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You are listening to the Analogue and Grid podcast. I'm your host, Victor Troyer.
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Former kind of co-host Justin Pitner.
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And Mainstay Dillon is what they call me.
00:59
It's the first time he's ever said it.
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Well, that's what you guys call me.
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I call you whenever I show up these days.
01:06
I think I got some slobber on my pants.
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Wouldn't be surprised.
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You have a little napkin there.
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So, yeah, well, I wiped the slobber off my pants from the dog that we have here.
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Last time we had a Patriot.
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We've had him on before a couple times.
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You could hear him in the background.
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Hopefully we don't hear rain tonight.
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Well, I hope we're the best, man.
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So today's episode, we're going to be talking about new cars versus old cars.
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So we recently, Justin and Dillon and myself went to the San Diego Auto Show at the
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convention center, which was in town this week.
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Dillon wasn't with us, but he did go.
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I was like, dude, it sucked because I went and then the next day Victor is like, yo,
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And I just like paid for tickets and parking the day before.
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He was really close to paying parking.
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I was like, whoa, whoa, hold on.
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I didn't pay for, yeah, I didn't pay $50 for the underground parking.
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We fucking bonkers.
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For that auto show too.
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So it's a little underwhelming.
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What are your thoughts?
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The first thing that I noticed is like when I got there and I walked in and we had walked
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around for a while, we covered it all in such a short time without, without like rushing
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like I sat in cars.
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I like poked around, you know, press buttons did the whole thing and like was not in any
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rush to leave and we still covered like everything and like under an hour with when the coolest
02:39
car at the show is the Kia K4 hatch, you know, it's a rough show.
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Like when that's the coolest shit, like out of all the car, like I like the Fiat 500
02:49
Electric, but that's because it's like, at least it's unique, but other than that, like
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the coolest car there is the K4 hatch, which is just.
02:57
It was kind of the coolest car.
02:59
There was a cool EcoBoost Mustang.
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Yeah, nothing, you know, nothing unfamiliar.
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A 10 year old Chrysler Pacifica that's going off as a 2026.
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The prelude had the little rope around it.
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This and do not touch.
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I'm like, it's a fucking Civic Hybrid.
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What are you doing?
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Like, hey, we already can't sell these minus one, not people like you get in them.
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I'm like, I saw when I traded Joe's last week.
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If I'm not mistaken to they only come in automatic.
03:31
It's only automatic.
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That is the most I.
03:38
Well, it's like Honda.
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Like the like everybody's excited like prelude names coming back and then like it's going
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to be a coop and they're like, it's going to be a hybrid.
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But like maybe they'll make it manual.
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You know, Honda's done manual hybrids before and they did it well.
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They're they're good.
03:54
Fucking just drop the ball hardcore.
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And then charge a fuck done for it.
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It's like close to 50.
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I think base is 43.
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I think which is I was talking about this with somebody the other day.
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And if the prelude was like if it had everything that made the original like prelude SI like
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so cool, I think that it could maybe justify the price, but it doesn't.
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If it had all kinds of cool like like tech like driver tech, like how the early ones
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had four wheel steering.
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If they just integrated something cool like that or even like a lap timer and the infotainment,
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just cool stuff like that, then maybe it could justify it.
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But automatic only CVT is just like so sad.
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I feel like all they even really had to do was just put a manual on it.
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Like they really only had to parts been the fucking SI motor, the 1.5 turbo.
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It'll fit in there because that's the size of motor that's in it for the hybrid system.
04:56
Do I sound super loud?
04:58
No, it sounds like a pitchy.
05:00
Like every time I use an ass, it's like whistling.
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They really didn't have to do much.
05:08
I don't like it just would have been a coupe civic basically again is all they had to do.
05:13
And I think it would have sold decently just to be a coupe and something unique, but they just didn't.
05:18
Yeah, it's kind of a bummer.
05:19
It has underpinnings of the type R, right?
05:23
Some suspension components I heard.
05:24
Like it's not obviously a type R even though it's priced like like it ought to be.
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Yeah, it's right next to it.
05:32
Like the more you think about it, the more it's just like, what were you doing?
05:37
Well, look, they discontinued 42 grand.
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They discontinued the civic coupe, right?
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So this is like the coupe now that you can buy and it obviously is bespoke.
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I think the styling is great, right?
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When I first saw it at the LA Auto show two years ago, I was impressed.
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But back then, I think it was going to be a fully V and everyone was just like womp, womp to that.
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So the fact that it's now automatic hybrid, like it's what we expected.
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I'm glad it's not fully V, but I imagine when sales start to like not be as good as they suspected,
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they're going to probably introduce a manual kind of like how to super it.
06:14
Yeah, that's exactly my thoughts too.
06:17
And the Supra is the perfect car to use as an example of that.
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But I don't even think the manual Supra has done that particularly well, right?
06:25
Well, it's taken over sales.
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It's like, I think 80-20 now.
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No one's buying automatic Supras anymore.
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But then no one's buying Supras anymore in general.
06:32
Yeah, it was like they definitely sold that well in general.
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Now the car that Justin is amazed that is not selling, and I agree with him, the Nissan Z.
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I think it's so good looking and I haven't driven one like in great like a lot or much
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I've only kind of driven one around in like a lot.
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But I think they're striking to look at.
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I personally think they did a pretty good job of new to old.
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It's relatively analog.
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So I, and I never, dude, I never see them.
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I never see them either.
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I've seen like maybe, maybe four.
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And that includes one that's on Nissan's lot because I drive by it on the way to work.
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Last I checked, they had only sold under 2500 nationwide.
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Dude, that's brutal.
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And they lose value fast, too.
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But that was months ago, but still, I think it maybe is doing a little bit better now.
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But yeah, they are not.
07:30
People aren't buying them, I guess.
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Dude, and I got one at work and it was cheap.
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Like they don't seem to hold value well either.
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Like I think it was like 36998 or 35998.
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And I'm like, that's, that's cheap.
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Like that's a decent amount of car for that money.
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That's less than a type R Honda Civic and you're getting a front engine, rear drive,
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400 horsepower turbocharged six.
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The value is there on that car.
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When you think about like how much you can pay for like a 300 ZX today.
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Like, like my 300 ZX, right, with over 100,000 miles is worth close to 30.
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You can get, you can now get a really close to news,
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like slightly used Newsy for that price.
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And that one only had 6,000 miles.
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God forbid you find one that has like 20 to 30,000 miles.
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That's probably low 30s.
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Which one are you referring to?
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The one I got at work was had 6,000 miles or 4,000 miles,
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which is wildly low.
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And it was, I think, because MSRP on those is like close to 50, right?
08:38
There's the Z, was it the performance?
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They have the Nismo.
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And then there's the Nismo, which is the top of the line.
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It was a performance.
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Which is like the mid-level.
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But you can't, you now can, but you couldn't get the Z Nismo in a manual initially.
08:57
Oh, that's news to me.
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See, that makes the Nismo, the Nismo Z exciting because I liked everything that they did to
09:07
I was just disappointed that it was automatic.
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It's supposed to be a performance car.
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The automatic is better, faster in every way for racing and track performance.
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But I just feel like you could still have all those features, have the cool seats that
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are in it, the racing seats, the body kit, the arrow and just make it a manual and tune
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it a little bit for a little more horsepower.
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Because people will buy it because it looks great.
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Like the Nismo looks great in my opinion.
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Does the Nismo have more power than the regular Z?
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I must say, well, because remember the Nismo 370 barely had any more power than the regular
09:43
A basic tune on a, a basic tune on a new Z will make it, you know, equal.
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But all the other stuff, suspension, adjustable dampening, this and that.
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Is what separates it.
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What other highlights like cars that you saw there that were like, like the tech and
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the tell your ride.
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I love the tell your ride.
10:02
Tell your ride is pretty cool.
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I've always loved the key to tell your ride, but the new generation, like I even saw one
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on the freeway the other day and I was like, wow, that looks like, you know, a $300,000
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like Rolls Royce or Bentley SUV.
