plh
Explorer
"But increased part count adding complexity really isn't the reason the new caddy is in a different league , is it? Could it be...... Design and QC/QA?"
That's my Quote from above. I guess you... agree.
Ok.. But for examples lets not use stats that "clip" the bar graph. As you can see when you drive past a ford dealer, 1 in five new auto broncos aren't failing to pull out of the lot, are they? .99 seems like a bit of a sucky number. Maybe use .9999 or .99999 to come up with a more realistic representation of parts actually being pushed out the door. Then we get 99.99% vs 99.96% and we ask if the .06% is statistically relevant enough to choose a 3 speed over a 10 speed?
Then lets look at the major moving components of a solid axle vs a independent. 2 cv's vs 4, at something representative like 99.99%.
We get 99.98 vs 99.96... .02% between them, but still both seem like ridiculously high rates of failure to me. I must be buying black market chinese parts.
so... hell... lets keep it unrealistic for ya, and use only 99% reliability for something as simple as a CV
And we end up with Pieces of "poop" assemblies either way at 98% and 96%
So, it makes sense for customers to choose Solid over Independent solely on this level of utter statistical irrelevance?
Yea. Its a non sequitur.
I missed documenting an important factor. The OE specs are generally 99% @ end of life. Depending on the OE it could be anywhere from 150K to 300K miles. So in USA average miles driven per year are 13.5K, so a lifetime for the vehicle is considered 11 to 22 years. There is a reason that certain OE vehicles have a better life maintenance track record than others.
A certain department of our government keeps great records of what vehicles remain on the road (registered) by model year. Being statistics are great a generalization, by the time a vehicle is 20 years old, there aren't a lot of them left on the road. Accidents are a huge contributor to this and other factors of course. Its in the 35% range still registered.
Oh and as far as IFS vs Solid axle. People in USA expect a comfy ride. Mall Crawlers are much more common than rock climbers.
Design, design tools, manufacturing tool improvements - of course a lot of things have changed since 1958 - that transmission was designed with a pencil and paper, not so much in 2023.
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