La crise de l’automobile allemande a révélé l’attachement profond du pays à la maîtrise du métal, à la combustion et au sport automobile. Une culture mise à mal par le véhicule moderne, dominé par le logiciel, la batterie et la conduite autonome.
Engine rebuilds typically are only necessary after a much longer time, by that time you’d be running an electric car at least on its 3rd battery. Brake pads are cheap (and cheaply and easily exchangeable) wear items. With vehicles that do lots of regenerative braking, there are issues with brake rotors getting surface rust problems due lack of use. Replacing (or even just resurfacing them) due to that is way more expensive than swapping some pads.
The typical parts that will fail at some point way too early and can’t be easily or economically replaced have increasingly been electronics, on non-electric cars, too. Most mechanical components that aren’t common to all cars regardless of their power train, have been rather long lived and reliable for a pretty long time. (it got worse after the car industry invented enshittification, though)
Unfortunately there never were any electric cars that didn’t get the full enshittification package with all sorts of unnecessary sensors and electronics.
Yeah, that’s the problem, isn’t it? Electric cars were built in the age of planned obsolescence and other enshitification mechanisms. There still were ICE cars that were actually built to the highest quality standard, that age of quality, electric car sadly missed.
Yes, that’s the real problem. I don’t really want any car, regardless of how it’s powered, from the full blown enshitification era.
I am old enough to have personal experience with cars that would easily last (last as in pass a rigorous road safety inspection every two years) 2 to 3 decades without needing major overhaul, take a whole lot of abuse in the meantime, and were for the largest part easily maintainable and repairable with a rather limited skill set and tool box. The majority of those cars was last built in the early 2000s. Maybe there are some still produced outliers, but they aren’t easily available in Europe anymore, because regulations demand a whole crapload of enshittification to be built in these days.
Engine rebuilds typically are only necessary after a much longer time, by that time you’d be running an electric car at least on its 3rd battery. Brake pads are cheap (and cheaply and easily exchangeable) wear items. With vehicles that do lots of regenerative braking, there are issues with brake rotors getting surface rust problems due lack of use. Replacing (or even just resurfacing them) due to that is way more expensive than swapping some pads.
The typical parts that will fail at some point way too early and can’t be easily or economically replaced have increasingly been electronics, on non-electric cars, too. Most mechanical components that aren’t common to all cars regardless of their power train, have been rather long lived and reliable for a pretty long time. (it got worse after the car industry invented enshittification, though)
Unfortunately there never were any electric cars that didn’t get the full enshittification package with all sorts of unnecessary sensors and electronics.
Yeah, that’s the problem, isn’t it? Electric cars were built in the age of planned obsolescence and other enshitification mechanisms. There still were ICE cars that were actually built to the highest quality standard, that age of quality, electric car sadly missed.
Edit: Enshitification got auto corrected. :(
Yes, that’s the real problem. I don’t really want any car, regardless of how it’s powered, from the full blown enshitification era.
I am old enough to have personal experience with cars that would easily last (last as in pass a rigorous road safety inspection every two years) 2 to 3 decades without needing major overhaul, take a whole lot of abuse in the meantime, and were for the largest part easily maintainable and repairable with a rather limited skill set and tool box. The majority of those cars was last built in the early 2000s. Maybe there are some still produced outliers, but they aren’t easily available in Europe anymore, because regulations demand a whole crapload of enshittification to be built in these days.