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The tell your ride and the new Palisade kind of take design like the same design language
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like the front end with those little blocky LED, I don't know if it's LED lights, but
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it's like a blocky like layers of headlights and headlamps and all that.
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I will say, I do think Hyundai and Kia, Hyundai more so than Kia, but I think both of them
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are doing styling pretty well right now.
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I'm liking most things are coming out with a decent amount when I'm not, when most other
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brands and cars that are coming out, I'm really not vibing with.
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Like most cars, like they come out with a new design and it's like worse than it was last
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I'm like, oh, yeah.
10:55
No, I kind of like that Kia and Hyundai have gone back to like using that like blocky kind
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of like eight almost eighties styling.
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And I think all of their cars are in their lineup are pretty good looking for the most
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The EVs, I love like all the, the Genesis stuff, all the higher end Kia stuff, like
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the tell your ride, really stylish new cars.
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That one made a big impression on me at the auto show.
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Because like you said, the Kia, the tell your ride, tell your ride.
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Yeah, that was pretty cool.
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The Kia K4 that we saw there was the new hatchback, I guess, version of it.
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We were just like kind of comparing like where does this fit and like, you know, the customers
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cross shop and things like that.
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But you're starting to see more like little hatch wagons.
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Like when you look at a CX30 Mazda, obviously the Crosstrek and Subaru's like been doing
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But like, I think people are starting to want higher ground clearance, but in like a car
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Like not an SUV or crossover.
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Like the Toyota Crown, for example.
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And that's why I mean the Crosstrek was on one of the top selling cars.
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So that makes sense.
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It's not necessarily an SUV because it doesn't really look like an SUV, but it's also not
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It's totally not an SUV.
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I would consider it like a hatchback or a wagon.
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So I'm starting to see like, I noticed that at the car show that there are more options
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You know, like I told you a few weeks ago about the Outback, like for the longest time,
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the Outback was really like the only like wagon you can buy unless you like found somehow
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found the E 350 wagon or you found like a Volvo V70 or whatever they made.
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But for the most part, that's like the most popular wagon.
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Now you're starting to see little smaller versions.
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The Toyota Crown comes to mind.
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When you look at a Crown Signia, it's a different shape than the Crown.
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But it, you know, because it's more of like an SUV, but same thing, like it has a little
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bit more ground clearance, but it kind of doesn't look like an SUV.
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The Signia does more than the Crown Crown is just like an SUV that's been, I guess,
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I mean, a car that's been lifted.
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So yeah, the Crown is an odd one.
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It's, it's, it reminds me of, have you ever seen like the old Subaru Outback sedans?
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They make an Outback sedan.
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I know they had the legacy.
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And it is considered a sport utility sedan, and that is precisely what the Toyota Crown
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Look it up, Pitner.
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Subaru Outback sedan.
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Because the legacy.
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That was from like the early 2000s.
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But it was like that kind of same like ideal, like a lifted.
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I forgot seeing those.
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It's basically the legacy before the legacy existed.
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The legacy didn't exist yet.
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No, I believe it did.
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So the front end is, is Outback and then the rear is legacy.
13:58
Well, let me pose this question to you guys because clearly we were unimpressed with the
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There were a few cars that we liked, right?
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Obviously Kia and Hyundai, Genesis, you know, I've said many times are the most exciting
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automaker right now on the market.
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Another thing that I think is worth mentioning is a car that I thought was cool to just see
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them put on display just because this is not the type of vehicle you would typically
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display at an auto show, but Ford put out like a base, base, base model Bronco.
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With the steelies and like plastic cladding and the smallest engine option.
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I was actually showing Justin it because I wrote an article for hot cars saying that
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the, the base model Bronco with the steelies, you just add some, you know, all terrain tires
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So you want the shorter wheelbase, you know, they go, I mean, it has the four cylinder.
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They go for like brand new, like a little under 35 grand, I think.
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And to me, that's, that's the one you want for that price point.
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You know, cause you can pay up to like 55 for a Bronco.
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But it was cool that they had this base Bronco there that people were sitting in and walking
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around and looking at because like I said, that's not the flagship.
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Well, they had the heritage edition there, which is their flagship with the white grill
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and the doors were all open.
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And that was kind of like the one that a lot of people were attracted to.
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But the question I want to pose to you guys is we were unimpressed, right?
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But I feel like as enthusiasts, we're unimpressed because we gravitate towards the analog car.
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We don't care about the tech as much as, as we do the character that the car has, right?
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Like we want a car that's obviously older, maybe has more, just less is more actually,
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For us as enthusiasts.
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So what do you guys think?
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Do you feel like new cars?
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Is it just the generation or is it because I'm I'm an older generation.
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I gravitate towards older cars because I remember them as a kid.
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You guys, a lot of the cars you drive, you don't remember as a kid, right?
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But I wanted to ask you like, why do you think we gravitate towards those older analog cars
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rather than the newer stuff?
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I think so many reasons.
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There's a ton of reasons.
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I've been kind of thinking about this on and off ever since the car show because initially
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I wanted to just kind of say, well, it's because cars aren't very analog anymore.
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But it's that's more than either it's, it's definitely deeper than that.
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A lot of it cars don't just feel necessarily well built anymore.
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There's not a single car to look at the auto show and just go like, oh, I would be willing
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to trust or want that car.
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Pricing's got to a point where nothing's affordable, like I guarantee that little Kia
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wagon was probably up in the thirties, like I'm like, or high twenties and there's just
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not really anything that affordable anymore.
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Everything's just kind of so mashful of tech and that's kind of all you're really getting
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and all the tech really isn't that good.
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One thing I mentioned to Vic is a lot of cars tech is not that good.
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Like tablets 10 years ago is about where car tech is now.
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As far as like responsiveness, overall usability, some of them aren't even like user friendly.
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So it's like, you have all this tech and it's not that user friendly.
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You're forced to have the tech.
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You don't have an option to not get a techie version.
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You don't have the option to get like a base car really anymore in general, even like the
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base versions are relatively expensive and still chocked full of tech at this point.
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Yeah, the average sale price, the average price of a new car is I think close to 49 grand.
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It's almost 50 grand.
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And that's crazy because I used to be like, I used to be like a dream slash future car.
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Like when you've made it now, that's like your average price of the regular consumer car.
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And I think the big thing is like a lot of these new cars that are full of screens, they don't
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they just don't feel durable.
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Like you don't see like elements of like stuff that's overbuilt, you know what I mean?
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On the interiors or in the engine bay.
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Anywhere, everything you see just feels like it's going to last even less long.
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I remember seeing something because a lot of new cars are proving to be unreliable.
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Like like brand new cars off the dealer lot from all, all manufacturers, like not saying
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even Toyota cars, but like everybody at least, yeah, even Toyota, but everybody at least
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has one car that is like not building a strong reputation in its first few years.
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And so it just makes me think that like older cars are better.
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Like remember seeing like just better in every way, mechanically, the design, there's just
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I think they've gotten too complicated and too efficient.
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There was an article that somebody sent me.
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I didn't get a chance to read it, but it was about the argument that engines have like
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reach the peak of efficiency and everything going forward is just going to be a less durable
19:08
long lasting engine, which in turn, if you think about it is bad for efficiency because
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you have to produce more engines and they don't last as long.
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Yeah, not only that, but so cars also because of all the tech and the way everything's going
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and everybody's doing the same thing with a slightly different flair.
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Like on top of all else that was mentioned, every car is the same.
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Every car is a big tablet screen, sometimes two in the center.
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If you have an AC control, that's all tablet controlled.
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Every car feels kind of the same.
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You get in every vehicle.
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It's just slightly different styling that's over styled and has screens for the gauge
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cluster screens for your center cluster screen for HVAC.
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If you get in a luxury car, that's like that seems to be the big determining factor at
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this point of his luxury or not.
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If it has two screens or one screen in the center console.
