Reply 20 of 32, by kanecvr
- Rank
- Oldbie
wrote:Japanese engines are just as breakable as anybody else's. The reputation of Japanese being indestructible is a perception based […]
Japanese engines are just as breakable as anybody else's. The reputation of Japanese being indestructible is a perception based on the group of people one hangs out with. A lot of people I know would say American pushrod V8s are indestructible. German fans would say German engines are indestructible. Each group would say the other is less reliable. Fanboyism runs thicker in the car world than anywhere else. In reality, everybody knows how to build an engine nowadays, and nobody is in the business of building things that are indestructible. They're all built to be as reliable as they need to be, and that's it.
I was amused when I was parked at a gas pump and a Honda owner engaged me in a group Honda backrub. She saw my old car and for some reason thought it was a Honda. It was actually a Pontiac.The Prius is what, 5 years old? Any car that young will be in good condition, no matter how many miles a day it gets driven. If any model of car has a bad track record at 5 years, it would have to be one of the biggest lemons of all time.
Cars that get used in fleet service always rack up high mileage pretty easily, it's not the same as enduring the same mileage over the course of 20 years with private owners and less consistent operating and maintenance patterns.Since they all have breakdowns, the key differentiator for me is how easy an engine is to maintain and service. To that end, I generally dislike modern cars, older cars are much easier.
^ more or less this ^^^ - but like I said, I like both german and japanese cars, I've owned both and my germans overlasted the japanese.
wrote:Nobody said anything about modifying/upgrading engines. The point was that most Japanese engines, when stock, will last very lon […]
wrote:In any case, we could debate this all day and night - everyone has had different experience with their cars, but calling japanese engines bulletproof is an exaggeration. Yes, you can turbo a toyota supra to 1000hp, but after changing most of the engine's internals (pistons, rods, oil pump, rocker arms / tappets - etc) so much so that it's not really a toyota engine anymore. Same can be done with ANY other brand - that doesn't make them bulletproof.
Nobody said anything about modifying/upgrading engines.
The point was that most Japanese engines, when stock, will last very long without any trouble. That's because the Japanese are experts at precision-engineering. Even moreso than Germans are.
Take the Toyota Prius for example. Not only is it the most advanced hybrid system on the market (not just a regular engine and transmission with an electric engine for boost, but a specially developed Atkinson-cycle engine together with a special eCVT transmission), but over the years it has proven itself to be extremely reliable. They have been used a lot in taxi service, with 300.000+ kilometers on them, and still going strong. Even the batteries hold up very well.
The prius engine is pretty tough, but other toyotas are not as lucky. For example everyone I know who owns or used to own a corolla has had engine trouble in the first 3 years of owning the car. From sticky / stuck throttle body, bad ICV to premature ignition coil or intake manifold gasket failure causing vacuum leaks and horrible gas mileage. This covers both the older models (the E120 2002-2006 and some of the newer ones).