliberately crippled EVs. They dont want EVs to be cannibalize their ICEV sales.

      --
      sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
    7. Re:People deride Elon Musk and Tesla... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, it is important we receive "innovations" like cars that can't be worked on by the home mechanic, and companies that actively fight independent mechanics from repairing their vehicles. And "innovations" such as refusing to do safety recalls because the car was rebuilt. Very "innovative" of non-dinosaur Tesla indeed!

    8. Re:People deride Elon Musk and Tesla... by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      The Model 3 isn't a cheap car though, so it's likely that these figures are just because they did a pre-order and people had time to save up. Either that or there are a lot of rich people who can afford to drop $50k on a car.

      I have a feeling that the base $35k model may be dropped, at least in Europe. They already removed it from their web site.

      While I'm glad it's selling well, credit for popularizing EVs must also go to Nissan. The Leaf, especially outside the US, was the game changer. Affordable, good, and proved that EVs were practical. They also build a lot of the charging infrastructure in many countries.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    9. Re:People deride Elon Musk and Tesla... by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 1
      I have talked to Leaf owners. It is actually not a good intro to EV.

      The battery had no thermal management. So it was losing capacity very quickly. Lost 50% capacity in two years due to battery degradation. Nissan attempted to fix it by reducing the charging current rate. So it needed more than 12 hours of charge. Winter range drops to 75 miles on full charge. In two or three year old vehicles is around 40 miles on full charge, and you need to wrap yourself in blankets and avoid using the cabin heat.

      Bolt always had thermal management.

      Both Leaf and Bolt suffer from the compromises made to avoid cannibalizing their ICEV sales. On paper it is an EV, affordable, it has bullet points, a compliance car. But the companies dont promote it seriously, the dealers dont want to sell it.

      My brother says these are deliberate attempts to sour the people off EV. But he is over reacting. Why ascribe to malice what is easily explained by incompetence?

      --
      sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
    10. Re:People deride Elon Musk and Tesla... by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      Well, really, the problem here is a lack of capitalism. Capitalism handles this quite well: somebody buys all the patents for these emissions technologies, positions themselves as having great emissions, causes the standards to tighten, and licenses the technology to their competitors so they make a fucking mint.

      When you don't have regulations--notably, anti-trust regulations--capitalism goes away. Instead of competing, they collude, and they don't bring these technologies forward.

      So you see, anti-trust regulations are the great protector of capitalism: they prevent companies from acting against market forces and suppressing the great innovation power of competition. If the government doesn't step in with a hammer and smash this little cabal into its rightful many pieces, then it will sicken and tear down our glorious market system, leading to corporate fascism and dominance by what ultimately becomes a single commercial entity owning everything.

      Therefor, by decree of the duly elected representatives of the States of Europe and their sovereign citizens, it is time to kick ass and chew bubblegum.

    11. Re:People deride Elon Musk and Tesla... by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 1
      No the 35K model will come, once the waiting list is exhausted and the battery production capacity hits 10,000 a week. The German breakdown predicted a $20K gross margin per vehicle for the premium version at 10K units/week. The Monroe breakdown predicted a $10K margin at the 4K units/week. UBS sued Monroe to gag him up, but its report did agree 42K as the production cost for the premium versions. It switched to net margin, including factory depreciation and R&D costs to report a negative margin for the base model, but added a misleading "summary" that suggested negative margin for the base model.

      Elon mentioned the gross margin would be 0$ at 5K units a week for the base model. At 10K /week, given the one more year of price drop for the batteries, and other optimizations, there will be a 10K gross margin for the base model too. As long as there is demand for the premium versions, it will sell them to pay down debt and raise capital. But as the premium version demand is sated, it will switch to base model. It might even make a lower than base model too.

      There is model Y in the works. That too would be around 60K and it will keep the high end demand up.

      Tesla will not be making base model for a long time. It might make a few runs to satisfy the line waiters and other long time supporters.

      --
      sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
    12. Re:People deride Elon Musk and Tesla... by drinkypoo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Well, really, the problem here is a lack of capitalism.

      Wrong. What you see here is an excess of capitalism. Capitalism means that capital controls the means of production, full stop. It obviously does not mean whatever you think it means.

      Capitalism handles this quite well:

      No, it doesn't. It requires some kind of regulatory body to make it handle this situation.

      somebody buys all the patents for these emissions technologies, positions themselves as having great emissions, causes the standards to tighten, and licenses the technology to their competitors so they make a fucking mint.

      The patents were developed by the automakers, and used to prevent that from happening. They did that because they stood to make more money by slowing it down, because those systems cost money and if they slow down progress, they don't have to put them on the vehicles they sell and they can keep more money — because consumers will only pay so much for a vehicle, which is based on their position in capitalism.

      So you see, anti-trust regulations are the great protector of capitalism: they prevent companies from acting against market forces and suppressing the great innovation power of competition.

      No, preventing competition is a perfectly normal thing to do under capitalism. Anti-trust regulations are the great protector of the free market, which paradoxically cannot exist without government interference.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    13. Re:People deride Elon Musk and Tesla... by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      The Model 3 isn't a cheap car though,

      Auto lending has increased, and the TCO of the Model 3 is lower than an ICE-based vehicle, so while it's not cheap... it's not actually expensive, either.

      While I'm glad it's selling well, credit for popularizing EVs must also go to Nissan.

      Not really. Nobody not already converted to EVs sees a Leaf and says "wow, I want to buy an EV". Teslas, on the other hand... The truth is that Tesla made the EV popular, and Nissan has benefited from that... and from Tesla's backlog. Lots of people bought a Leaf because they couldn't get their hands on a Tesla. That is the very definition of not being cool in this space, being the alternative.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    14. Re:People deride Elon Musk and Tesla... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      https://www.google.com/search?q=tesla+3+cost

      Really, $49k is 1% territory?

      It is more than I want to spend on a car, but not more than I COULD spend.

      That said, the 1% often don't worry about how much their car costs:
      https://www.ceotodaymagazine.com/2018/03/5-affordable-cars-the-richest-people-in-the-world-are-driving/

    15. Re:People deride Elon Musk and Tesla... by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      I dunno, there is a lot of interest in the 40kWh model from non-EV people.

      The M3 TCO might be lower than some ICE cars, but still not really in the affordable category. And most importantly it's much, much more expensive than the competition for long range EVs, namely the Niro, Kona and soon the Leaf 60.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    16. Re:People deride Elon Musk and Tesla... by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      The issue with he $35k model is that it's just not very competitive. For that you get a stripped down hatchback with a decent motor but very little else. No comfort features like heated/ventilated seats, minimal interior, no autopilot etc. And most of all the range isn't that impressive for the money.

