Home | Contact Us | FAQ | Search & Site Map | Link to Us
Sign In | Join | Other 45 Sites in Network
HomeAnnouncements
Discussion Groups
By Brand
BMWChevroletDodgeFordGMHondaLexusMercedes-BenzNissanPeugeotToyotaVolkswagenOther Brands
By Topic
4x4 CarsRVsDrivingMaintenance & RepairCar AudioCollectible Cars
Country Specific
Australian ForumsUK Forums
ArticlesAuto InsuranceBuyingCars & TechnologyMaintenanceMiscellaneousSafety
DMV Resources
Related Topics
MotorcyclesBoatsMore Topics ...

Re: Toyota/Honda vs American

Tip: Looking for answers? Try searching our database.



You are accessing this site in a read-only mode. For full access to all member benefits, including message posting, please login or register. Registration is completely free, simple, and takes only a few seconds.

Login | Free CarKB.com registration | Whole discussion thread

The message you are replying to and its parents are listed in the reverse order with the most recent posts first. This might not be the whole discussion thread. To read all the messages in this thread please click here.

Re: Toyota/Honda vs American

D.D. Palmer05 May 2005 21:42
YET
> Your information is incorrect.  The Taurus is still available as
> a 2005 model.  The Ford that will replace the Taurus is the 2006
[quoted text clipped - 49 lines]
>> > No matter what happens, someone will find a way to take it too
>> > seriously.

MajorDomo@mailcity.com04 May 2005 20:56
Your information is incorrect.  The Taurus is still available as
a 2005 model.  The Ford that will replace the Taurus is the 2006
Futura, that comes out in September.  It will be available with a
4 cy and a V6, in FWD or AWD.  The expected price range is 19K
for the FWD 4cy to 25K for the V6 AWD models

The Avalon is the Toyota that compares to the 500 in size, not
the Taurus.  The 500 is a bit larger in all dimensions than the
Avalon and the 500 has a much lager trunk. The trunk in the 500
is even larger than the trunk in the Crown Vic.

The only comparison that can be made between the 2005 Camry and
the 2005 500 is in price, however for the price of a V6 FWD Camry
one can buy a V6 500 with AWD.  Even when one includes the
current $750 rebate that is available in the Philadelphia area on
the FWD only Camry, it still costs more than AWD the 500.  The
500 has never had a rebate

mike hunt

> No, you have to use what was on the market 4 years ago, because there is no
> 4 year data for the 500 yet. In other words, you only have data in the rear
[quoted text clipped - 25 lines]
> > No matter what happens, someone will find a way to take it too
> > seriously.

D.D. Palmer04 May 2005 20:21
No, you have to use what was on the market 4 years ago, because there is no
4 year data for the 500 yet. In other words, you only have data in the rear
view mirror. And a new Camry comes out next year. So while it's true that a
new bodystyle will probably retain a higher % of price paid, that "new
bodystyle" thing alternates. You have to pick a year and stick with it.
Also, the 500 might have a higher resale value but since it's new might also
cost more upfront. We just don't know yet.

> DH, 5/2/2005, 2:58:47 PM,
> <1115060364.28f6ff827ddfb1cf627d8dc07356157e@teranews> wrote:
[quoted text clipped - 13 lines]
> current Camry be compared to a Ford 500 instead?  I thought the Taurus
> has been discontinued and its successor is the 500.

badgolferman04 May 2005 18:28
DH, 5/2/2005, 2:58:47 PM,
<1115060364.28f6ff827ddfb1cf627d8dc07356157e@teranews> wrote:

[snipped]

> Car    Purchase    Plus_Fuel    Less_Resale    Total_4_yr
> Taurus    21,000.00    4,222.22    7,115.00    18,107.22
> Camry    19,000.00    3,431.37    9,335.00    13,096.37
>
> Sooo... let's see.  Nearly equal performance, very similar features
> and room, Camry's 4-year cost is projected to be $5K less...

