bruto
Penultimate Amazing
My Hyundai Accent is a couple of hundred shy of 100K now, which is well below some of its predecessors. The little Hun has been very reliable, though, and has only a little surface rust underneath, so I am expecting a few more years unless something major goes "iffy-plut" suddenly. It's one of the cheapest cars there is, with high quality control but pretty basic innards and cheap materials where it doesn't matter much. There's an all electric cousin to the Accent, I think, and that might be just the ticket if the price is right, but with luck I won't be needing it for a while.I just hit 100,000 miles on my Corolla, and I'm hoping it'll last another 10 years or so. I'm very hopeful my next car will be electric.
I hate these newfangled cars that are like spaceships, and about as complicated as one. Even my wife's relatively sane Honda CRV has concealed electronics that give no indication what they're doing (you never know if and when it's shifted into 4WD, for example), and a climate control system that is baffling and almost impossible to control except by setting the temperature and trusting that somehow it will be done, but without any clue as to when or whether it decides to send the air to where you want it, or whether the AC is running or not. Fortunately Hondas are pretty reliable, so the stuff works.
But (slight off-topic rant) whoever thought of obligatory air-conditioned defrosting ought to be... Ok, I'm not really for shooting them but they should not be allowed to design a heater ever again.
So I'm hoping, probably in vain, that some cheapskate outfit like Hyundai will make its electric cars more basic and less gadgety than others. I'll be happy to skip the on line maps and stuff, just charge, run, and charge.