      You can already buy a Kona, Niro is due in a couple of months, Leaf 60 is due this year too. The Model 3 Short Range out is already expensive compared to those cars and the spec you get from their top models, let alone the base models.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    17. Re:People deride Elon Musk and Tesla... by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 1
      If they really make a good EV and occupy the 35K segment, it is ok. The goal is to kill the ICEV, not propping up Tesla.

      But without Tesla they wont make a no-compromise EV. They will design it not to hurt the ICEV sales. Without Tesla chasing their tail there will not be a really good EV at 35K. That is why we need to pop up Tesla till the market shifts. Then we can let Tesla go to hell.

      Look how crippled Leaf was. No thermal management system, 50% capacity loss in two years, reduced to 40 mile range in winter with cabin heat on ... come on, thee would never be a Leaf 60, had there not been a Model3.

      Jaguar is shifting first because it was bought by Ford that killed its engine division. Now owned by Tata, it has a diesel engine plant but it does not have the heavy emotional attachment or know how. So it is willing to ditch ICE first. Tata wants real EVs for India anyway too.

      But BMW and Porsche have ICEV fanatics, pedigree, enthusiasts, know how. They would loathe to give up what they built over a century. Start a fresh in battery EV? Only because Tesla is able to eat their market share with X, S and 3 they are coming out with EV.

      --
      sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
    18. Re:People deride Elon Musk and Tesla... by 110010001000 · · Score: 1

      OK, a 2% car. What the F. Moron. The point is it isn't an affordable EV. There are other companies providing that.

    19. Re:People deride Elon Musk and Tesla... by 110010001000 · · Score: 1

      Right. A $60,000 Tesla is not expensive. You guys live in a bubble.

    20. Re:People deride Elon Musk and Tesla... by 110010001000 · · Score: 1

      If you are reading this website you are likely part of the 1%.Do you earn more than $32,000? You are part of the 1%. You guys are out of touch with reality.

    21. Re:People deride Elon Musk and Tesla... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Privileged, wealthy people don't like to be reminded of that.
      "So what, get a better job if you don't like it."

    22. Re:People deride Elon Musk and Tesla... by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      Ah, but you miss the salient detail: without the anti-trust regulations, the capitalist market eventually turns into superconglomerates selling out for big money, until the final merger and acquisition cycle leaves you with one giant megacorporation which can unilaterally crush all competition by shutting off access by anyone to anything. That is your government: a single corporate dictator, owner of all.

      That's not capitalism anymore. Capitalism only survives, as you observe, by the maintenance of government. Capitalism involves the means of production being controlled by private owners rather than the state; and when you've reached the conclusion of buy-outs down to one, your megacorporation is your government. At that scale, they don't need a military; they'll just cut off the supply chain to yours.

    23. Re:People deride Elon Musk and Tesla... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, but with the guy you are replying to, if HE can't afford it, it's only for the 1%.

      Actual figures and math need not apply.

    24. Re:People deride Elon Musk and Tesla... by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      Affordability isn't a static line on the graph. What's affordable to some isn't necessarily affordable to you. And that's perfectly ok, for the record.

      I don't know why you have broomstick up your ass about what other people do with their money.

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    25. Re:People deride Elon Musk and Tesla... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe it is because those vehicles last longer and didn't need to be replaced as often?

    26. Re:People deride Elon Musk and Tesla... by rahvin112 · · Score: 1

      Bunch of baloney that is. All capital intensive markets will gravitate towards a single monopolistic provider without government restraint. The automakers got around this by colluding with each other to deliberately break competition and break the very capital policies that make the markets work.

      You cannot have a functioning capital market without anti-trust controls. Any market with significant capital spending will devolve automatically towards a single monopoly provider in such a case without government controls. For example, the cost to boot strap a new automotive company is upwards of $20 billion dollars. At those costs the capital markets will demand impressive levels of interest for the risk that you won't make it to profitability before the capital costs destroy you. Tesla faces this very problem and it's hounded relentlessly by their competitors and short sellers who are betting they can't make it.

    27. Re:People deride Elon Musk and Tesla... by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      Well, really, the problem here is a lack of capitalism. Capitalism handles this quite well: somebody buys all the patents for these emissions technologies, positions themselves as having great emissions, causes the standards to tighten, and licenses the technology to their competitors so they make a fucking mint.

      *Sigh* another person who doesn't understand the difference between the political concept of capitalism and the economic concept of the perfect market.

    28. Re:People deride Elon Musk and Tesla... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      90% of the Americans are driving used vehicles they bought below 20K.

      You sure about that? It would mean that an average vehicle spends less than 10 % of its lifetime with the first owner.

    29. Re:People deride Elon Musk and Tesla... by Cederic · · Score: 1

      In August more Model 3 were sold than Altima, Accent, Legacy, Impreza, Sentra, Focus, the Fiats, Chryslers, ....all these "affordable" middle class cars. Of course it also outsold all BMW cars combined, all Lexus cars combined, all MB cars combined,

      Meanwhile, in the real world, there were more BMWs alone sold in August than there were Tesla cars (of any model):
      http://carsalesbase.com/us-car...
      http://carsalesbase.com/us-car...

      Sure, not totally reliable data but substantially better than the ones you provided.

      Given BMW and Mercedes alone sell more cars each month than Tesla make in a quarter, I'm feeling confident that you're talking shit.

    30. Re:People deride Elon Musk and Tesla... by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 1
      Given BMW and Mercedes alone sell more cars each month than Tesla make in a quarter, I'm feeling confident that you're talking shit.

      The figures you cite includes cross overs, SUVs and cars. Tesla has not released model Y yet. Once it does, we can compare these numbers. Anyway there is a legitimate argument that sedan market is shrinking anyway, and the BMW sedan sale drop (double digits for three years now) is not due to Tesla.

      --
      sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
    31. Re:People deride Elon Musk and Tesla... by Cederic · · Score: 1

      Once it does, we can compare these numbers.

      So why did you compare these numbers?

      Anyway there is a legitimate argument

      Which you didn't try to make.

      Seriously, there are plenty of good reasons to support Tesla. Idiots spouting bullshit to try and close down conversation merely obscure those.