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Yeah, that's another thing.
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It's just screen like everything feels the same.
20:02
Every car you get in, like none of them really have touches of uniqueness.
20:07
None of them have touches of personality.
20:09
It's just the same car remanufactured for this brand.
20:13
And while if you pay more, you get a couple more features like, oh, will you get a
20:18
Bose sound system or you get a panel roof, which comes in relatively lower model cars.
20:23
Like you don't, everything feels the same and everything has the same turbo charged
20:26
motors. You can't even go to Toyota anymore.
20:28
That's all turbo charged at this point, except for, you know, a select few.
20:33
Yeah, there's a lot of copycatting.
20:35
Like ironically, it seems like some of the electric cars, like the most unique cars.
20:39
Right. Yeah, absolutely.
20:41
Like, you know, I drove a Rivian the other day and even that drove surprisingly well
20:46
and like had some unique features.
20:50
Typical difficulties.
20:52
It sounds like maybe sounds like you're not on.
20:55
Yeah, well, I hear, I hear something now.
20:58
He's just got really loud.
21:04
Because he's on one.
21:07
Now you can hear me, right?
21:10
You know what it is?
21:12
He's usually not on one.
21:14
That's why aren't you normally on one?
21:22
That's a good point is that it seems like the electric cars are more like they're taking
21:29
more risks with design on the electric cars.
21:33
And sometimes the result is really beautiful looking.
21:38
Like the I mean, think about it.
21:40
They don't have to incorporate a grill so they can they can have a car that has entirely
21:45
different brand recognition with a whole new front fascia.
21:47
That's stylish and efficient.
21:50
Obviously, aerodynamics are huge on an electric car.
21:53
So they're making them swoopy and slippery and kind of cool looking.
21:58
A lot of them, even like an Ionic six.
22:04
That's a little like Tron looking car.
22:06
The little squared.
22:10
A lot of people don't like it.
22:11
It's like a teardrop.
22:12
Yeah, I can't do the styling on the six.
22:14
But regardless if you like it or not, exactly.
22:16
And it says they took risks with the styling.
22:20
And I'm seeing that, like you said, more on electric cars.
22:23
And I never really thought about that until you mentioned it.
22:26
Yeah, it's an interesting point because like now that automakers are pivoting back to ice
22:32
Because for a minute, they were like ready to just, you know, get rid of all the internal
22:36
combustion engines and just Ford's like, we're done.
22:40
No more cars, only electric going forward.
22:42
All the brands are saying, yeah, I know.
22:44
But like still, like even Toyota, Toyota always said, no, hybrid is the future.
22:49
We're not going to fully invest.
22:50
But then we have like three or four electric cars of the auto show.
22:53
Yeah, they did add that.
22:54
You see the CHR they added now.
22:56
Yeah, that's all electric now.
22:58
They redesigned the BZ.
23:00
You bring up a good point.
23:01
Like a lot of these companies are just looking at each other and just replicating what everyone
23:05
else is doing or copycatting what everyone else is doing with interior dashboards and
23:11
I always thought tech would eventually become like just outsourced to Google or Microsoft
23:16
like companies that do it well, rather than automakers making infotainment screens still,
23:21
you know, because I really can't.
23:24
Well, my thing though is like, what else are you going to do?
23:26
Well, let me go back to the question.
23:29
Why do you feel that you gravitate towards the lesser, non-techy, you know, vintage cars
23:38
that you guys feel?
23:41
I don't need any of the tech.
23:43
The only tech I think is decent is Apple CarPlay and that's easy to add in pretty much
23:49
any car at this point.
23:50
And you don't need a giant screen for Apple CarPlay.
23:53
That's the other thing.
23:53
I can't say that cars have massive fucking screens.
23:57
You don't need a TV.
23:57
You can get a single-den carplay if you want.
23:59
Dude, and that's cool.
24:01
I know I almost got one for my car and I'm like, that does everything you need carplay
24:05
You just need to be able to see like the direction you're supposed to go.
24:09
You need to make sure you're not going to run over a child with your backup camera.
24:12
The reason these screens are so big is people literally just fucking stare at them.
24:15
Have you ever seen somebody back there?
24:16
I'm going to go on Test Drive and literally they go to backup and they just stare at the
24:20
screen the whole time.
24:22
No mirrors, nothing.
24:23
I'm like, dude, you're going to kill somebody.
24:25
I saw Doug Demiro put a little single-den Apple CarPlay in his 996, 993, 911.
24:35
The screen is like, what, two by two?
24:37
Steve has one in his Viper.
24:41
They're pretty much just as good as modern OEM screens.
24:44
And they look like a period correct, right?
24:47
Ish, because it fits in that area.
24:49
So yeah, I mean, that makes sense.
24:51
I think you bring up a good point, right?
24:53
We've already talked about this on the podcast.
24:55
You mentioned words like character.
24:58
It's type, cars that are older and vintage.
25:00
When you park them, you look back at them, right?
25:02
Today, I feel like we get excited for new cars when they're new, right?
25:07
And they're obviously like new in the sense that, well, no one has that car.
25:12
Like I can flex, like a Cybertruck.
25:14
When the Cybertruck came out, everyone wanted it because it was out of this world.
25:18
It was something so crazy that people were going to chase you down the block to go and
25:24
get pictures of it, right?
25:26
That's like in the first, what, maybe four or five months, six months, right?
25:29
Now once that's faded and now no one cares to see a Cybertruck anymore, now you're stuck
25:34
with a $40,000 appreciation.
25:38
So people paid way more than MSRP for those and they're just cut.
25:42
So here's my take and this could be a hot take.
25:45
I think we gravitate towards analog, vintage, classic cars more so than maybe ever.
25:53
I feel like the community is growing, right?
25:55
Because you guys are young.
25:56
Obviously, you're still in your 20s.
25:57
You're into cars because you love them since you were young.
26:01
But I think the car scene, the modern day car scene, the reason why we're not excited
26:05
about new cars that are coming out and being like, because I don't think people back in
26:09
the 80s weren't excited when a new car came out and they were driving 60s and 70s cars,
26:14
Yeah, they were excited because it still felt like a car.
26:19
I want you to continue your point and then I'll go later.
26:22
So I think a lot of it has to do with the direction of the auto industry.
26:27
It's going in this direction of crossovers, SUVs, cars that are kind of mundane.
26:34
They just kind of all look neutral.
26:35
There's no more nice colors anymore.
26:38
So people are okay with that.
26:39
People think of an automobile today as just a means to get from point A to point B.
26:46
This has always existed.
26:47
There's always been people that didn't care about the car.
26:50
They just wanted to use it as a means of transportation, right?
26:53
That's its purpose.
26:54
But my point is, is the cars that are new are SUVs, right?
27:00
The cars that people care about or excited about are SUVs.
27:03
No one's excited anymore for like a two-door coupe.
27:07
Like back in the day, there were coupes all over the place, right?
27:11
But today a prelude comes out.
27:13
It's like cool because like, oh, wow, they're making coupes still, but no one's going to
27:19
No, I think what you're saying and something that I've observed is like just regular people
27:25
used to love their love and appreciate their cars back in the day.
27:30
And now they don't like, even if they weren't necessarily an enthusiast who is washing and
27:35
working on their cars every week and they had pride of ownership.
27:39
And I think a lot of that is faded like with more leases and this and that.
27:44
And cars were built.
27:45
Like, I remember sending you that video on like the W124 S-Class, they built that car
27:51
like the same Land Cruiser of the same generation to go 300, 350,000 miles.
27:58
Like the parts were built to that standard and they tested Land Cruisers, not just in
28:03
normal sunny Southern California terrain, like they put that thing in deserts, making
28:08
sure like these parts were tested, tried and true.
28:11
So that way that car, they could almost guarantee 300,000 plus miles on that engine.
28:16
People now probably don't even care if the car will go 300,000 miles.
28:20
So they're not going to make cars like that.
28:21
Part of what's making a car enthusiast is the thing less interested.
