Quote:
Originally Posted by BENT_8
All i can tell you is what i was told, im not sure why he'd make it up just for conversation and if its infact true, i doubt all those people who have this mindset would be central to his area, it would suggest its somewhat widespread.
The people making these comments and buying Dmax from him over Ranger aren't making up those 75% of 2.0l sales, nor the 25% of 3.2l sales either so they are still losing sales regardless of the actual numbers.
And i haven't chosen to leave anything out of the debate, but it would appear that if capacity alone is a sticking point with a percentage of the potential customer base, it would seem more likely that whats missing from the equation is their own homework.
|
A lack of homework and flawed way of thinking.
I have a work mate who has an older 2012 ish Hilux who refuses to buy a new one because it has a smaller engine. Obviously he is not alone in this neanderthal thinking.
The old 3.0 Hilux made slightly more power and torque than BMWs 2.0 four cylinder N47 diesel from around the year 2000 which was in the 1 & 3 Series. When that shape Hilux was launch BMWs 3.0 diesel was 160kw/500nm. Mercedes new OM642 3.0 V6 in 2005 was 165kw and 510nm.
Knuckle dragging die hard ute owners in Oz with their head too far up their **** to realise their highly inefficient Jap diesels are well behind the times.
I guess a similar perception was back in the early 1990s when the boat anchor 5.0 were pushing 165kw while Toyota and BMW dohc 4.0 V8s were 210kw.
Even now BMW 3.0 diesel range from 190kw/560nm all the way to 280kw/750nm, Mercedes 2.1 turbo diesel 150kw/500nm yet these mongs would rather stick to their archaic 'large capacity' diesel with performance and efficiency or lack of that belong in the 1990s.
If I were buying new and had the intention to hold onto it for a decade or so I'd be tempted to go smaller capacity as I wouldn't be surprised if the enviro push becomes stronger in the near future and taxes cars relative to their engine size, C02 output or claimed fuel use.