    32. Re:People deride Elon Musk and Tesla... by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      Oh, I don't think the economic perfect market can exist without political controls to keep it running. It'll turn itself into a monopolistic quasi-government unless you come in with a broomstick and break up the salt bridges now and then.

    33. Re:People deride Elon Musk and Tesla... by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      An economic perfect market exists in theory and is the perfectly unstable form of a market in a capitalist policitcal system. In the absence of any regulation this market will degrade to full monopoly which is the capitalist system's stable state.

    34. Re:People deride Elon Musk and Tesla... by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 1

      Anyway there is a legitimate argument

      Which you didn't try to make.

      Seriously, there are plenty of good reasons to support Tesla. Idiots spouting bullshit to try and close down conversation merely obscure those.

      OK I did not give allowance in advance for a possible legitimate counter argument. Good. Point well taken.

      Did you vocalize any of the plenty of good reasons to support Tesla? 4 digit ID, achievements 39, lots of postings. I cant find if you had done so. Please post links if you have.

      --
      sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
    35. Re:People deride Elon Musk and Tesla... by drsquare · · Score: 1

      Not only is that capitalism, it's the ultimate end-goal of capitalism. No-one runs a business because they want to compete, they run a business because they want to crush everyone and enjoy a profitable monopoly.

  4. No collusion, volks. by h33t+l4x0r · · Score: 0

    No pee pee tapes.

  5. Do not expect too much... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    ... Except a token gesture. Germany's car industry is vital to German economy, and Europe's economy IS German economy. That's just the way it is. That's why Dieselgate was a powerful shock to the whole EU and a "friendly" reminder from president Obama that the US can turn off the EU at any given moment without Europeans being able to do anything about it. Junker is huffing and puffing and making a big show of challenging Trump's America because he knows that retaliatory measures against the EU would be opposed by Democrats, while a Dem president with a Dem majority would have been unimaginably dangerous to defy. Hillary would have laid down the law, in even harsher terms than Obama did, with Euros having no choice but to comply. But Junker also understands that he's on his last legs and he can drop everything over his successor, who must only hope push does not come to shove. If it boils down to US interests vs EU interests, both parties will stare down the EU and bring it to heel.

    1. Re:Do not expect too much... by fintux · · Score: 1

      Europe's economy IS German economy.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_GDP_(PPP) - 2017 figures for GDP EU: 20.85 trillion USD, Germany: 4.15 trillion USD.

      https://www.thelocal.de/20150924/what-the-vw-scandal-means-for-germanys-economy - Germany's car industry sales are 14% of Germany's GDP.

      Certainly, car industry is very important for Germany. And also certainly, Germany's economy is very important for the EU. But to claim an equality between these is a hyperbole.

      That's why Dieselgate was a powerful shock to the whole EU and a "friendly" reminder from president Obama that the US can turn off the EU at any given moment without Europeans being able to do anything about it

      Also, a significant portion of the car sales does NOT go to the USA. I also don't understand the claim how a smaller economy can "turn off" a bigger economy without being affected by it themselves.

    2. Re:Do not expect too much... by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      If the EU tips over, the US is going down with it.

    3. Re: Do not expect too much... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not really. The US will "kindly" step in and pick up the pieces. American industries will have free rein over all of Europe with the taxation they like and the rules they like. The EU as it is now is to the US a bothersome wannabe "competitor" to be reminded now and then who the boss is. Europeans should be happy. The moment the US should perceive the EU as a threat, Europeans would find out how unpleasant things can be.

    4. Re: Do not expect too much... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Germany dictatates the rules over the whole of the EU. That is a fact. All member countries'GDPs are measured against Germany's. Should Germany go under, the Euro's value would plunge to the point of non-viability. The whole economic strategy behind the Euro is to present a currency on the global market as strong as the US Dollar. The US Dollar is backed by the US' immense financial, industrial AND military might. The Euro is backed for the most important part by German economy. Who would sustain the Euro's worth? Italy? France? Greece? Don't make me snicker.

    5. Re: Do not expect too much... by Cederic · · Score: 1

      The US will "kindly" step in and pick up the pieces.

      Really? Not China, or Brazil, or Japan and Korea, or a newly independent UK along with its Commonwealth (plenty of rich people in India these days).

  6. Re:Blame the EU commission.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    > but they'll as you say be less reliable and all the replacement parts required and/or early scrapping will easily offset any minor gains in the exhaust emissions.

    You have a source on this?
    Never heard this argument before.

  7. Calling Spider-Man by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Otto" particulate filters

    Dammit, Otto. What did you do this time?

  8. Re:Blame the EU commission.. by Viol8 · · Score: 1

    Look up how much energy it takes to manufacture a modern car. Most of it will have come from fossiil fuel power stations or diesel transporation, either shippingi, trains or trucks.

  9. Oh for the love of Pete by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't know what this new warriorism is, but we need to nip it in the bud.

    Companies do this literally ALL THE TIME. It's not called collusion. It's called cooperation. GM and Ford have been sharing transmission designs for literally decades.

    It just so happens that Audi, VW, and BMW, in addition to lobbying government not to require these systems, decided to work together to come up with a system that could be used in all of their cars, driving down the costs for all of them.

    This is GOOD FOR CONSUMERS on both fronts. The cost savings of not having to have the systems at all is the ideal, but if they're going to be forced by government to have them, they may as well make them as cheaply as they can by leveraging the economy of scale.

    So what do we call these imbeciles who insist that everything is collusion? Well, besides just calling them imbeciles? Collusion Warriors?

    1. Re:Oh for the love of Pete by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      Also good for consumers: if multiple manufacturers are using common parts, the part availability goes up, and the pricing goes down due to economies of scale.

      We can't have that, can we? Better bust up this arrangement so we end up with a whole lot of snowflake emissions crap that is impossible to repair.

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
  10. Re:Blame the EU commission.. by Computershack · · Score: 4, Insightful

    .Sure, it will end up with cars producing less CO2, but they'll as you say be less reliable and all the replacement parts required and/or early scrapping will easily offset any minor gains in the exhaust emissions.

    Yet modern cars with all of this are far more reliable than they ever were back in the day of carburettors, doing mileage that cars of the 70s would never reach.

    --
    I only please one person per day. Today is not your day. Tomorrow isn't looking good either. - Scott Adams
  11. Re:Blame the EU commission.. by Computershack · · Score: 1

    Look up how much energy it takes to manufacture a modern car. Most of it will have come from fossiil fuel power stations or diesel transporation, either shippingi, trains or trucks.

