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Old 02-13-2009, 02:04 PM   #22
pitfield
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Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Mayfair/Brighton
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Originally Posted by RC45 View Post
No, thats what you just said.

What I am saying is that any car employing relatively expensive components costs more to repair/maintain when out of warranty.

When you buy a new $60,000 Lincoln Towncar, you ignore the $2500 cost of a replacement rear air suspension. The car is under warranty and working.

When you buy that same Towncar 6 years later for $15,000 (or you keep the car for 6 years) and you are faced with a $2500 rear air suspension repair that is a significnt cost.

By the same token, the $400 shocks and struts for a $18,000 econocar that still cost $400 6 years later refelect a lower cost.

Simple to understand really.

Now this new Ford has some great cutting edge technology and is flash with new tech. Until this same technlogy is shared by many more models across manufacturers the unt cost to owners for repairs soon after warranty expires is going to be higher than anticipated.

This is just the way it is.

When Audi introduced their unique clever flush-mount glue-on winshield, it was awesoem - until someone went to get their windshield repaired and were faced enormous cost. SOmetimes several thousand dolalrs.. for a family car???

Fast forward 15 years and every car uses the same stick on tchnology and repair costs have plummeted... but there were a a few lower priced cars tht egan using the same window mounting system early on and the cost of the window repair was disproportionatly costly compared to the price of the car - at first.

Same with this new Ford... repair and maintenance of this new model is going to be disproportionatly higher until more models across manufacturers switch to similar electronic, fuel and peripheral systems.


Not unreliable, but quite expensive to maintain for certain systems - the shocks, brakes and carbon firbre body components represent a HUGE maintenance cost compared to their other stablemates.

In this case, the cost of brakes as an example have been reduced by a lot, because GM bought more brake rotors for the first year of ZR1 production, than Ferrari has bought in the last 5 years. But at $8,000 a new brakes system for the ZR1 is not cheap... until more vehicles begin to get CCB brakes... then eventually when CCB systems are on every car, rorots will eb as cheap as iron and there will be no debate.

Imagine the maintenance costs the buyer of a 150,000 mile 7 year old Prius might face


Then what the hell is the point of an auto enthusiast forum if discussion is not allowed?

Either way, in thisone I am correct - maintenance for this car when out of warranty will be appreciable higher than expected until the tech spreads further afield.
Maybe you could use cheaper parts on an older car... And more expensive fords from 20 years ago can be seen running in the UK XR3i/RST while the lesser models haven't been so well looked after.
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