28:24
Like every car you look at feels like an appliance.
28:28
Even if it looks cool, it's like, okay, it's just an appliance, how long is it really
28:32
This is not a car we're going to see 30, 40, 50 years from now still on the road, like
28:35
a lot of the cars that we've gotten to experience.
28:38
I think that's part of like, and also I think cars are just kind of peaking, like they
28:42
can't really get better in the way that car companies used to constantly fight to make
28:48
The constant fight was how quiet can we make the interior?
28:51
How smooth can we make the suspension?
28:53
How well can we make the suspension react to all the terrains that you're going to hit
28:58
How good can we make everything feel when you shut, click, touch, push on this car?
29:04
Cars haven't done that now for at least 10, 15 years.
29:07
It's just been a tech game because tech became introduced with like touchscreens and GPS.
29:11
And then that got a lot of people excited because now it's easier to have that in your
29:16
So now you can have GPS factory.
29:18
That was a big thing.
29:20
And then, but once you have GPS, you already have a screen, well, no, I don't take that
29:23
Now we're going to, you know, use it for multiple things.
29:25
We're going to connect it to your smartphone that everybody has in every pocket at this
29:30
And they're an appliance in quite literally every single way.
29:33
And it's only, but it's like every single car does the same thing, but you can't really
29:38
They're all just the same.
29:39
It's just like pick your flavor of styling and some of them are faster and some of them
29:44
But none of it feels good.
29:46
And cars really can't get faster now, like in terms of production, like production cars,
29:53
like the only limit at this point is like tire technology.
29:59
I mean, like a Tesla Plaid can do a 1.9 seconds, zero to 60, like, like what's the only limiting
30:06
and they have to do, they have to use traction control so that the torque of the motor doesn't
30:10
just rip all the tires off.
30:13
So like cars can't really get faster, which maybe is another reason tying this into a
30:20
topic we've talked about in the past that like enthusiasts are gravitating towards cars
30:25
that like don't, they don't need to have a lot of power.
30:28
Speed is becoming something that enthusiasts and even just modern day car buyers are not
30:34
necessarily looking for because anybody can experience it.
30:38
It's like diluting the desire of it.
30:41
If it's plentiful, then it's like not going to be that special to have a car that can
30:47
So what's special now, right?
30:48
That's kind of the point where we're getting to is like, when you look at these new cars,
30:52
there's nothing that sticks out other than tech to your point, right?
30:56
Like tech is all the same.
30:57
Like you're not really like, I'm sorry, you're not really using tech in your car that often.
31:01
And if you are, you suck at driving.
31:03
So let's just take automated cruise control, for example.
31:06
Let's say you're sitting in a modern C class, right?
31:10
It has beautiful ambient lighting.
31:12
You can change the color, the ambient lighting on the front of the seat and it could have
31:16
different color in the rear of the seat.
31:17
You put on automated cruise control.
31:19
You're going down the freeway.
31:22
Such a nice experience in a car.
31:24
But like, are you going to like desire that feature in your analog vintage classic car?
31:31
Like you don't, like it's, it's cool to have in a new car because it sets a vibe.
31:34
And again, that's a feature that's going to be really cool for one and a half months.
31:38
And that's going to be the same thing in your car.
31:40
Every time like, oh, wait, you know, I got to change the color.
31:43
I'm getting kind of tired of this one.
31:44
It doesn't feel fresh anymore.
31:45
And then you're going to run through the colors.
31:47
And also you're never going to choose yellow because who's going to choose yellow and like,
31:52
what is your go-to ambient lighting?
31:54
I really like purple and pink.
31:56
I think it matches like almost any interior.
31:59
And then in cars, I hate red.
32:04
In cars that have like a tan or beige interior though, low key and nice orange ambient light
32:09
makes it feel a little older because, because orange is like the color that is on so many
32:15
I can picture like a becker cassette.
32:18
But there's, I don't know, man, cars are just really becoming, they're not going to really
32:24
I think that's part of it too.
32:25
They're not going to get better.
32:27
Like they're not going to get more impressive.
32:28
They're already there.
32:29
Like how do you get better?
32:30
Rolls Royce literally had to make their cars slightly louder when the newest ghost came
32:35
out because they made it so quiet that it was upsetting the nervous system because the
32:40
human body wasn't wrecking, like it was moving, but there was no signs besides visual and feel
32:46
to tell you the car was moving.
32:48
So they literally had to pull back on the sound ending a little bit so it doesn't affect
32:53
you in a way that makes you nauseous.
32:55
And it's like, so if we're already there, like what, okay, you can't get quieter now.
33:00
You can't really get smoother.
33:02
In fact, I feel like cars are bumpy than they used to be.
33:04
Every car I drive is on 20s and stiff.
33:07
So what more tech, what more tech can come out that's going to be like, make people
33:12
race to the dealerships, which the more we talk about this, it kind of makes me happy
33:15
because the only thing I can see brands doing is be like, oh yeah, people want to show that
33:19
I have an answer to that question, but it's not the answer that enthusiasts want to hear.
33:25
Safety tech doesn't bring people to dealers unless they're going to the Volvo dealership.
33:31
You know, well, here's another thing I wanted to say.
33:33
So besides that SUVs are kind of the new future of car building, right?
33:39
Every automaker has nine to 15 SUVs and like three sedans, right?
33:45
So we see the direction that they're going and no one, no enthusiasts, no one's excited
33:50
Those are just, it's the practicality.
33:53
I mean, yeah, we like them because they're, you know, they're obviously practical and
33:56
you know, they make little slopey ones now that are fast and whatever.
34:01
But my point is, is the other take that I wanted to say earlier was when you're a young car
34:06
buyer, you're usually thinking of what is the best bang for your buck, right?
34:12
So like, for example, you guys go out and cross shop cars, you're looking at fun cars
34:16
that are obviously checks a lot of boxes.
34:20
And when you look at a new car today, if a brand new car or even like a slightly used
34:24
one is 30 to 40 grand, it's a lot of money to invest in a depreciating asset, right?
34:30
Also with housing costs at an all time high, like that's, I think part of the reason cars
34:34
are doing what they're doing is because there's not the only people buying brand new cars
34:37
like regularly and keeping the market going are people that are doing well enough somehow.
34:42
And like where are the type of people that car enthusiasts, I'll sell, I'll try and speak
34:46
for everyone here that prefer something that has character that's older, that's vintage
34:51
that when you park, you look back at when you sit inside of it, you can smell that something
34:56
leather or whatever scent that just, you know, keeps bringing you back to one of the experience
35:03
again, you know, when you're behind the wheel, but it's also the fact that you're buying
35:07
a car that's not that expensive, right?
35:10
Like, like think about like most classic cars, you can be so satisfied.
35:16
There's so many cars we can think of under 10 grand and be so satisfied has enough safety
35:22
It's not going to, you know, you wrap it around a pole, you're still going to, you know, survive.
35:27
It's not going to be crazy unless you get something maybe pre airbag.
35:29
But like, it's just, it's something that it's worth every penny, right?
35:35
It's hard to justify buying a car today and saying, oh, this car is worth every penny.
35:40
You go out and buy a Maserati Gricale for 82 grand.
35:45
In two years, it's worth 40.
35:50
The more you drive the thing up, the lot is worth nothing.
35:52
And that's that's a cool crossover SUV, you know, you see like the Modena or the Trofeo,
35:57
like those are, those are pretty cool.
35:59
But yeah, but I'm also the, none of them are pretty, like nobody makes like a real pretty
36:04
Like cars also used to be pretty and cars aren't pretty anymore.
36:07
They're just hard to do a funky.
36:09
Unless you get like one of those like coupes, you know, like a GLE coupe, right?
36:13
They make those now.
36:14
Like for every single pretty much, you know, I would say even the entry level SUVs, there's
36:20
like the GLC coupe now, the Cayenne has a coupe, right?
36:25
So like those are a little bit sexier looking, I guess, right?