    Almost 100% of any car made in the last 20 years is recyclable. Most of the materials used in a new build are from recycled metals.

    --
    I only please one person per day. Today is not your day. Tomorrow isn't looking good either. - Scott Adams
  12. Re:Blame the EU commission.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Most of it will have come from fossiil fuel power stations or diesel transporation," You're a dinosaur being truculent. Stupid ass lol.

  13. Elon did NOT start Tesla by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... sometimes with good reason, but we need people like him to force innovation on these dinosaurs otherwise nothing will change even if at the end of the day the maverick loses and the dinosaurs survive but producing much better vehicles.

    There is nothing innovative about Tesla. His reputation "innovative disruptive genius" is all made up by his publicists and eaten up whole by sycophantic fanboys who believe everything that liar says and make excuses for his stupidity.

    Does he do what he's done with SpaceX and hire people who know what they're doing for Tesla?
    Nope.

    Typical Silicon Valley arrogance - making cars is easy! And no one else wants to use Tesla batteries. That'll be your home work because you fanboys just stick you fingers in your ears and ignore any and all truth about Musk Tesla's faults.

    Sold long position at $365.55, then shorted and covered. $$$$$$$$ Yeee Haw! I'm staying away from the SS Tesla Titanic Captained by the drug impaired Elon Musk

  14. Re:Blame the EU commission.. by muecksteiner · · Score: 1

    As if. For instance, the bodywork of most cars is anodised these days, for rust protection. Getting the zinc off the scrap metal afterwards is nigh impossible, though, so you end up with a lot of sub-par scrap steel.

    And that's not even talking about all the plastics. "Recyclable" is a very flexible term, and can mean a lot of things. Up to, and including, just shredding the stuff in question, and using it as low-grade plastic for disposable items. Which, by itself, hardly counts as particularly long-term thinking in and by itself.

  15. So Yur Sayin Germany WOULD START WW 3! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    W W I I I

    Of course it would. Who else!

  16. Libbies love collusion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think liberals love the collusion angle of anything. Makes its sound more evil and out the get someone. In the end it was about unrealistic emission regulations that amounts to all makers trying to find ways to sell those cars with those engines. If the car maker did not do something the owners would complain and may even try to adapt something of their own to skirt emissions and make their engines run better.
    Yes, we need to improve emissions but at a pace that engineering can achieve and not set the bar too high so that engine makers have little choice but to cheat.

  17. Re:Blame the EU commission.. by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

    More reliable, safer, and efficient. But that adds to complexity and cost.

    Is there any reason we can't have the efficiency of a modern 4 cylinder engine, drive-train without all the useless "features" that just adds to complexity and cost? I would love to own a brand new car that's easy to work on without all the entertainment and luxury electronic crap. I dunno, say a base model of a 1980's Honda Civic or a Toyota light truck (manual windows, etc) but constructed with modern safety and engine. Is anti-lock braking even needed in a car that light?? Hopefully you get the gist.

    --
    Life is not for the lazy.
  18. .ban by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The whole world has to fight for carbon neutral enviroment, whilw those greedy mfs dont give a single f about the future of this planet. Record fines and big jail time is the only way to show how serious thia aituation is.

  19. Re:Blame the EU commission.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    https://www.ignitionlive.co.za/this-volvo-p1800-has-clocked-over-5-million-kilometres/

    “After a few kilometres behind the wheel, I decided to take the leap of faith and since then I’ve never looked back,” says Gordon. He has since travelled vast distances in his car, driving through more than six countries including the US and Alaska. He says he only had to change wheel bearings at 100 000 miles (160 934km) and it was not until 700 000 miles (1 126 000km) that the engine had to be rebuilt.

    Do show me a modern car that even comes close to that...

    Of course modern cars use less gas and is less prone to rust, but for reliability (and repair-costs) modern cars are quite shitty.

  20. Re:Blame the EU commission.. by burtosis · · Score: 1

    Easy to work on adds to the cost of losing sales in repairs at proprietary process dealerships. It also tends to make the designs larger and bulkier in general. In the 60s before computer modeling, some difficulties in repair were more excusable, but with modern CAD I'm assuming they specifically make the spaces so that standard tools won't fit, require fairy thin arms and fingers to fit in yet with the strength of a professional weight lifter, and place sharp corners even Legolas couldn't dodge cutting himself up on when servicing parts.

  21. Re:Blame the EU commission.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Technically they are made from a lot of recycled materials and technically most of it can be recycled, but the problem is in reality it's extremely difficult to separate out all the bits once they're turned into a car.

    Recycling is actually one of the worst ways to conserve resources as it requires almost as much energy to recycle as it did to create the things from raw materials, and in some cases can require as much energy as extracting the raw material AND making it.

    The most environmentally friendly thing is REUSE - but this being made increasingly difficult as it is less profitable and with legislation practically banning older cars from cities everything is just being crosswired.

    For instance, I had an old Euro3 diesel car that could do 600 miles on 35 litres even with me thrashing it.

    Because I use my car for work within an emissions control zone, I had to change to a petrol car that produces 33% more CO2 and barely does 400 miles on 40 litres when I'm driving it at Maximum Inconsiderateness (If I drive it the way I did my old diesel I get maybe 300 miles!)

    So I've had to buy a new car while my old one will likely get scrapped despite it being perfectly functional and usable, AND I'm contributing to the skyrocketing CO2 levels in my city, which in previous years had been dropping due to the uptake of diesel cars (Admittedly against a rise of NOx and particulates which is why these knee-jerk bans have been popping up)

    I had hoped to keep my old diesel until a decent sub-4m long electric car popped up that also had 300 miles range at 70mph, but that plan's gone out the window now since the funds I'd been saving for that have been mostly decimated. So gutless high-CO2 shitbox it is for the foreseeable future! Great job government!!

  22. Re:Blame the EU commission.. by sinij · · Score: 1

    Sure, it will end up with cars producing less CO2.

    Only on a test. About everything in modern cars is optimized to pass government emission and fuel economy tests. This doesn't translate to better cars is real driving situations.

    For example, start and stop technology. It makes no difference in regular driving, but it improves EPA city driving fuel economy test performance. The difference? In EPA tests you are 100% stopped, in real life you often have to creep forward in traffic or even near stoplights.

  23. Sorry. Wrong company by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 1

    Only Tesla scandals, real and imagined, are to be given top play. Please take down this thread.

