It was the reminder of the oft repeated “Alfas are unreliable” mantra from those who’ve probably never even been in one let alone owned one that gave me the most pleasure watching that videoNope, Alfa’s are famous for their bulletproof reliability.
I’d still happily have one if I could afford to run two cars.
Every breakdown truck I’ve seen in the last month or two has had a BMW or Mini on the back of it, so they’ve clearly got some sort of quality issue going on there.
I have considrered a Giulia 4cheese recently, but think it's a waste of money. Way too much performance for the road which you'll never be able to use ( I have driven one enough miles to make a judgement ) I lived with a cooking one for a year (10k miles) nand its a wonderful car. Interestingly they all have the 8 speed semi automatic ZF box that is also used by other Italian and German manufacturers . . . .@Icy Gull The gripes from friends who had 2000s era Alfa’s wasn’t that they were desperately unreliable, but that even the main dealers could struggle to get bits for them, and the cost of parts was high.
The Giulia Quadrifoglio is a car I would dearly love, but my financial situation would have to improve significantly before it becomes a realistic prospect. More for the running costs than the purchase price.
I agree…unless you do this with it!I have considrered a Giulia 4cheese recently, but think it's a waste of money. Way too much performance for the road which you'll never be able to use ( I have driven one enough miles to make a judgement ) I lived with a cooking one for a year (10k miles) nand its a wonderful car. Interestingly they all have the 8 speed semi automatic ZF box that is also used by other Italian and German manufacturers . . . .
as for running costs, no worse than anything else, but the quad is a bit juicy if you have heavy feet.
I have considrered a Giulia 4cheese recently, but think it's a waste of money. Way too much performance for the road which you'll never be able to use ( I have driven one enough miles to make a judgement ) I lived with a cooking one for a year (10k miles) nand its a wonderful car. Interestingly they all have the 8 speed semi automatic ZF box that is also used by other Italian and German manufacturers . . . .
as for running costs, no worse than anything else, but the quad is a bit juicy if you have heavy feet.
Best buy a Range Rover, keep your kids safe, park on double yellows outside schools. If it doesn’t break down it’ll probably get stolen. What’s not to like?I think that if your customer base buy 'the badge' rather than the car, then there is absolutely no need to worry about reliability
Case rests, m'ludBest buy a Range Rover, keep your kids safe, park on double yellows outside schools. If it doesn’t break down it’ll probably get stolen. What’s not to like?
Alfa I think have a bad reliability rep but ive driven both BMW’s & the new Mini’s & never had a reliability issue . You must get them serviced regularly though .Nope, Alfa’s are famous for their bulletproof reliability.
I’d still happily have one if I could afford to run two cars.
Every breakdown truck I’ve seen in the last month or two has had a BMW or Mini on the back of it, so they’ve clearly got some sort of quality issue going on there.
Korea and Kias seem to be where Japanese cars were back in the day. Decent looking good value cars. I have never owned one but I have mates who buy cars to get from A to B, who have, and they have little interest in cars so I guess you could say they are probably not cherished, but seldom seem to have problems. German reliability is definitely not what it was it seems.electronics and over-engineering for emissions compliance or ecking out performace have screwed cars. doesn't explain dodgy gearboxes and such, though in case of BMW M series you're basically buying a race car. German cars seem to generally lost their high quality after decades of reliable service from blocks and components designed in the 70's. Japan seems to have found a way through this, so maybe its how engineers approach things?
If you can afford a new Range Rover then I doubt whether you will be parking outside the school, you will probably park in the car waiting area of your kids private schoolBest buy a Range Rover, keep your kids safe, park on double yellows outside schools. If it doesn’t break down it’ll probably get stolen. What’s not to like?
The earlier ones were poor but not any more. Keep up, times and info are moving on.Tesla's have absolutely terrible build quality, wouldn't touch one with a barge pole.
Zef jr has his first car. A Suzuki, not a lot of 'news' out there about them, so on the Learner scale a great little car with good performance and features with sensible insurance And not too expensive to buy. It's kind of off the radar in many respects . . . Which is largely due to going about its business un-fussily, and reliably.