36:28
But regardless, it's, you're right.
36:30
Like it's not a sports car.
36:32
It's not going to look like it's not going to have the lines of a sports car.
36:35
That's what I'm thinking about.
36:36
There's like a surprising lack of cars that have sex appeal.
36:41
And we haven't really talked about kind of universally gorgeous.
36:45
Or just that, like, I wonder a lot of that comes from the fact that like all the stereotypes
36:50
that were garnered around so many cars that were cool.
36:54
Like if you drive a Porsche, you know, you always use euphemisms towards who owns different
37:00
Dylan's really good at that.
37:03
And I wonder if part of that is like why cars have gone the direction they are, because
37:06
now you don't want to go buy one of those cars because you might be looked at as like
37:09
a douchebag or somebody that's like not cool.
37:12
Like, oh, you bought a car that like attracts looks.
37:15
I wonder how much that affected the market as well, because like everything's SUVs, but
37:21
it's like, OK, then where are the cars that are actually like you just want to look at
37:24
and buy just by looking at it?
37:26
Like there are certain cars that you just look at them and you know, there are problematic
37:29
car, but you're like, I still want to fucking buy that.
37:34
When was the last time a new car came out and it was designed by Pininfarina or designed
37:40
by Jujaro's like the answer is not one you want to hear.
37:47
I didn't know that.
37:49
Vin Fast is designed by Pininfarina.
37:51
That's pretty fucking sad.
37:58
Fuck yeah, Vin Fast.
38:01
Justin saw Vin Fast and he's like, dude, why is this Vin Fast look good right now?
38:06
Yeah, they had the bigger one there.
38:09
The VF9 looks good.
38:11
Why does this Vin Fast look so good?
38:13
VF5, I think it is.
38:14
VF9 is the big one.
38:15
No, it's a small one.
38:18
It fucking doesn't look good.
38:20
And it was universally praised for being shitty to try.
38:25
Hey, you liked it though.
38:27
Pininfarina design, baby.
38:28
Yeah, but I didn't like it like Pininfarina.
38:31
I didn't like it like damn, look at that fucking car.
38:34
I wasn't like, I want to buy it.
38:36
I want to go back on a point that you made because I like what you said.
38:39
You said that you feel like an old car is worth every penny.
38:43
And like that's so true because if you're an enthusiast who knows the market and especially
38:49
even more if you know how to work on cars, then there are so many used cars that are
38:54
a tremendous value like even older depreciated luxury cars.
39:00
There are ones that can be fairly reliable if they've been maintained and like they'll
39:05
have the features that like a new car that costs the same has their better built and
39:10
they're way cooler.
39:12
I mean, less is more when it comes to a classic car, right?
39:16
We don't need all that tech, like you said, we don't really need to have all the safety
39:21
tech that these new cars have.
39:24
It's not a it's not something like you'd be bummed.
39:27
Oh, wow, this car has, you know, lane departure warning, but like the end of the day, like
39:33
we're good drivers.
39:35
And also, I can't fucking stand when cars beep at me.
39:37
Yeah, I cannot stand when my car I'm driving my car makes a noise.
39:41
I'm like, no, you're not going to tell me how to drive.
39:43
It makes me so mad.
39:45
Like what was like, oh, the fucking Rivian I drove.
39:49
It beeps and bongs and boops like the entire time you're driving.
39:53
I'm like, dude, this thing's going to and has no motor noise to cover up anything.
39:56
So I'm like, I'm going to lose my mind.
39:57
About lane keep assist.
40:01
I can feel it in this year.
40:02
Who's fucking control here?
40:06
You guys can't see this because they're going to be listening, but this is who control.
40:13
Well, this, this will help me transition to my next point.
40:18
So I don't know if I talked about this on the podcast, but back there and I think it
40:22
was Thanksgiving break, I drove in my first Waymo, right, which by the way, Waymo is
40:27
in San Diego downtown Dylan's face.
40:32
There is a guy mapping that they drive in it right now.
40:36
They're mapping and it's not the Jaguar.
40:38
It's in that weird little, it looks like a, it looks like a ID buzz almost.
40:43
Was it a Chinese car?
40:46
It probably is Dylan.
40:47
They're mapping San Diego roads so that way we can be like where I lays out right now
40:51
where it's full, like there's Waymo's Waymo's coming down the block every two minutes.
40:55
Nothing like killing more jobs, brother.
40:57
But let me tell you this, this is the direction people are going to get.
41:01
Like they just need to get from point A to point B.
41:04
Obviously it costs money to spend on a trip, but if they can get the cost down because
41:09
there's no driver to pay, right?
41:11
And now it's like five bucks to go 50 miles.
41:14
People are just going to do that.
41:17
Especially in cities.
41:20
That's, I mean, you make a good case.
41:23
The whole point of not having someone in the car is so that way you don't have to pay.
41:28
There's no overhead.
41:29
Obviously the upkeep on that car with all the sensors and everything that probably need
41:35
to be, you know, making sure they're cleaned and they're not dusty and, you know, things
41:40
Bro, I can already see being a game to like, like if like driverless cars, especially for
41:45
like ridesharing stuff become more popular, it'd be such a fun game.
41:48
It's a fucked up game.
41:49
But just like to fuck with all the cars that are driving themselves because you know,
41:52
they're going to do this.
41:53
People are already doing that.
41:54
You know, they're going to do the safest maneuver.
41:56
Like I know it's common to cut Teslas off because the car will stop.
41:59
Like there's not a way to turn that feature off.
42:03
And so could you drive in the skies?
42:04
We were like, well, hey, dude, if they're all driverless and you're driving your car
42:07
still, you'll never have to worry about waiting in traffic because you just cut off a bunch
42:11
of cars to get where you're going to go because they're not going to road rage at you.
42:14
They're not going to not let you in.
42:15
They'll just be like, oh, sorry.
42:16
And you'll just pull through.
42:18
That's going to be fun.
42:19
And it won't even stop short.
42:20
It'll somehow just manage to slow down gradually.
42:23
Even though you just jumped out in front of it from the sidewall.
42:26
Because you can see like the middle of the second you start turning towards it.
42:29
It's like, oh, he's probably going to drive in front of me.
42:31
And that's going to be fun.
42:34
A guy just came right.
42:34
He j-walked right in front of it and it just gradually came to a stop and gradually continue.
42:40
Dude, what would you have done if it's like just took the car out?
42:43
I would have been like, you deserve to do.
42:44
You're just on the back seat and the guy just rolls over the car.
42:47
You're just like, oh, fuck.
42:48
The way it was just like, the way it was just like, you're still on your way to your location or your destination.
42:55
It just doesn't care.
42:57
It's like, now we're not going to stop.
43:01
You are still on the fastest route.
43:05
Well, I'm telling you though, it drove better because like what?
43:11
Because there's no emotion behind it.
43:12
It doesn't care when it gets there.
43:13
Two hours later, you know, I had some other, you know, guy didn't even speak English,
43:17
drive me from where we went to back to the hotel and it was a way worse experience.
43:22
Dude, sometimes Uber drivers are no fucking chill.
43:25
The fucking car smelled like smoke.
43:27
The guy's hitting every bump at like, like 30 miles an hour more than he should be.
43:33
You know, we're in a residential area where it's speed bumps and he's just like, like sending it.
43:37
Bro, did I ever tell you about the fucking Lyft experience I had in Vegas?
43:43
I went to Vegas for my birthday and most Lyft riders are fine.
43:46
Like we got picked up in escalates most of the time because we had a pretty big group
43:50
and the guys were always just cruising like comfortable.
43:53
I'm like, okay, cool.
43:53
Like I'm not that scared of driving.
43:56
You know, I don't like riding rideshare.
43:58
I the first time I ever did was in Vegas and I was 20.
44:03
I never take rideshare.
44:05
I hate being passenger, especially with somebody I don't know.
44:09
So I just I've never done it and it's fucking expensive.
44:12
But in Vegas, you know, we're drinking and doing that shit.