[snipped]

You put a lot of effort and research into this post.  But shouldn't the
current Camry be compared to a Ford 500 instead?  I thought the Taurus
has been discontinued and its successor is the 500.

Signature

No matter what happens, someone will find a way to take it too
seriously.


DH02 May 2005 18:58
> > >> You tell the same lie time and time again with your comparison of a
> > >> pushrod V6 Taurus vs a V6 Camry which is a more complext DOHC
[quoted text clipped - 14 lines]
> Toyotphile, or a CU drone).
> Ed

Only an idiot would...??

Let's look at published specifications...

Why not compare drivetrains that should offer similar performance?  The DOHC
VVTi 2.4L in-line 4 Camry engine is rated at 160hp at 5700rpm, 163ft-lbs
torque at 4000rpm.  The OHV 3.0L V6 Taurus engine is rated at 153hp at
4900rpm, 185ft-lbs torque at 3950rpm.   The Taurus weighs 3306lbs.  The
Camry weighs 3150lbs.  Add a 160lb driver and the Taurus is pushing  along
22.7 lbs per hp.  The Camry is pushing along 20.7 lbs per hp.

That's fairly similar with a slight edge to the Camry.

The 4-cylinder in the Camry, of course, may cost less to maintain.  It
certainly uses fewer plugs but it might also be easier to work around a
narrower in-line 4 block than around a V6 block, so other maintenance may be
cheaper, too.

I am surprised to notice that the list price on the stock Camry is about $2k
less than the Taurus.  Ford, of course, may be doing all kinds of givebacks,
etc., to push the Taurus but the Camry does seem to have a $2k head start.
The Toyota dealer assured me I'd pay less than list for a new Camry when I
bought a used car from him a couple of weeks ago.

When you say the Tarus is larger, you're right in terms of exterior
dimensions (Taurus is about 10 in. longer) but that larger on the outside
only makes the car harder to park.  All interior dimensions were within an
inch of each other (some wins to Taurus, some to Camry).  The features list
seems very comparable.  Notable feature differences are: the Taurus has a
trip computer while the Camry has a more completely adjustable driver's
seat; the Taurus will tow 1250 lbs but the Camry can do a little better at
2000 lbs.

Let's take a look at depreciation...  I checked CarSoup.com for 2001
Tauruses and Camrys.  The bulk of the Camrys are offered for sale at
$14-15K.  The bulk of the Tauruses are offered for sale at $8-9K (mileages
mostly fell within 40-50K range for both).  Granted, this is not the market
value, per se.  Let's check Edmunds again and they're suggesting the cheaper
Camry models are $9335 vs the cheaper Taurus models at $7115. We'll use
Edmunds as our guide, again and presume the Camry is worth $2K or so more
after 4 years..

Without getting into maintenance costs, let's look at which car is likely to
cost me less.  Let's drive 50K miles over 4 years, 20K in town and 30K on
the highway an then sell it:

Car    Purchase    Plus_Fuel    Less_Resale    Total_4_yr
Taurus    21,000.00    4,222.22    7,115.00    18,107.22
Camry    19,000.00    3,431.37    9,335.00    13,096.37

Sooo... let's see.  Nearly equal performance, very similar features and
room, Camry's 4-year cost is projected to be $5K less...

Suuure... only an idiot would buy a Camry.  Unless you get a LOT of
givebacks from Ford.

All figures are from Edmunds.com, except advertised prices which are from
CarSoup.com.

Anybody know the actual 0-60 and 1/4 mile times for the 200 52.4L Camry and
the 2005 3.0L Taurus?  I found "ReasearchYourCar.com" listed a 16.9 sec 1/4
mile and a 9.1 sec 0-60 for the 2004 Camry and a 9.2 sec 0-60 for the 2004
Taurus.  However, the engine power and fuel mileage ratings were a little
different from the figures Edmunds gives for the current year, so some
tweaking could have occurred between 2004 and 2005.