    --
    sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
    1. Re:Sorry. Wrong company by houghi · · Score: 1

      Not only that. It looks as if the EU is not only after US companies. That is bad for the perception of how they use the law to fleece US companies. So hide this evidence.

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    2. Re: Sorry. Wrong company by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The evidence was already out, they had to look like they were acting. But don't worry, Germany will not be hit hard. They ARE the EU after all.

    3. Re: Sorry. Wrong company by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This was started by a German investigation. That is also the reason why the French, Italian and overseas car makers that did similar things are not included.

    4. Re: Sorry. Wrong company by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And it will all end in the same way: with a slap on the wrist. They HAVE to do some thorough investigation themselves now, though: would be too embarassing to be caught by another US probe that could result in very punishing sanctions.

  24. Re:Blame the EU commission.. by sinij · · Score: 2

    This. The most environmentally responsible approach is long-term car ownership. Longer you own the car, lower the annualized impact of manufacturing the car. If you own your big-block Chevy long enough you will have lower lifetime emissions that someone leasing Priuses.

    If EPA was rational they would regulate car long term reliability - ensuring that the car could be used for at least 250,000 miles and 20 years without major rebuilds.

  25. DanAHill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    my clAssmAte's sister mAkes $84/hr on the computer. She hAs been fired from work for 5 months but lAst month her pAyment wAs $13638 just working on the computer for A few hours. here's the site to reAd more....www.99logic.com

  26. Meh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There was absolutely no collusion, and if their was, collsion is not a crime!

  27. Oh ok by Viol8 · · Score: 1

    So you'll be able to point me in the direction of another 2 ton electric 4 door that can do 0-60 in 3 seconds and still has a quoted range of 300 miles and is on sale today then won't you....

    Come on , whats keeping you....

  28. Re:Blame the EU commission.. by vtcodger · · Score: 1

    "Yet modern cars with all of this are far more reliable than they ever were back in the day of carburettors, doing mileage that cars of the 70s would never reach."

    I know it's sample size 1, but my carbureted 1979 Mazda GLC was about the size of a modern family sedan, had every emission control device known to man, and consistently got better than 30mpg -- better than the more modern cars that replaced it. While I agree that modern cars are amazingly reliable, I submit that the problem with carburetors wasn't reliability or fuel consumption. It was that they had moving parts that were subject to wear and that diagnosing problems and fixing them was very difficult. I suspect that if carburetors were still in use, they'd be more reliable than they were 40 or 50 years ago. (But they'd likely still be hard to fix).

    --
    You can't see ANYTHING from a car, You've got to get out of the goddamned contraption and walk...Edward Abbey
  29. Sorry but by Wolfier · · Score: 1

    It's just the old saying that no replacement for displacement, which is proven to be absurd these days.

    In passenger cars, a 2.0L 4 cylinder turbo nowadays produces more power than a 3.5L 6 cylinder naturally aspired 20 years ago (that's around 300PS).
    A 1.0L 3 cylinder turbo can produce about 140PS, which is sufficient for most people who wants to buy a car.

    The traditional big displacement engines from the American manufacturers...I haven't seen any stats they're in any way more reliable than the turbos.

    Where does your "nobody" come from? If you know how to drive. It's in no way "underpowered". Of course, if you don't know how to drive, it's another story.

    1. Re:Sorry but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Show me a 4-cylinder that can produce the torque of a 6-cylinder, and thus get you up and down steeper inclines.

      My 4.0L V6 RWD vehicle is waiting for your response, since its birth in 2002. I get up and over mountains that usually need 4x4 and a V8, and that is with a full load of rock or ore material.

    2. Re:Sorry but by Cederic · · Score: 1

      It's just the old saying that no replacement for displacement, which is proven to be absurd these days.

      In passenger cars, a 2.0L 4 cylinder turbo nowadays produces more power than a 3.5L 6 cylinder naturally aspired 20 years ago

      But I can buy a 3.5L 6 cylinder turbo now, and your shitty 2L just isn't going to replace it.

      If you know how to drive. It's in no way "underpowered"

      If it can't get me from 25 to 70 in less time than it takes me to go down the slip road it's fucking dangerously underpowered.

      If it can't get me from 40, past the slow cunt holding me up and back into my lane before the next bend, it's underpowered.

      But I do know how to drive, and I do know where proper acceleration is a useful safety feature.

  30. Re:Blame the EU commission.. by rickb928 · · Score: 1

    You've never bought an American car made in the 60s or 70s. I'll leave the 80s models for futher review...

    Back then you were surprised to find one running well after 100,000 miles. Not just the sheet metal, which, if you went out to the garage around 2am, laid down on the floor, and put your ear up next to the quarter panel, you could hear it rust. But those high-compression engines, lacking a little in advanced metallurgy and manufacturing, suffered from intake manifold gasket failures, carburetor problems, and of course biennial exhaust system replacements before that magical extra digit changed on the odometer. I drove two for a while, a 72 Riviera (damn, that was sweet) and a 78 Mustang II (damn, what a terrible car), and both had great issues. When the Japanese Invasion took hold, most of Detroit improved their offerings, but it took a while. Oh, and I drove a 80-something (maybe 79) Datsun 310, and it rusted too. The Nissan 310 that followed it (cheap company cars) less so, but let me tell you about the crankshaft thrust washer...

    Anyways, No one cared that American cars from those decades didn't last. It was the standard. Somehow, though imports did better, with the notable exception of BMW, which seemed to deliver great cars that didn't last in America, mostly I suspect because we did not take the care of them that German owners did, for a variety of reasons. Planned obsolescence? Probably. It changed. Now with relatively rapid changes in tech, we see engines getting turbos (which can last very well if done right, ask Saab and Subaru) and of course the cockpit getting so much tech. I wonder how many 20 year old cars with LCD screens will still have a working display. Hard to drive without that sweet virtual dashboard. If you think these EU manufacturers plan for their vehicles to suffer predictable, designed-in failure to drive repair revenue or replacement, do not be surprised. Ask GM why they really killed the EV-1.

    --
    deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
  31. Re:Blame the EU commission.. by rickb928 · · Score: 1
    --
    deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
  32. Re:Blame the EU commission.. by kilfarsnar · · Score: 1

    Is anti-lock braking even needed in a car that light??

    I would expect it is more important in a light car. Less weight means less grip, and it being easier to lock up the wheels during braking. Anti-lock brakes enable you to brake and turn at the same time without worrying about pumping the brakes. You want it.

