Are Japanese cars really better then european cars

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stan202, Feb 9, 4:55pm
opinions please.

vtecintegra, Feb 9, 4:56pm
Depends on the specific models

clark20, Feb 9, 4:57pm
How do you mean better! better to drive! Better to maintain! better value!

richynuts, Feb 9, 4:59pm
All of the above

socram, Feb 9, 5:04pm
Why do you ask!The answers are obvious - on each count.Are you comparing an Aston Martin Vanquish with a Suzuki Swift!

ryanm2, Feb 9, 6:45pm
My dick is bigger than yours.

tigra, Feb 9, 6:49pm
But does it have a documented service history

skull, Feb 9, 6:49pm
Ahh but your brain is smaller.unless you keep it in your dick.

sr2, Feb 9, 7:12pm
Brilliant, post of the week.

pebbles61, Feb 9, 7:24pm
Never buy the Jappa cars, not after the war! lol

doug207, Feb 9, 7:26pm
I prefer green cars.

chevcamaro, Feb 9, 7:29pm
to tight to pass wind i reckon, it all boils down to the quality of the nuts n bolts, and who , how, when they was put in. have a great day

daryl14, Feb 9, 7:31pm
Ooohh,Come on now that's a bit rash.

itsbutters, Feb 9, 7:33pm
Price-wise, I think older Jappas have it for reliability and cheap parts.

New cars, I get the impression, have good reliability regardless of manufacturer (with the exception of Ssangyong, Cheery etc). With a good service history they will do millions of kms. There is a 2008 Toyota Yaris on Reddit with over 440,000 miles http://i.imgur.com/vyZhY.jpg

tgray, Feb 9, 8:06pm
Any time now.

grangies, Feb 9, 8:11pm
Japan is one country, and Europe is many.

curlcrown, Feb 9, 9:03pm
Aston Martin is not European.

happylad3, Feb 9, 9:15pm
So England isn't in Europe now! Here's me thinking they were part of the EU and everything.

supernova2, Feb 9, 9:52pm
Lexus v Trabbant or Veyron v RX7!

sr2, Feb 9, 10:09pm
England is part of Europe, it's even in the EEC!

sharchew, Feb 10, 6:43am
I got a GOLD oneBMW

haventrader, Feb 10, 9:20am
I don't wish to enter a debate on this as this is completely off topic, but actually United Kingdom (made up of England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland) is not part of the EEC. They have very relaxed laws towards the EEC, but they have never "joined", as eg. Ireland had. That is why the UK continues to use Pound Sterling, and not Euro, amongst other European Union legislations.

kestrel43, Feb 10, 9:39am

kazbanz, Feb 10, 10:21am
Stan-from a purely appliance point of view in NZ YES.

tgray, Feb 10, 1:28pm
Won't be long.