C. E. White02 May 2005 17:08
> >> You tell the same lie time and time again with your comparison of a
> >> pushrod V6 Taurus vs a V6 Camry which is a more complext DOHC
[quoted text clipped - 8 lines]
> Any cost comparisons must be done with like drivelines in place.  Or do you
> disagree with that?

I am not sure what you mean. I don't think a 4 cylinder
Camry can be compared to a 6 cylinder Taurus. The Taurus is
larger, costs less, and performs better. If you are
comparing the two based on published specifications, only an
idiot would buy the 4 cylinder Camry. If you drive them,
well only the idiot would buy the 4 cylinder Camry (or a
Toyotphile, or a CU drone).

Ed

Philip30 Apr 2005 00:01
>> You tell the same lie time and time again with your comparison of a
>> pushrod V6 Taurus vs a V6 Camry which is a more complext DOHC
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
> I think you are both wrong. It is irrelevant whether the
> vehicle has a 4 or a 6, OHV or OHC.
snip
>Ed

Any cost comparisons must be done with like drivelines in place.  Or do you
disagree with that?

C. E. White29 Apr 2005 14:55
> You tell the same lie time and time again with your comparison of a pushrod
> V6 Taurus vs a V6 Camry which is a more complext DOHC engine.  DOHC Taurus
> (optional engine) has to be selected for LIKE comparison.

I think you are both wrong. It is irrelevant whether the
vehicle has a 4 or a 6, OHV or OHC. What matters is the
realtivel performance (including things like engine
smoothness, performance, ease of maintenance, etc.). Just
sitting in a Taurus tell you it is "more" car. And the OHV
Taurus 6 is smoother and more powerful than the OHC Camry 4.
However, I am sure many people feel that the Camry is a
better value for whatever reason.

According to CR, a 4 cyliner 2005 Camry LE has a zero to 60
of 9.7 sec. A 2004 OHC Taurus had a zero to 60 of 8.3 sec.
So, I'd say it is not fair to comapre the 4 cylinder Camry
to the OHC Taurus if performance is your criteria. Clearly
the base model Taurus is a far better "value" than the base
model Camry. If you put much faith in CR's little circles,
both the 2004 Taurus and 2004 Camry got excellent marks. On
CU's 150 mile trip, the 4 cylinder Camry averaged 28 mpg,
the larger and much faster Taurus averaged 26. I doubt that
many people buying a Camry will care about this.

Ed

Philip29 Apr 2005 04:38
You tell the same lie time and time again with your comparison of a pushrod
V6 Taurus vs a V6 Camry which is a more complext DOHC engine.  DOHC Taurus
(optional engine) has to be selected for LIKE comparison.

> Using that logic why not compare the Taurus to a Corolla? The
> point is the price one must pay to buy similarly equipped
[quoted text clipped - 128 lines]
>>>>>>>>> vehicles to last about
>>>>>>>>> 50% longer).

MikeHhunt2@mailcity.com28 Apr 2005 19:59
Using that logic why not compare the Taurus to a Corolla? The
point is the price one must pay to buy similarly equipped
vehicles, that means the Camry that must be compared is the V6,
since Taurus is not available with a
4 cy in its lowest priced model.  A V6 over the 4 cy adds to cost
of a Camry so the higher end model must be used to make any
comparison.  ;)

mike hunt

> Yeah but that wasn't his point. He was trying to compare the PRICES of an
> apples to apples scenario. It makes no difference that most people opt for
[quoted text clipped - 115 lines]
> >> >>>>> last about
> >> >>>>> 50% longer).

D.D. Palmer28 Apr 2005 00:31
Yeah but that wasn't his point. He was trying to compare the PRICES of an
apples to apples scenario. It makes no difference that most people opt for
the Camry 4 cylinder and the Taurus 6. His POINT was the huge price
differential of AS SIMILAR AS POSSIBLE used cars.