44:16
And I just didn't want to be driving like that.
44:19
So I would hope we got lifts and all of them are cool.
44:24
So I'm like, getting comfortable.
44:26
Well, thank God this lift.
44:28
He was driving an infinity QX 80.
44:31
So the giant SUV, bro, that fool drove like an indie car driver, but he hit curbs and shit.
44:38
And he was fucking talking about how fucking sick his car is.
44:41
And he's flooring it in like flowing through traffic, like driving crazy, making last minute
44:48
turns sharp as fuck.
44:49
Like the whole car is silent and he's just still talking.
44:52
And at one point he's like, oh, yeah, I just got the transmission replaced.
44:56
And again, I'm hammered in the back.
44:57
Like I'm already scared.
44:58
But like, thankfully, I think being like super drunk was like, chilled me out a little bit
45:02
because I would have probably told him to slow down.
45:04
I would have been pissed if I was not.
45:06
And I like, look up at the gauge cluster because I'm like, there's no way this
45:10
was over a hundred thousand miles.
45:12
So he drives like this.
45:12
There's no way his transmission lasted.
45:14
And I looked up 48,000 miles of the thing and I'm like, that means this guy drives
45:18
like this 24 seven.
45:19
Like, and it was, but dude, it was crazy.
45:22
Like he drove insane.
45:25
So he was like, mean, pinned to win everywhere.
45:31
Mildly, I had to be safer for everybody involved.
45:34
Tell us your gripes, Dylan, with Waymo.
45:37
We got a one month free trial of the full self driving on my mom's model three.
45:44
And when I would borrow it, there was a time where a couple of times where I
45:47
tested it and there's a lot like that.
45:51
I know Waymo is more advanced, but like that did not feel remotely safe using the
45:56
Tesla full self driving, not remotely safe.
46:00
It was getting close to cars.
46:02
And the worst and arguably the most dangerous part was it was not assertive
46:08
It needed to be more assertive.
46:10
Yeah, it was too cautious.
46:12
So let me tell you an example of me observing a Waymo from me driving.
46:17
So this was in LA cars double parked with the hazards on and the Waymo is in
46:24
So I'm in the left lane, right?
46:28
So I'm watching it and I'm like telling my fiance.
46:30
I'm like, let's see what it does.
46:31
Does it just stop and just stay behind this double parked car?
46:35
That shouldn't have been there anyway, right?
46:37
Bro, it slows down, puts on its left blinker and just goes around him and then
46:42
goes back into the right lane in front of that car that was double parked and
46:45
then stays in the right lane of and approaches the traffic light.
46:49
I was fully expecting you to say it just sat there for 30 minutes.
46:52
I think I think though.
46:55
If it didn't have hazards on the car double parked, I don't think it would have
47:00
How would it have known that that car is double parked and there's no cars in
47:03
front of it, right?
47:04
Like I'm sure it has enough of ability to see.
47:07
It could be by mapped out roads, like knowing that car is not where it's
47:12
I think it would have stopped and then it would have said, okay, it's
47:15
unusual that this car stopped for this long with a green light because it
47:18
could probably see the way the Waymo recognize the fact that it had hazards
47:21
on because that would just be light.
47:24
It needs to recognize people's turn signals.
47:27
So yeah, that's crazy.
47:28
Bro, it's insane how good it is.
47:31
I'm going to go on the record here and say very soon people will be taken
47:37
Waymo's without any fear.
47:39
They'll all be doing it.
47:40
Did Uber has to be shipped?
47:42
I'm talking like Uber will just buy all the cars.
47:44
Bro, less than a year.
47:46
It'll be in every city, every major city.
47:48
Dude, that gets rid of rideshare.
47:50
That gets rid of food delivery.
47:51
Dude, that's with the exception of New York City because New York City, like
47:54
they're really cracking down on even lifts and Ubers because of the yellow
47:59
So they might like be opposed to it.
48:01
But look, at the end of the day, like I said earlier, people just want to be
48:04
able to get from point A to point B without paying too much money, right?
48:11
If there's no lawsuits on, there's going to be way more car accidents
48:15
due to human area than there is on AI, right?
48:20
It's a scary thought, but at the same time, that's the future in my eyes,
48:25
I agree for rideshare.
48:26
It's definitely the future on quite literally every front.
48:28
It's more so just like, man, like how many fucking jobs are we going to take?
48:32
Well, like how many things are we just going to take away from humans though?
48:34
Like it's pretty wild.
48:36
There's like people make that argument for a lot of different things like AI,
48:41
but like I feel like those it also creates other jobs like simultaneously.
48:49
Like there's going to have to be people who are like monitor.
48:53
There's going to have to be people monitoring there.
48:55
Those Waymo's people servicing them.
48:59
And I don't think it's it's going to be as detrimental as some people expect.
49:05
But how much of again, that's now more corporations being in charge of more jobs.
49:10
Like, I mean, technically they are now because Lyft and Uber are basically just
49:13
a massive corporation that basically just pays you what they want to pay you.
49:17
Well, good thing we're not a, you know, economics podcast.
49:21
We're just a car podcast.
49:23
We don't have to worry about that, but also driverless cars.
49:26
That's scary because if that becomes more prevalent also, that just one more push
49:29
for driverless cars would be the norm even for regular people.
49:32
Well, look, we always will worry that electric cars are going to like be the
49:35
end of classic cars and no one's going to drive cool vintage shit anymore
49:40
It's not going to be it's going to like the more electric, the more tech gets
49:43
advanced, the more people will gravitate towards classic cars.
49:47
And another thing we've also talked about before on that same note is it's
49:52
never been an easier time to own those vintage cars because of 3D printing
49:57
and and CAD and everything else.
50:00
Like if you can't buy parts, you can make them.
50:02
And you can source them through the internet by just figuring out, oh, wow.
50:07
Little did I know my GeoStorm, you know, intake manifold is also the same shape
50:13
as the one on, you know, the Oldsmobile Aurora.
50:18
I can find an Oldsmobile Aurora like whatever.
50:20
Like there's, there's parts been sharing that you can do, right?
50:25
And you can discover that using the internet, right?
50:28
Yeah, you were back in a day.
50:29
Maybe someone say, oh, this part's unobtainium and not dink outside the box
50:33
and say, oh, let me check.
50:34
Maybe it is a similar fit on a like maker model, you know, like I remember
50:39
my Montero, the EVAP canister was straight out of a 3000 GT.
50:43
And I found that the 3000 GT in a junkyard, not another Montero since
50:47
that was way more 3000 GTs, I think the Monteros, at least I never see Monteros,
50:55
Well, I think I don't think that second gen Monteros, not third gen Monteros.
51:00
Yeah, they definitely was still out there.
51:02
I don't think there was necessarily more, but the 3000 GTs were just kept
51:06
like by more enthusiasts.
51:09
So I want to talk about some classic cars.
51:12
So or not too classic in some cases, but Justin bought a car recently
51:17
and you bought a car recently.
51:19
So let's start with your car.
51:21
So you recently put out a nice little reel on the Toyota Cressida.
51:25
So that's one that I'm selling with work.
51:30
So yeah, we did pick up a Toyota Cressida.
51:34
I don't know much about them because I know they came to the U.S.
51:37
and then they stopped after the 80s.
51:39
So it's it was basically Toyota testing luxury Japanese luxury in the U.S.
51:45
So that was like the test for like Lexus, basically.
51:50
I mean, when the Cressida came out, Lexus was still years away, but Toyota
51:54
wanted to see if they could sell a kind of more traditional American
51:59
style luxury car in the U.S.
52:02
Because the Cressida in very many ways is feels like what Americans
52:07
of the 80s would have wanted in a luxury car.
52:10
It has the plush seats with buttons and crushed velour.
52:15
You know, it has the type of creature comforts that Americans want,
52:20
like the cruise control and heated mirrors and that sort of thing.
52:23
And it's a the best part.
