Originally Posted by jim pastorius:
In 1965 I bought a new Chevy Malibu SS with a 283 and a 4 speed with bucket seats and a nice interior for $3,000. sweet car, would get 20 MPG. Wish I still had it. The equivalent today would be around 30 Gs, I am guessing.
You would end up on the losing end of that argument, for a lot of reasons. While I love old cars, you can't even compare them to what you have today, and in terms of prices, that 3k back then is probably close to 30k today......and you get a lot more value out of a car these days. That 1965 car would get smoked by a lot of economy cars these days (take a look at zero-60 times), the brakes on cars today are infinitely superior, you geta modern car and turn the key it starts in the coldest weather, those cars after a couple of years in areas with winter would have leprosy all over the place from rust, you used to have to pull the heads on those cars around 20k miles to de-carbonize them, and despite the fact that some would last to 100k, after a couple of years you were looking to get rid of them because the engine and transmission would likely need major work, today cars routinely go 200k miles and more without needing that kind of work, and so forth.
There are things that were better back then, a washing machine or dryer would last 20, 30 years, you are lucky if you get 5 or 6 these days, but with cars there is no comparison, as much as I loved my old Italian sports car, I would not like to rely on it, either.
With the issue with the trains today, as we have talked about ad hominem, you are faced with items that are too small a market to have real quality control, you are dealing with remote suppliers who have the upper hand so quality is difficult to conquer, and quite frankly, you have a market of consumers who are willing to buy what they put out, blemishes and all. It is very different where there is a mass market, when consumers had a choice with cars, they voted with their feet to the consternation of Ford, Chrysler and GM whose products were not all that much better back then than you face with toy trains today, and like toy trains, there wasn't much differentiation with quality, Ford, GM and Chrysler were basically the same, as Lionel and MTH are in my opinion. The only way you will see this kind of issue resolve itself would be if the market dried up on the makers, if people refused to buy their products, but it isn't likely to happen, since all of them are made the same way, have in reality the same components and otherwise are not all different from each other.