> Me thinks if you look under the hood of 80% of Camrys you will
> find a 4 cy engine.   ;)
[quoted text clipped - 110 lines]
>> >>>>> last about
>> >>>>> 50% longer).

RustyFendor@mailcity.com28 Apr 2005 00:04
Me thinks if you look under the hood of 80% of Camrys you will
find a 4 cy engine.   ;)

mike hunt

> It does not.  Check the Kelly Bluebook website and get price quotes for both
> cars, comparably equipped when new, equal mileage, equal engines (be sure
[quoted text clipped - 103 lines]
> >>>>> last about
> >>>>> 50% longer).

Philip27 Apr 2005 21:48
It does not.  Check the Kelly Bluebook website and get price quotes for both
cars, comparably equipped when new, equal mileage, equal engines (be sure
you note that Ford stuffs a pushrod low output V6 in the Taurus as a base
engine while an overhead cam V6 in the Ford is an upgrade that Camry comes
standard with.

> I cannot imagine that a 2 year old Taurus or similar brings nearly
> the % as a 2 year old Hon/Toy.
[quoted text clipped - 97 lines]
>>>>> last about
>>>>> 50% longer).

D.D. Palmer27 Apr 2005 21:19
I cannot imagine that a 2 year old Taurus or similar brings nearly the % as
a 2 year old Hon/Toy.

> That is fine if your goal is to spend more to buy your new car,
> to help the dealer and manufacture earn more money.  I prefer to
[quoted text clipped - 93 lines]
>> >> about
>> >> 50% longer).

RustyFendor@mailcity.com27 Apr 2005 19:54
That is fine if your goal is to spend more to buy your new car,
to help the dealer and manufacture earn more money.  I prefer to
spend less to get a new car every two years, not more

Glad you mentioned the Taurus.  A two year old top of the line V6
Taurus actually returns MORE of it actual drive home price than a
similar V6 Camry.  Sure the Camry has a higher resale value than
the Taurus, of about $4,000 according to NADA, but the Camry cost
$6,000 more to drive home when new so you lost $2,000.  When you
trade Taurus on Taurus you save on the next one as well   ;)

mike hunt

> My numbers....actual transaction prices of new and used cars...is more FACTUAL.
> Those FACTS show that Japanese cars are priced to go about 50% longer than
> American cars.

<snip>

I am talking about actual
> transaction-after-rebates prices. True, Taurus and Camry might have similar
> window stickers, but the only way to move the Taurus is to cut the price
> using rebates while Camry generally can be sold out at window sticker.

,snip>

> > You are entitled to believe whatever you wish.  I chose to
> > disagree with your opinion however, because of my own experiences
[quoted text clipped - 53 lines]
> >> about
> >> 50% longer).

D.D. Palmer27 Apr 2005 16:24
Actually, you claim to have facts but they are merely antidotes. My
numbers....actual transaction prices of new and used cars...is more FACTUAL.
Those FACTS show that Japanese cars are priced to go about 50% longer than
American cars. You may argue that the Japanese cars DON'T ACTUALLY go 50%
more, and you MAY (but probably are not) be right. But my FACT, which is
undisputable, is that the Japanese cars, both new and used, command a
premium suggesting 50% longer miles per car. And I am talking about actual
transaction-after-rebates prices. True, Taurus and Camry might have similar
window stickers, but the only way to move the Taurus is to cut the price
using rebates while Camry generally can be sold out at window sticker. Same
for used....a 3 year old Taurus will lose 60% of it's value while a Camry
will lose 35% (just guesses on THOSE numbers but you get my point).

