![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Matt Whiting wrote: I wrote the above, not Newps. So who are you really agreeing with? Newps who says sales volume is synonymous with quality I never said that or even hinted at it. You may disagree but to me Ford is the best built truck. A million people a year likewise agree. |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Newps wrote:
Matt Whiting wrote: I wrote the above, not Newps. So who are you really agreeing with? Newps who says sales volume is synonymous with quality I never said that or even hinted at it. You may disagree but to me Ford is the best built truck. A million people a year likewise agree. I prefer Chevy, but I think the quality data is pretty similar between Ford and Chevy with respect to full-size trucks. I believe that Toyota's are better built that both, but they don't yet have a truly full-size truck. I expect they will at some point and the same thing as happened to cars in the 80s will then happen to trucks. Ford F-150 sales are off pace considerably through the first 6 months of the year at 400,000. Matt |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Matt Whiting wrote: I prefer Chevy, but I think the quality data is pretty similar between Ford and Chevy with respect to full-size trucks. I didn't have any preference when I worked at the St. Paul newspaper in 1986. The company bought 6 new Ford Rangers and 6 new Chevy S10's. Bone stock except for V6/automatics and A/C. They installed a topper on each one. Every Sunday we loaded the back of each truck to the very top of the topper with newspaper bundles. Way, way over gross. The rear bumper sagged to a foot off the ground. After 30,000 miles the Chevy's rear suspension gave up and just stayed there. The transmissions made god awful noises and jerked around terribly. The company gave them to another department that didn't need to put any stuff in the back and bought more Rangers for us. I've been a Ford Truck guy since. I have a full size 1/2 ton Chevy conversion van, second one. I buy them from my Dad after he puts about 35,000 miles on it. Chevy is not able to build a van with doors that close with that reassuring thunk. There's 6 doors on these vans and all have to be slammed to shut tight. Both vans I have owned. And that god awful intake gasket design. Like the 350 Vortec but overall the vans are rattle traps. There's nothing Chevy can do to sell me a pickup. I'd buy a Dodge before I'd buy a Chevy. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
The business is now pretty much closed down, but grand-dad started the
second plumbing shop in Tulsa, Ok. My grand-dad's first service truck was a Dodge Brothers and he stayed with the Dodge line for over 60 years. Dodge makes a helluva service truck, but not much of a domestic passenger vehicle. We regularly ran our 3/4 ton trucks across the scales at over 12,000 pounds and had to quit buying the 1/2 ton version when the rims started splitting. Over the years my dad tried a Studebaker, International Harvester, Ford, Chevy, and GMC. They always went back to the Dodge line. The Ford and GM trucks were much nicer traveling domestic passenger vehicles, but they got beat up real fast under the heavy loads on Tulsa streets in stop and go traffic. The business is just about gone now, so I'm not sure if my observations are still valid. -----Original Message----- From: Newps ] Posted At: Sunday, August 06, 2006 7:10 PM Posted To: rec.aviation.piloting Conversation: Manufacturing Quality Subject: Manufacturing Quality ..... I'd buy a Dodge before I'd buy a Chevy. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Jim Carter" wrote The business is just about gone now, so I'm not sure if my observations are still valid. Nope. Unless you buy the super heavy duty Dodge Diesel truck, or what ever the expensive Dodge calls itself, it has not been that way for years. Why do you suppose that Chrysler-Dodge had to be bought out? It's quality was crap, and their stuff is junk. Want a real Eye-Opener? Go over and read the Dodge usenet group for a while. I started after my Dodge minivan that my wife had to have, failed its second window motor in just over 30,000 miles, and we never even use the things. The answerer was, Oh, they are so weak that sometimes if they have not been used for a while, they don't have enough power to "un-stick" the window. Gads. I won't even start on the weak suspension that a friend of mine's Durango has had! -- Jim in NC |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Quality helicopter sim? | AirDolphin | Simulators | 11 | September 15th 06 06:04 AM |
Poor Audio Quality, FlightCom 403 Stereo Intercom | mikem | Owning | 5 | April 17th 06 04:40 PM |
ASA 100 ISO 9001 QUALITY CONTROL MANUAL | QCMAN | Products | 0 | December 16th 04 04:31 PM |
Sailplane Manufacturing Sites/Information - College Project | Matt | Soaring | 2 | February 13th 04 02:11 PM |
During hot air balloon races in Reno/Sparks, avoid Quality Inn | Joe Clark | General Aviation | 0 | July 18th 03 11:11 PM |