The same at Avonmouth last week. Looked to be only a handful of fiat 500s
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Coming back from a short stay in Cornwall today I traveled past Portbury docks on the M5, if there was ever a pic that tells you what’s happening to the new car market this is it.
Normally this is brimming with vehicles as far as the eye can see but there is literally not one car in any car park
Weird times!
The same at Avonmouth last week. Looked to be only a handful of fiat 500s
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The true reality is that most cars are still ok when 20 years old because the quality and reliability is still good . We don't need to keep buying new cars like we used to. So be grateful we are importing less of the things and if you want one, buy a UK manufactured car.
Whilst this may be true ( at first glance )
It is also impractical - as there are few remaining UK car manufacturers... if you want one, buy a UK manufactured car.
Unless we all drive around in a Lotus or Noble 2 seater supercar...
...& also has a whiff of Brexit to me...
If you disagree - then hit the BP...
z
Ha, I live not far from this junction and it’s not often that car park is empty, I also went over today but didn’t notice the lack of new cars/vans.
There is another newer big car park at the top of Junction 19, that is also full most of the time, I’ll have to look next time I drive past..
https://www.carkeys.co.uk/news/what-...uced-in-the-uk
Still a few, some affordable.
M
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Breitling Cosmonaute 809 - What's not to like?
I took micks comment as UK manufactured rather than UK owned but I may be wrong?
Anyway it’s a moot point surely as the issue is relating to semiconductors which is affecting all manufactures not just UK
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Just passed them a couple of hours ago on the way to Somerset. Still absolutely empty.
You can buy Teslas with fast delivery and good for the environment as well
But you have to give money to that knob Elon Musk...
M
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Breitling Cosmonaute 809 - What's not to like?
My main point is that you don't need to replace your car every couple of years anymore because todays cars are so good that they will give 20 years of reliable service. Therefore if your car is say 5 years old, why not keep it for another 15 years. That way we would cut car production down and Toyota and Nissan would probably provide a high percentage of our needs.
If your urge to renew is great, then so be it but please do not ever moan about climate change because constant over purchase of goods must be a contributing factor.
I have a conscience about my own level of over purchase and am making an effort to reduce it. The one thing I want to get out of is buying stuff for no good reason.
If you think that is something to make snide comments about with daft pics etc, then be my guest.
You would need to define UK manufactured, all cars assembled in the UK are made from kits of imported parts, if the car makers published the actual UK content people who thought that they were buying British would be horrified. This would be easy to do as manufacturing location for every component for every car is logged in IMDS https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intern...al_Data_System
I don’t fully understand the bit about climate change. If I bought a vehicle 20 years ago the vehicle would be equipped with the latest tech of the day to reduce the emissions to what was acceptable back then. Of course you do realise that a lot newer vehicle would have far less impact on the environment than something that was made 20 years ago. I fully take your point about unnecessary purchases but don’t dress it up as saving the environment because i think we both know that’s rubbish if we’re talking about cars
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There is the embedded carbon in the manufacturing process, which increases with the size of the car. Keeping a car for longer is better for the environment. Having a smaller car is better. Having an EV is better.
If you make a car last to 200,000 miles rather than 100,000, then the emissions for each mile the car does in its lifetime may drop by as much as 50%,
The problem with climate change/sustainability/the environment is that governments don't really care, no one has forced Coca Cola to stop using disposable plastic bottles or nappy suppliers to stop making disposable nappies, or Amazon flogging us stuff we don't really need, or Apple punting out phones with built in obsolescence, or car manufacturers making cars we don't need, it's all about business and profit
Apart from the huge amount of energy from making steel, tyres, paint etc. etc. and rare earth materials required to make a Tesla and its batteries.
Plus all the energy required to manufacturer the solar panels, wind turbines, substations, copper cables etc etc.
I get the point about Tesla’s not burning fossil fuels <which they are at the moment since the U.K. is burning coal to generate electricity>, but on a well to wheel basis they are still not kind to the environment
This is pretty much how I see it. That and the fact (I'm generalising obviously) that I see Tesla owners being the same kind of people who change their iPhone as soon as the newer model comes out so they can be the best. Still maybe that will push the prices down to real world affordability for most.
Are you kidding me, do you realise how much carbon it takes to make it in the first place, including the second house?
I’ve got no issues with it, enjoy your life, but having 2 homes and thinking you’re environmentally aware is not compatible. You’re living the dream but at least own it. Otherwise it really does reflect poorly on you.
That report was from 2010, since then manufacturing techniques have changed somewhat, most “claim” now that they’re carbon neutral and CO2 is offset in other ways. Whether you believe that or not is another matter but I’m looking at it has a pure pollution issue.
Take a car manufactured back in 2005, the maker back then would have given little thought to the impact on the environment when that car was being produced, we were still in the realms of EU3 and going in to EU4 in 2005 depending on date. Now the latest standards are EU6(d) which are 5 times less NOX than 16 years ago.
That also isn’t taking in to account the normal degradation that happens to all engines as the years role on. How many times have you been driving down the motorway following something spewing out clouds of smoke at every press of the accelerator or when the turbo cuts in?
If we are talking about environmental issues ( and direct impact to health ) I can’t believe that keeping a 20 plus year old car on the road is better than purchasing a new vehicle especially if we’re talking petrol / hyrbrid.
Last edited by Franky Four Fingers; 26th October 2021 at 18:05.
What about a 20 year fiesta, still l got to be doing 30mpg. Not that much more carbon produced compared to a modern fiesta?
Slightly more up to date https://www.wired.com/2016/03/teslas...reen-think/amp
I don’t know what the answers are but it certainly seems they aren’t black and white and there doesn’t seem to be an easy one.
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Last edited by Rodder; 26th October 2021 at 18:14.