And regardless of what you say, the Pinto was just plain garbage. OK, you
may have a rare, exceptional creampuff, but in the real world it was
garbage. And, OK, the early 1970's Toyotas and CERTAINLY the early Hondas
were junk too. And the Detroit Iron of that era, except for Pinto, Vega and
Gremlin, was indeed generally good. But let's get off the ancient history
here. Modern cars, priced by FACTUAL STATISTICS ACCORDING TO WHAT PEOPLE ARE
WILLING TO PAY, show the Japanese cars are priced to go about 150,000 miles
while Detroit (or Mexican or Canadian) metal is only priced for 100,000
miles. If you honestly believe you can get the same mileage out of Detroit
as you can out of Japan with no additional operating costs, then Detroit is
the better deal for you. The market of millions and millions of vehicles
suggests that the average American has learned otherwise.

> You are entitled to believe whatever you wish.  I chose to
> disagree with your opinion however, because of my own experiences
[quoted text clipped - 53 lines]
>> about
>> 50% longer).

MelvinGibson@mailcity.com27 Apr 2005 15:05
You are entitled to believe whatever you wish.  I chose to
disagree with your opinion however, because of my own experiences
over the years.  That is after all what we are expressing here,
opinions.  I happen to own a 1971 Pinto, that I purchased new in
1970.  It has lasted for a lot more than you perceived 100K.
There is currently 298,000 miles on the clock and all original.
The only repairs have been s clutch at 210K and a Carbon and
valve job in February.   I own a half dozen old cars that I take
to old cars shows.  I see old cars for the US, England, Germany,
even Italy but I have never seen any Japanese cars from the
seventies at any of those shows let alone one with the 150K you
believe they will exclusively achieve. All manufactures build
some on occasion that are not up to their build standards for the
class in which they compete, that is why the all have a
warranty.  From what we see in our fleet service business, that
services nearly every brand on the market, is that ANY brand on
the market today will easily run 200K and more if properly
serviced. That is not an opinion but a fact and we have the
records to support that conclusion.  The only real difference we
see in todays vehicles is style and price, period.  I prefer
a particular style of vehicle and that is RWD and V8 powered.  I
want to buy those that will cost me the least amount of money to
replace every two years.  That is my choice, others may chose
differently and that is their privilege as well.

mike hunt

> There is another thread about new Lexus and Toyota models that has just run
> too long. Accordingly, I wanted to spin off that conversation with a new
[quoted text clipped - 15 lines]
> build. But my point is that THE MARKET prices Toy/Hon vehicles to last about
> 50% longer).

D.D. Palmer27 Apr 2005 11:17
There is another thread about new Lexus and Toyota models that has just run
too long. Accordingly, I wanted to spin off that conversation with a new
thread. There was discussion about buying Lexus versus Lincoln. One of the
things that I realized is that, more or less, Toyota/Honda vehicles are
priced by the market, both new and used, as if the car will last 150,000
miles while American vehicles are generally priced as if the vehicles will
last 100,000 miles. Meaning that at 50,000MI, a Honda/Toyota will still be
worth about 2/3 of the original price while an American vehicle will be
worth about half. This is merely a very rough rule of thumb, but something
I've noticed. Even new, the US vehicles can't be sold unless Detroit rebates
it's way to a sale, so the "out the door" price is much less than the "out
the door" price of a Toy/Hon. Even though the sticker prices are similar.
Again, this seems to reflect that the market assumes the Toy/Hon will go
150,000 miles before major trouble vs merely 100,000 for the US vehicle. My
point is that buying similar sized-categorized vehicles from Toy/Hon vs US
is no longer an apples to apples comparison. (I realize that many vehicles
go 200,000 to 300,000 miles...maybe more....of both American and Japanese
build. But my point is that THE MARKET prices Toy/Hon vehicles to last about
50% longer).

Quick links:

 
Sign In
Join
My Latest Posts
My Monitored Threads
My Blog
My Photo Gallery
My Profile
My Homepage




©2009 Advenet LLC   Privacy Policy - Terms of Use
This website includes both content owned or controlled by Advenet as well as content owned or controlled by third parties.