F Type sports car is number 1 for the wrong reason
#21
There is at least one good achievement from raising artickes like this: It causes such cool responses from fellow posters. No joke, I have thoroughly enjoyed reading all your replies. Intelligent, spot-on, and a few downright hilariously sarcastic. Nice way to start a Monday, reading this.
And my advice to you Turko is, don't let Peter Akpejeluh's disinformation article get to you. Because that's exactly what Peter wants.
And my advice to you Turko is, don't let Peter Akpejeluh's disinformation article get to you. Because that's exactly what Peter wants.
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sov211 (02-20-2023)
#22
Hi guys.
do take a look at this article regarding Jaguar car's. Not good ....
What say you....
https://www.hotcars.com/unreliable-j...xf---7-recalls
do take a look at this article regarding Jaguar car's. Not good ....
What say you....
https://www.hotcars.com/unreliable-j...xf---7-recalls
#23
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Supersprint Sport Exhausts (02-26-2023)
#24
My wife and I have owned several Jags (2015 F-Type S, 2016 F-Type S, 2016 XF 35t Prestige, 2017 XE 35t Prestige, 2018 E-PACE P300 R-Dynamic SE, 2018 F-PACE S, and 2018 F-Type R-Dynamic; as many as five at the same time. All (except the E-PACE) with the V6 and with the odometer showing up to 68,000 miles. The only time we got stranded was in our new XE. The issue was nothing more than a loose connector from the factory. All of the engines smell of coolant leaks without any visible sign of leakage.
Compare our experience to the two Audi Q3s my wife owned. While she was busy purchasing the 2nd Q3 I took the liberty of looking into the service area. There were a number of Q5s in the service area with entire front ends removed and engines on stands. Yikes! Later I had the opportunity to ask a mechanic/technician what the problem was with the engines. His response was routine carbon build-up. The engines needed to be removed when cleaning out the carbon. And the front end needed to be removed in order to remove the engine. However, the latest Audi engines didn't require the front end to be removed. Instead, the engines could be lowered. A friend of ours owns an Audi A4. After 45,000 miles on the odometer he replaced the plastic water pump because it leaked. It's a well-known Audi issue. And who is Audi's parent company? VW. Who is Porsche's parent company? VW. Great German engineering, huh?
Friends of ours owned Cadillacs. After 150,000 miles, they were replacing wheel bearings. The rear suspension of my wife's Cadillac XT4 kept stepping out (jumping sideways) whenever we drove across an expansion strip. I had her get rid of it because, if it did that on a dry and straight road, how unsafe that would be in rain or snow!
The more efficient vehicles have become, the more complexity and tighter the packaging which means that stuff is hidden from view. Unlike decades ago when we could easily see all the coolant hoses in an engine bay we now find the things buried in the most expensive locations.
Compare our experience to the two Audi Q3s my wife owned. While she was busy purchasing the 2nd Q3 I took the liberty of looking into the service area. There were a number of Q5s in the service area with entire front ends removed and engines on stands. Yikes! Later I had the opportunity to ask a mechanic/technician what the problem was with the engines. His response was routine carbon build-up. The engines needed to be removed when cleaning out the carbon. And the front end needed to be removed in order to remove the engine. However, the latest Audi engines didn't require the front end to be removed. Instead, the engines could be lowered. A friend of ours owns an Audi A4. After 45,000 miles on the odometer he replaced the plastic water pump because it leaked. It's a well-known Audi issue. And who is Audi's parent company? VW. Who is Porsche's parent company? VW. Great German engineering, huh?
Friends of ours owned Cadillacs. After 150,000 miles, they were replacing wheel bearings. The rear suspension of my wife's Cadillac XT4 kept stepping out (jumping sideways) whenever we drove across an expansion strip. I had her get rid of it because, if it did that on a dry and straight road, how unsafe that would be in rain or snow!
The more efficient vehicles have become, the more complexity and tighter the packaging which means that stuff is hidden from view. Unlike decades ago when we could easily see all the coolant hoses in an engine bay we now find the things buried in the most expensive locations.
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NewLester de Rocin (03-29-2023)
#25
The more efficient vehicles have become, the more complexity and tighter the packaging which means that stuff is hidden from view. Unlike decades ago when we could easily see all the coolant hoses in an engine bay we now find the things buried in the most expensive locations.
#26
I just looked at their website and read three pages of Jaguar specific articles that were posted.
They literally had “worst 10 Jaguars to own” and then followed that up with “Best 10 Jaguars to own…many of the same cars on both lists. Seems like a rubbish publication after reading all of the contradictions in multiple articles.
They literally had “worst 10 Jaguars to own” and then followed that up with “Best 10 Jaguars to own…many of the same cars on both lists. Seems like a rubbish publication after reading all of the contradictions in multiple articles.
#27
.....The only time we got stranded was in our new XE. The issue was nothing more than a loose connector from the factory. All of the engines smell of coolant leaks without any visible sign of leakage.
And who is Audi's parent company? VW. Who is Porsche's parent company? VW. Great German engineering, huh?
Friends of ours owned Cadillacs. After 150,000 miles, they were replacing wheel bearings. The rear suspension of my wife's Cadillac XT4 kept stepping out (jumping sideways) whenever we drove across an expansion strip.
The more efficient vehicles have become, the more complexity and tighter the packaging which means that stuff is hidden from view. Unlike decades ago when we could easily see all the coolant hoses in an engine bay we now find the things buried in the most expensive locations.,,,,,
And who is Audi's parent company? VW. Who is Porsche's parent company? VW. Great German engineering, huh?
Friends of ours owned Cadillacs. After 150,000 miles, they were replacing wheel bearings. The rear suspension of my wife's Cadillac XT4 kept stepping out (jumping sideways) whenever we drove across an expansion strip.
The more efficient vehicles have become, the more complexity and tighter the packaging which means that stuff is hidden from view. Unlike decades ago when we could easily see all the coolant hoses in an engine bay we now find the things buried in the most expensive locations.,,,,,
Just when my Jaguar (the first Jaguar I ever owned in my entire bland life) starts to teach me all the things I never knew about TRUE driving skill and true car engineering,... luxury car companies everywhere take a nose dive into this lousy "modern" car/engine designing. Give customers glitzy computer imagery radar synchro navi light sensing splap that can't efficiently help you park, avoid traffic, notice pedestrians, hear ambulances or properly detect night from day any better than 10 years ago.... and force the mechanics to have to take off and scare up the entire body of your car...just to change a hose clamp.
This is supposed to be fun for us owners?
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sov211 (03-31-2023)
#28
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NewLester de Rocin (03-31-2023)
#29
I just looked at their website and read three pages of Jaguar specific articles that were posted.
They literally had “worst 10 Jaguars to own” and then followed that up with “Best 10 Jaguars to own…many of the same cars on both lists. Seems like a rubbish publication after reading all of the contradictions in multiple articles.
They literally had “worst 10 Jaguars to own” and then followed that up with “Best 10 Jaguars to own…many of the same cars on both lists. Seems like a rubbish publication after reading all of the contradictions in multiple articles.
The following 2 users liked this post by kb58:
NewLester de Rocin (03-31-2023),
sov211 (03-31-2023)
#30
#31
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