    --
    "What the American public doesn't know is what makes them the American public." -Ray Zalinsky (Tommy Boy)
  33. Why? by vtcodger · · Score: 1

    There's little doubt that automakers would sell their grandmothers into slavery if the price was right, I'm a bit curious why they would take the legal risk of conspiring to suppress development of a spectrum of emission control technologies. The cost of plugging away lethargically on emission control device development is low ("Hey we're working on better catalysts. But it's slow. Developing new technologies takes time"). The cost of getting caught is likely to be very high.

    --
    You can't see ANYTHING from a car, You've got to get out of the goddamned contraption and walk...Edward Abbey
    1. Re:Why? by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      There's little doubt that automakers would sell their grandmothers into slavery if the price was right, I'm a bit curious why they would take the legal risk of conspiring to suppress development of a spectrum of emission control technologies.

      It couldn't be more obvious: they stood to make more money by not putting this equipment into vehicles than they stood to lose by getting fined later. So long as punishments don't fit crimes, you will only see more of this kind of behavior.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    2. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why on earth shouldn't they be allowed to agree to not develop this technology? Let the academic world develop the technology, and if sound, then have legislation mandate its use.

      Simplifying a past story, crotch rocket manufactures agreed to put governors on their sportbikes during the speed wars to prevent legislation on power limits which would have ultimately stifled small engine advancements (amazing what you can get from a 1000 cc engine). The result was a top end speed limit while manufacturers could continue to increase the power available in their top end sportbikes.

  34. Re:Blame the EU commission.. by rickb928 · · Score: 1

    ABS is even more valuable with a light car. Complex ECUs permit better emission controls, and that's your government at work, talk to them. It's hard to argue against cleane air. Useless entertainment features? Oh, I mostly don't like being stuck with the audio system they decided to settle for, but I suppose if they built Bluetooth and streaming into it I'm done, amps and speakers are still upgradable.

    'They' won't let you build an 80s Toyota Hilux any more, you'll have to use modern emissions and that's the end of repairability. And this is, BTW, an argument in almost all consumer electronics and similar products, and even farm equipment, where the manufacturers will deny you access to the software, and that's the end of fixing it yourself. Mind you, BMW fanatics have developed software to deal with many chassis versions, as have some others, but that's complex for a reason. Just not to make it easy for YOU to fix.

    --
    deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
  35. Units by rossdee · · Score: 1

      >3.5L 6 cylinder naturally aspired 20 years ago (that's around 300PS)

    So WTF is a PS ?
    The unit of power is a KiloWatt , I think 76KW is about 100 HorsePower

    1. Re:Units by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      So WTF is a PS ?

      It's a pferdestarke. 1 of them equals 0.98632 horsepower, so they are essentially interchangeable. You commonly see power in PS when you see torque in newton-meters... which are sadly different from pound-feet.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    2. Re: Units by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      PS (PferdstÃrke) is the traditional unit of power output in car engines. It has technically been replaced by kW, but it is still incredibly common.

  36. Re:Blame the EU commission.. by rickb928 · · Score: 1

    " you often have to creep forward in traffic"

    Often at idle, or minimum acceleration. No meaningful difference.

    --
    deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
  37. You are judged on your vehicle though... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    One of the things people judge others on, is what they drive. I have seen candidates hired because, "they drive a BMW, they are organized", or "A single male with a minivan... probably gay or a mental case." That becomes just as part of an interview as what one says in front of the candidates. When dating, I have encountered dates made/broken solely on the make of vehicle driven.

    People don't realize that appearances do matter. That 20 year old Daewoo may work, but people will not give you the time of day, and consider you a mental patient.

    1. Re:You are judged on your vehicle though... by sinij · · Score: 2

      Old cars can be cool and not expensive. If you drive a beater car and don't show pride of ownership, then yes, people react accordingly. If you drive an old car and it is clean, minimal rust, and is running well, then it is "old school cool".

      For example old and inexpensive Civic Hatch, VW Golf, Subaru Impreza, Toyota Celcia, and so on would not be seen in a negative light. Your choices broaden a great deal if you step up to luxury bracket, as almost any $100K car would still be seen as cool 20 years older. For example, old diesel W123 Mercedes-Benz is both super practical (easily 40MPG) and super cool.

    2. Re:You are judged on your vehicle though... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why would you want to work for or date someone who thinks like that?

      They are self-selecting you a favor.

      Oh. Shit. I think like that. People that have nice shit are pretentious assholes who are probably horribly in debt and broken ... or just given a silver ladle... (in my mind).

    3. Re: You are judged on your vehicle though... by reanjr · · Score: 1

      When I see a lowly salesperson driving a BMW, I assume they don't know the first thing about managing money, and that they are generally incompetent at life. People who spend 10% of their gross salary leasing a car probably aren't smart enough to be gainfully employed.

    4. Re:You are judged on your vehicle though... by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      Or make a decent enough living to actually afford nice things?

      Just because you don't, doesn't mean others can't.

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    5. Re:You are judged on your vehicle though... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please, we all know that your laptop&pony tail only afford you living in a box with your multiple cats and eating mac&cheese with cat food mixed in for protein.

  38. Democrats again! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Democrat part is part of collusion and election interferance! Other party of VW/BMW or whatever are TOTALLY INNOCENT.

  39. Re:Blame the EU commission.. by Viol8 · · Score: 1

    Wish I had mod points. Nailed it.

  40. Re:Blame the EU commission.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    a base model of a 1980's Honda Civic or a Toyota light truck (manual windows, etc) but constructed with modern safety and engine. Is anti-lock braking even needed in a car that light?? Hopefully you get the gist.

    Safety and efficiency are exactly why cars are heavier nowadays. That's like saying you want a Motorola StarTAC that still plays Fortnite and has a 12 megapixel camera.

  41. Remember when the CEO blamed the programmers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Remember when the CEO blamed the programmers?

  42. Collusion by hardihoot · · Score: 1

    So it was VW and Daimler who hacked the US 2016 Election. It was the Germans, not the Russians, all along!

    --
    A word fitly spoken is like apples of gold in pictures of silver --Proverbs 25:11
  43. Re:Blame the EU commission.. by ledow · · Score: 2

    We no longer need to make cars that go at ludicrous speeds. My cheap run-of-the-mill car will easily do 130mph if I ask it to.

    That's unnecessary.

    All the safety features on modern cars are there for a reason. Your bumpers disintegrate because they will save your life much better than any older car. Airbags are everywhere, even the roof supports. Because it saves your life. None of those are repairable, you don't want them to be, because people will sell you a car with a second-hand replacement airbag that they bolted in after they rear-ended someone and you'll die.

