junior
Well-known member
Get a £900 Micra or Toyota Yaris. Drive it into the ground and then get another one.
When parts deliveries arrived they had come from one of the factories in either country. As I said earlier, if Kia were out of stock of a particular part a Hyundai part was used instead, had no bearing on the warranty as it’s all one and the same.Sure the heart of many may be the same, but the overall vehicles (including the different electrical components you mention) are going to have different reliability results.
What's your source for them getting their components from Slovakia and Czech Republic?
No, broadly the same engines, electrical gear etc.Thought Kia were cheaper Hyundai because they used lower quality parts.
Or posted this.3 pages in and nobody has asked .who's gonna drive you home tonight?
Poor form.
I had a CR-V. Needed a new instrument cluster at 8 years old. Honda wanted £1200. Needed an engine mount for MoT. None in the country and not due for two months.Honda. All you need is a Honda. The only thing you'll ever need to replace is the tyres and exhuast.
I adore my Civic.
I want it to get me to work and back, not be best mates with it.Very, very, very reliable cars. About as much personality as a Morphy Richards iron.
Car people are f***ing weird. Actually scratch that as i recall bicycle weirdo is on this thread too. People that obsess on one form of transport are f***ing weird.I want it to get me to work and back, not be best mates with it.
When parts deliveries arrived they had come from one of the factories in either country.
Yeah I believe you, although I would be surprised if neither make had some specific parts which weren't interchangeable, and regardless of that, the electronics alone are going to cause some variation in reliability.As I said earlier, if Kia were out of stock of a particular part a Hyundai part was used instead, had no bearing on the warranty as it’s all one and the same.
All European Hyundai and Kia vehicles are assembled in Slovakia and Czech Republic using parts mainly sourced in Europe. If you need a non stock warranty part it’s coming directly from the European factory that stocks every single part as that’s where they build the cars. It was a running joke at our dealership as one of our booking agents was Slovakian. Imagine the wait time if you needed parts that were only stocked in Korea.Maybe that was for one specific model, but I think most parts come from China and S.Korea itself.
That has been very much my reasoning for buying cars in recent years. Purchased a new Ford C-Max in 2004, and near on ten years later l am still driving them, a mixture of new and used, and on my fifth example now.Personal mobility was an issue for me and getting older, so I needed something of an SUV to make it easier getting in and out. Doesn’t have to be a big beast but worth bearing in mind.
Well in your beloved Alfa you will defo burn out, and in a BMW just fade away.Nope, just hate BMWs and Audis
Shoot me
Morphy Richards you say? . . . Russell Hobbs is the way to go.Very, very, very reliable cars. About as much personality as a Morphy Richards iron.