52:26
What I think makes the Cressida cool is it's an inline six rear wheel drive.
52:31
Yeah, really inline six rear wheel drive.
52:35
The same engine from the Mark III, the early Mark III Supra, the 5M GE.
52:43
I didn't know that that that makes that car reliable and fun to drive.
52:48
Well, inline six is, you know, yeah, but it's one of Toyota's less reliable
52:54
They're known for popping head gaskets, even the GE's.
52:58
So that that's part of the reason why you don't see Cressida's as often.
53:01
Yeah, I mean, I thought like he said, fancy Camry, you know,
53:04
front wheel drive based, maybe a V6.
53:07
So it's an original.
53:11
ES more when the new when the first yes, but in terms of like size and market
53:16
position when the when the ES came out, that was more or less kind of like the
53:20
replacement for the Cressida because the LS was like a full sized luxury car.
53:27
ES was, I guess, a more direct replacement.
53:30
Yeah, that's a cool car.
53:31
When I saw that you put together that reel and that you bought it, I was thinking
53:34
like this is a perfect example of a car that came to the US.
53:39
It came in wet, right?
53:40
Like the name plate lived on and now it's like forbidden fruit to import one
53:44
that came because they did continue it.
53:46
The name plate, right?
53:48
No, I don't think so.
53:50
I'm thinking crown, my bad.
53:51
I'm thinking crown.
53:53
So because the crown is still Toyota name plate, but it's like the luxury full
53:59
Um, but Cressida, we actually got.
54:02
That's what I confused a little bit, but, um, I just think that car, like when you
54:06
look at it, you see like, like a boxy typical 80s K car, you know, but with some
54:12
luxury features, right?
54:15
And then can I talk about the car that I bought?
54:18
That was one we bought for work.
54:20
Yeah, you're right.
54:21
But I got a 1977 Akano line, uh, four by four.
54:28
Akano line, 250 big block Ford V eight, 7.5 liter.
54:35
Um, yeah, and it's an original, well, not original technically, but it's a four
54:40
wheel drive conversion.
54:42
And it's like a body on frame, four by four.
54:44
That's pretty much that you can use for van life.
54:48
You can like deck it out through the whole kitchen sink.
54:51
I'm going to deck it out partially.
54:53
I'm going to put floors and walls and a roof in it and a foldable bed, but I
54:57
want to use it as a motorcycle hauler.
55:00
So let's put motorcycles in the back and strap them down for the desert.
55:05
What about you, Pitner?
55:05
You bought yourself another GM product.
55:09
I bought the GMC Yukon XL Denali.
55:12
It's been a while, right?
55:13
We, we actually talked about it on the part.
55:15
I was like, is he talking about the Miata?
55:17
I talked about the Miata.
55:18
I remember the last podcast though, like the whole episode was Miata.
55:22
So what do you think?
55:23
I know you always wanted a Denali.
55:27
Um, the GMT 800 in general, I'm definitely loving more and more as time goes on.
55:33
I was definitely more 900 and, you know, K2X over time.
55:37
Uh, cause I do like multiple gears still, like just going upgrades and doing
55:41
the stuff I usually do, but, uh, it's pretty incredible.
55:45
It's pretty incredible.
55:46
A, how well those vehicles held up.
55:48
It's pretty low miles.
55:49
That's about 98,000, but when you drive it, it really, and this kind of goes
55:54
towards the fact that cars really haven't got much better.
55:56
They just got bigger.
55:58
It drives incredibly well.
56:01
Like the transmission shifts kind of exactly I expected to every time just
56:04
kind of smooth and seamless.
56:07
Um, the motor has plenty of power, uh, and it's quiet inside.
56:12
It rides butter smooth.
56:14
It rides smoother than I think my Escalade did.
56:16
Well, like genuinely, I think that 800 drove better than my Escalade did.
56:19
The Escalade, it felt smooth, but always felt kind of stiff.
56:23
The older, the 800 felt nicer than the 900 I had.
56:26
Um, as far as like overall smoothness, I never probably take corners a little
56:31
faster, but yeah, I was going to say it's probably, it feels that way with 800
56:35
just cause it's a little more like floaty and less like focused on.
56:40
Yeah, but I like that.
56:40
Like it's a fucking giant.
56:42
Why should a giant as if you should never have to take corners fast.
56:46
Like I don't care that everybody else is driving 100 miles an hour.
56:49
I think like people don't want that like, um, body on frame, you know, body
56:54
roll type of feeling when they're driving a car.
56:57
So I feel like automakers are trying their best to eliminate that because
57:00
people are used to driving unibody cars and SUVs today.
57:03
So when they do make a body on frame SUV, they want, they want to make it with
57:07
the least amount of body rolls possible, right?
57:10
In case you do end up taking a corner at high speeds.
57:13
Which is probably good for most people.
57:16
I mean, most people, like I was saying earlier, the crossovers, they, they
57:19
want to just be in a comfortable car.
57:21
You know what I mean?
57:21
So GMT 800, I think is a good example.
57:24
And we've, I feel like we're playing out this, this platform, but we've all
57:28
So we can speak to it, but it's a, it's a perfect example of a car
57:31
that's worth every penny today.
57:34
You buy a people mover.
57:35
Like if you're looking to buy a car, cause you need a vehicle for
57:40
eight passengers, right?
57:42
There's a few, there's a bunch of minivans you could think of, like an older
57:44
Sienna, whatever, like you can find for around 10 grand, right?
57:48
Maybe like 20, 10s or early 20, 10s, you know, LE, XLE, whatever, right?
57:53
And you can find, we're going to tell your project car.
57:55
So it doesn't check every box, but an Yukon, a Suburban, Denali XL,
58:03
I mean, we're talking right around 10 to 15 grand and, and you're
58:06
going to have a people mover for a nice example.
58:09
For a nice example with decent miles, you're going to have a people mover
58:13
that's, that's going to get you to from point A to point B and tow and have
58:18
a third row and have, if you get an XL, you're going to have plenty of
58:21
How many cars would a third row today have room in the behind the third row?
58:25
Just the long wheelbase SUVs still, there still isn't like, they literally
58:29
the only two I can think of off the top of my head.
58:32
Well, technically three would be like a Chevy Traverse, a Buick Enclave,
58:37
Nissan Pathfinder and Infinity Q.
58:40
And even those don't have nearly as much space behind the third row.
58:44
They're more space behind the third row than a short wheelbase.
58:48
Like a Tahoe or a Yukon, but definitely less than the XL.
58:54
So, so why would you then go and buy a 2023?
58:58
Let's say GMC Yukon for $55,000, $60,000, when you can pay a fraction of
59:06
that and get the same thing and you know, cause it's tried and true that
59:10
that six liter Vortec is going to go almost 300,000 miles easily.
59:15
So why even bother?
59:16
That's, that's my point when I say that's, that's just one example of
59:19
why we gravitate towards the old perfect, the GMT 800 is the perfect
59:23
example because like the nicest one you can possibly find on local
59:29
classifies is like eight grand and even cheaper, even ones on the cheaper
59:36
side, you still can feel confident that they're going to be turnkey and
59:40
going to last a long time.
59:43
And the reason why people don't buy them is cause it's just, it's,
59:45
it's not a new car.
59:47
It's going to feel old.
59:48
It's not going to have new body roll.
59:50
They tell, they make themselves think why they don't need it.
59:53
It doesn't have this.
59:54
It doesn't have that latest technology that we all, but like you said,
59:57
how often are we using that latest technology?
00:00
You get in your phone and play music and everyone's want to put on maps.
00:03
Like, I don't know.
00:04
Cars don't need to have a 40 in screen.
00:05
You can put in a carplay.
00:07
Obviously that's so important to you, but that's just a perfect example.
00:10
So like, you know, when, when we drove in it, as soon after you bought it,
00:14
I was just thinking like, damn, like, like why remember I was telling
00:17
you, like, why would anyone want to buy anything else?
00:19
Like this is a perfect car.