    The entertainment costs an absolute pittance of space and money. Usually the same wires as an ISO radio, maybe
    a mic or two, and a couple of data cables. And yet they add satnav, in-car voice activation, bluetooth dialling etc. It's literally such a cheap bolt-on they give it away to you because people go "ooh" or consider it a necessity.

    In terms of the *car*, the main engine and everything else, the repairability may have gone down but - you know what, few people care. The vast majority of people do not service their own car. It's just that simple.

    My father's a mechanic, worked on fleets for decades. He is perfectly capable of building his own kit cars, making anything out of a pile of scrap, removing every single component of a car and engine, cleaning and servicing, and then refitting it all.

    He hasn't for years because... he's not being paid to do it. He did it for me a couple of times for accident repair and literal engine failure, etc. but he wouldn't just do it.

    The costs involved are all in the parts. He got trade prices. The rest is labour, which is enormous. The complications of all the modern tech is ridiculous, granted. Yet the computer tells him exactly what's wrong when it would take him hours to find out himself.

    So even he would go out of his way to avoid promising anything more than an oil change, a brake-pad change or simple repairs / replacements (e.g. lambda sensors).

    Not because he couldn't, but it's just not worth the hassle. And when you buy the kit - even a certified compatible, at trade prices, from a guy you've known 20+ years - it takes longer to fit and piss about than just taking it to a garage. It's not something he can afford to do any more as a favour to people.

    ABS is mandated in Europe. No ABS on your car, it doesn't get off the forecourt for the model design. Entertainment and luxury stuff is literally just trim. My dad couldn't do anything about most of it or even approach anything techy, but it's all throwaway computer modules and switches in the seats, nothing complex or expensive. But the actual engine-running and safety features - nobody sits and pisses about with those any more, you can't afford to. Just replacing like-for-like costs a fortune because of the legislation on car design.

    For example, seat-belt pre-tensioners. Literal explosives in the seatbelt. You can't mess with that stuff. Airbags in every corner and bracket and door and support. You can't mess with that stuff and even running cables around / near them can be a chore.

    It's not that there's nothing to play with. It's not that you have to be an expert to do so. It's not that these features are "unnecessary". It's that there's so much in a modern car that you can't get cheaper parts to replace them and it's just not worth the effort to try.

    My dad's already written off changing brakes on my car if they run low because it has an electronic handbrake. I didn't get the option on an entire raft of vehicle models. You get an electronic handbrake. And to safely adjust that means a piece of software from the manufacturer, a lesson in IT, and hours of pissing about.

    But the consumer just sees "hill start assist" and doesn't think twice, because they don't care about the repairability. It will hardly ever be them repairing it.

    Cars are more-so consumer items now than even computers and tablets and smartphones are. I sympathis

  44. Re:Blame the EU commission.. by sinij · · Score: 1

    Yes, but start and stop system will restart the engine as a result, reducing effectiveness of the system.

  45. Re:Blame the EU commission.. by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    What really makes turbos last is doing oil changes, and if the designers took the oil feed off from the right location. If they get it from an main oil galley, it's crap. If they took it directly off from the filter, then it might actually last. On most vehicles it just comes out of one of the oil passages so you're getting sludge in your turbo oil. I just noticed this characteristic when I was fiddling with a 1999 Blue Bird Q-Bus with a Cummins ISC. The turbo oil feed line comes directly from the oil filter manifold. I had to rebuild the turbo on my 1982 MBZ 300SD because the bearing was worn out. I put in a 360 degree bearing instead of the 270 degree one that is normally used for ease of installation, too... which is also crap.

    I should look into the VGT on my lady's 2006 Sprinter, and see if they used a proper thrust collar in that one. Just like my OM617, the OM647 features a Garrett turbine, though it's variable instead of being a fixed T3-pattern unit.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  46. Re:Blame the EU commission.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Getting the zinc off the scrap metal afterwards is nigh impossible, though, so you end up with a lot of sub-par scrap steel."

    Deanodizing metals is a well-known process. Hell, a simple bath in Greased Lightning will strip most anodized coatings right off of most knives (it's how I take those nasty coatings off of my knives in the first place.)

  47. Interesting dichotomy by reanjr · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Europe has much stricter environmental laws, but it turns out European manufacturers are shady as fuck. This is pretty much the perennial argument about private enterprise throwing up their hands once the government steps in.

    1. Re: Interesting dichotomy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some of the foreign car manufacturers are even worse...

    2. Re:Interesting dichotomy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Europe has much stricter environmental laws, but it turns out European manufacturers are shady as fuck.

      This is probably the reason we have much stricter environmental laws. ;)

  48. Re:Blame the EU commission.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "ask Saab and Subaru"

    Saab no longer exists.

    I drive a Subaru. I like it.

    These EU manufacturers are looking just as criminal as the rest of people who want money.

  49. Re: Blame the EU commission.. by reanjr · · Score: 1

    Funny how I know literally dozens of people with cars from the 70s...

  50. Re: Blame the EU commission.. by reanjr · · Score: 1

    Also funny how there are tons of old American cars on the road from the 70s, but barely any German made ones...

  51. Re: Blame the EU commission.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1.1 million km is not unheard of in somewhat recent VWs, Skodas, Mercedeses and Toyotas. They do tend to get exported to the east or to the third world at some point, though.

  52. Re:Blame the EU commission.. by Luthair · · Score: 1

    The reason modern cars are heavy is primarily safety - crumple zones, reinforced pillars, airbags, etc. all add weight. Generally other parts of the car (e.g. engine) have gotten lighter.

  53. Re: Blame the EU commission.. by rickb928 · · Score: 1

    Then ask Saab owners. Turbos were not the problems, the DIC was a problem.

    Really, you think I don't know Saab is defunct. Really. Did you know Subaru sold turbo engined cars in the 90s? Earlier, maybe?

    --
    deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
  54. Re: Blame the EU commission.. by rickb928 · · Score: 1

    Collectibles?

    --
    deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
  55. Re:Blame the EU commission.. by Luthair · · Score: 1

    Stop start actually does meaningfully improve fuel economy in cities. The technology that does not improve fuel economy is a turbo. Tests don't replicate common driver behaviour (with more power) which results in the tests effectively testing the smaller displacement engine w/o the turbo.

  56. You make a good point by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

    Us auto sales in 207 were around 17 million. source. There's 222 million drivers in America. That's around 7% of drivers buying new cars.

    Somehow this doesn't seem sustainable. It's also probably why used car prices are so crazy. E.g. a low mileage used car is within 10% of the price of a new one. I paid $12.5k for a 2014 Sentra not long ago and only got it that cheap because it'd been in a fender bender....

    OTOH I wish I could come up with a way to snatch trade ins from dealers and put them in the hands of buyers. A coworker just took a nice, 4 year old, low mileage car to the dealer for trade in and got $4k for it. That dealer will turn around and sell it for $10-$13.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
    1. Re:You make a good point by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 1
      Carvana and Carmax are making a dent into that segment of the market.

      People buying used car, out of factory warranty, want to see, touch and drive the car, may be take it to a mechanic. The internet companies take cars not in demand in some part (like AWD Subaru in Florida) and sell them where they have high local demand.

      Used car market going national and transparent will put a dent into the high mark ups of high quality used cars.

      --
      sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
  57. Re:Blame the EU commission.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    If EPA was rational they would regulate car long term reliability - ensuring that the car could be used for at least 250,000 miles and 20 years without major rebuilds.

    We need high power political action on non-repairability by design, and intentional obstruction to reuse of second hand parts.

    The issue here is companies like Volvo and Mercedes putting chips in things like headlamps to check the vehicle's VIN. Companies doing this should be fined at least 200% of their global turnover. And all CxOs sent to recycle garbage in Africa for not less than 30 years.

    When I was young, I sued to buy three identical cars from the scrap yard, make a good 'un, a "runner" and two the rest back to the scrap yard. (And it was up hill both ways ;-)

  58. Re:Blame the EU commission.. by sinij · · Score: 1

    When you say "meaningfully improve fuel economy in cities", what do you exactly mean? Is 0.01 Gal per full gas tank is meaningful? Also, how much gas do you think car consumes when idling? I think it is less than 0.1 gal per hour per L of engine of displacement. So 5.0 Mustang idling for 2 hours would use up 1 gal of fuel, or would be able to idle approximately for 1.3 days on a full tank.

  59. Re:Blame the EU commission.. by Anne+Thwacks · · Score: 1
    s there any reason we can't have the efficiency of a modern 4 cylinder engine, drive-train without all the useless "features" that just adds to complexity and cost?

    Yes, skulduggery and lobbying.

    --
    Sent from my ASR33 using ASCII
  60. Nazis Do As Nazis Do by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Duh. Stop supporting Nazis. Spit on BMWs and their drivers too!

  61. Re: Blame the EU commission.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yea in Cuba LUL.

  62. Re: Blame the EU commission.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ironically, Subaru is one of the few brands that still offers cars without turbos these days. Well, theoretically anyway, last time I checked, they sold around 35.000 cars in all of Europe.

  63. Re:Blame the EU commission.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Modern cars havent been around long enough to truly gauge reliability (e.g., some modern cars claim you never have to change the trans oil... time has shown thats a bad idea). High mileage is one thing, but adding age, deferred maintenance, multiple owners, etc. greatly compounds the difficulty of the reliability test.

    If you move one decade from your example of the 70s into the 80s, and youll find many cars that are fundamentally more reliable than today's cars.

    For example, Mercedes' most reliable car of all time? The W123 gen, in particular with the 5-cylinder turbo diesel (cast-iron head and block, oil squirters under the pistons, oil and tranny cooler, etc.). This was designed in the 70s, and production ended in the early 80s (the latter being the best). And the kicker? Virtually everything in the car is mechanical (including the fuel injection).. turns competently-created moving parts are extremely reliable, provided adequate lubrication.

    What has caused issues in practically all cars over time? Electronics.

  64. Re:Blame the EU commission.. by thegarbz · · Score: 1

    The average new car in the 70s vs the average new car now is a difference of $23k vs $30k adjsuted for inflation. The average car in the 70s wasn't even remotely as nice as the average car of today even ignoring value added features.

    Cars are just as cheap as they always have been. People just like paying for luxury. Ironically this is the opposite of the airline question where flights in the 70s were more expensive than business class is now, yet people still complain about service of economy.

    The world needs to collectively stop whining.

  65. Re:Blame the EU commission.. by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    Look up how much energy it takes to manufacture a modern car. Most of it will have come from fossiil fuel

    Less than one-third of the energy consumption of the typical automobile is spent in production.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  66. Re:Blame the EU commission.. by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    We no longer need to make cars that go at ludicrous speeds. My cheap run-of-the-mill car will easily do 130mph if I ask it to.

    We never needed to, either. It's never been safe to go more than someplace in the 60-80 mph range, in terms of surviving unexpected equipment failure. That stuff is rare, but it still happens.

    The entertainment costs an absolute pittance of space and money. [...] It's literally such a cheap bolt-on they give it away to you because people go "ooh" or consider it a necessity.

    Actually, it's one of the main areas of competition now that all automakers are basically competent to build a decent car.

    ABS is mandated in Europe.

    ESP is now mandatory in the US and in Europe. ABS has been mandatory for a long time.

    Voiding your warranty with Lenovo, even on a big server, is not something a professional would routinely or unthinkingly do. Voiding your warranty on a car capable of 130mph is something you want people in their garage to be able to choose to do? The results are unthinkable.

    I don't know how it works in Europe, but here in the USA we have the Magnusson-Moss warranty act which prohibits voiding warranties without cause, and recent court actions have given it teeth. You can tinker with your car, and they can't just void your warranty. They have to show that your modifications could reasonably have caused the problem. The bar is pretty low, but the days of being able to deny you warranty coverage anywhere on a vehicle because you tampered with one component are over. How does this work in Europe?

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  67. Re:Blame the EU commission.. by Luthair · · Score: 1

    They say 3-10% savings in city.

  68. Re:Blame the EU commission.. by toddestan · · Score: 1

    That car is an outlier. I doubt that the Volvo P1800 that has the second-most number of kilometers is even half of what that has logged. And while that is a lot of distance on a passenger car, it isn't unusual for over the road (long haul) trucks to accumulate that kind of mileage.

    Besides, from what I've seen from scrapyards, the majority of vehicles there that weren't wrecked are there for something that's relatively trivial, easily fixed, or often just minor cosmetic damage because they were in a minor accident and insurance totalled them out. There's often cars there that literally have nothing wrong with them at all - they were traded in or donated, ended up being wholesaled, and at the auction no one wanted them so the scrapyard that put in a couple hundred dollars scrap value bid ends up winning it.