00:20
It doesn't even look that old.
00:22
It looks still pretty like modern when you, when you look at the grill and
00:25
you look at the smooth lines.
00:27
Maybe there's some amber lighting in the taillights.
00:29
Like it's still a pretty contemporary car.
00:32
What is everybody here amber so much?
00:34
I think Amber's coming back.
00:35
I know so many people that just like amber delete headlights, taillights,
00:39
just anything they can.
00:40
It's coming back because everyone deleted it.
00:42
So now I want it again.
00:43
I don't want to hate it so much.
00:44
I'm like, it does a purpose.
00:46
It, it's just signal.
00:48
Like, I don't like, I don't want an LED.
00:51
I just don't understand.
00:53
I remember on my 300ZX, someone at Rancho Santa Fe came up to me and said,
00:56
you didn't want the JDM taillights?
00:59
And I was like, we never got JDM taillights in, in, in the US.
01:02
So why would I want those?
01:03
Well, they're not amber.
01:05
They're white in the back.
01:09
Can I talk about my car?
01:11
So you got your car?
01:14
Soon though, I will.
01:15
I was like, wait, it's the new year.
01:17
So the new year means I will be buying more cars.
01:23
Let me tell you about my Alfa Romeo Spyder, which I rarely talk about on
01:27
this podcast because I never drive it because the Milano took up so much of
01:31
your time, which is great.
01:33
So anyway, got the Alfa Romeo Spyder running today.
01:37
It wasn't starting.
01:38
No, uh, no, uh, fuel pump fuel.
01:41
Well, you didn't hear the fuel pump come on when you turned it on.
01:43
So I was like, okay, maybe it's a relay.
01:46
Finally find the relay cause chat GPT said it was somewhere else, but apparently
01:50
they thought it was a Motronic, even though I stated the year in my car.
01:53
It thought it was Motronic Bosch injection, which came later.
01:56
It's actually LGET.
01:58
We finally find it, test it.
02:01
Then he like what he like pretty much put the fuel pump on without
02:05
the car using the fuel pump.
02:07
Like he, um, like jumped the relay wire, the relay wire.
02:12
So you hear the fuel pump come on, like, okay, great.
02:14
Goes to turn it on.
02:15
Doesn't still like for like 10 seconds, doesn't it cranks, but doesn't go on.
02:19
So I'm like, what the hell could it be?
02:21
And then, um, he checks, he's like, there's no fuel pressure still.
02:24
You know, so he then goes and jumps it and, uh, checks for fuel pressure.
02:28
He's like, okay, there is fuel pressure now that I, whatever, hot wire to jump
02:33
the, um, the relay.
02:35
And then I was like, wait, let me go get my jump box, get the jump box on top
02:38
cause I already jumped it previously, obviously, and it's still in the start.
02:42
And with the fuel pump, I guess get a little, you know, kick in the, in the,
02:46
in the rear end with the jump, it started.
02:49
Well, I was like, so what was it?
02:50
I was like, what do you think it was?
02:51
Like what was, what did the fuel pump sees and you needed to like do that
02:55
Like the relay was still good.
02:57
Obviously like what could it have been?
02:59
He checked the cold start injector.
03:01
That was still good.
03:02
And, uh, he just looks at me with a straight face and he's like, it's a town.
03:07
He goes, it's Italian and he's like an old 77 year old, you know, white guy,
03:12
like kind of looks like Jay Leno.
03:14
And, and I'm like, okay, he's like, just drive it, man.
03:17
Just, just drive it like, you know, hopefully it starts tomorrow and just drive
03:22
So that's where we ended up, ended up and I drove it today.
03:25
I did a nice little spirited drive.
03:28
It, I rolled right at 10,000 RPMs.
03:30
Didn't, didn't hunt cause it's hunts when it's cold.
03:33
I was like, I don't, I don't attend a thousand RPMs.
03:38
So it says 10 on the, on the gauge.
03:47
I'm just picturing one, two, three and four.
03:55
Just jump to the stratosphere, bro.
03:58
Hey, it's a good car, man.
04:01
A little twin cam to that, that, that, uh, what is it?
04:06
That's a great car or 2000 CC.
04:08
Didn't that spirited drive you went on remind you of why you had that car?
04:13
Like honestly, all's good in the world.
04:15
After I got out of that car.
04:17
It's like, it's, it's bliss.
04:20
You get into your car and you have that feeling.
04:22
And that's why I wanted to talk about this today on the podcast cause I
04:24
wanted to think like, why do we still gravitate towards the old cars?
04:27
Like I can drive a new car any day of the week.
04:29
And, and, and, you know, for daily use, it is easier, but like my cars are
04:34
old, like my cars are 80s.
04:36
They're not even 2000s, but we're talking like sweet spot, like mid nineties
04:40
to, you know, mid to late 2000s.
04:42
You can't go wrong with a car like that.
04:44
Cause like I said, they're worth every penny.
04:46
So yeah, any final thoughts before we wrap up and perfections?
04:50
I guess I'll say one car if, since you're saying, cause I thought about this
04:54
after we talked about the auto show, but one car I really liked and was excited
04:58
to see was the, um, the Jetta GLI.
05:06
Why were you excited about it?
05:07
I've always loved the GLI, always loved the Jetta GLI.
05:11
And, um, I have a friend who used to be a 1.8 turbo guy, Volkswagen, who
05:17
would build them and make crazy power out of them.
05:20
And now he swears that like the new 2.0s and those GLIs are like the
05:27
That they can take crazy power and hold it.
05:31
I didn't know that.
05:33
I didn't know that.
05:33
I always thought a GLI was just like an unreliable sports sedan want to be.
05:39
No, the older GLIs had the 1.8 turbo that has forged crank and forged rods in it.
05:45
Was it the same engine that was in the GTI?
05:50
The Jetta was just like the GTI sedan.
05:53
I was surprised to see that there.
05:55
That's actually a good find.
05:57
We like, we picked that in there like, Oh, wow.
06:00
And we just kept walking.
06:02
I just think they're kind of ugly interior and exterior.
06:05
I just really don't think Volkswagen is doing good things.
06:07
It's just cool seeing the manual though.
06:10
Like I've never, I can't really crap on them because I haven't really driven them.
06:12
So they probably drive phenomenal.
06:14
They probably still drive German.
06:16
And they're not too expensive.
06:19
Just make sure you get the warranty.
06:22
I was wondered what Volkswagen's new ones like, like remember, they had that little
06:26
window right after the diesel gate where they had like a seven year warranty or
06:30
six years, 72,000 mile one.
06:32
And then after 2019, they went back to their, they, okay, they went back to like,
06:35
I think instead of three 36 that like four or five, it's five now.
06:41
So it's still really good.
06:42
It's still pretty good.
06:43
But like, man, they really fucked up with diesel gate.
06:46
Well, I guess they needed to win our hearts for two years.
06:51
Hey, we're not hearts again.
06:53
We don't got diesels like at 50 miles per gallon and feel great anymore.
06:56
But we'll give you that warranty.
06:59
Hey, look, now that I got my spider back up and running in again and he's,
07:02
you know, putting a rebuilding his econoline, I think it's time.
07:07
The Buick is back on the road.
07:08
Well, that's coming.
07:10
This guy's buying, he's buying cars left and right, but yet the Buick is neglected
07:13
on the side of the road with no sunshade on it.
07:15
The Buick just leaves me drive home every day in a different car.
07:21
You're the freaking GM good.
07:23
I know my four car, bro.
07:25
I just got mad when I replaced the fuel pump and it wasn't that.
07:27
I'm like, you know, fuck this thing.
07:28
Well, I'll have my mechanic come over to you and he'll he'll start,
07:31
you know, process of elimination.
07:35
Well, 75 bucks an hour.
07:37
Hey, that's a cheap labor.
07:39
That's a good labor.
07:40
And he comes to you.
07:41
All right, guys, until next week on the analog and grip podcast.
07:46
See you later till next time.