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Tuesday, 12 March 2024

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One thing about cars is how democratic they are. No matter how much you spend on them when they're new, twelve or fifteen years later they're rusted, expensive parts start breaking and they're almost worthless.

I used to love stick stick too. I had a manual Miata much like yours. But I've changed my tune. Here's why:

How would an ideal engine behave? It would have good torque, power, and economy at any speed. But real internal combustion engines can't be made to work like that. The gears are an attempt to make up for the deficiencies of the IC engine's inherent properties.

Now I have a Toyota hybrid with a continuously variable transmission. It acts much closer to an ideal engine system in terms of having good power and acceleration at any speed. I don't miss a manual any more.

Emotionally speaking, collecting a repaired car from a mechanic is like retrieving your pet from the vet after a surgery.

My car is like a pet. I'm always so grateful for its years of faithful service.

In rare circumstances, you do form a bond with particular objects in your life. Bipeds are funny like that. Although... my chocolate Labrador carts her favourite three furry toys around like children. So maybe I should include quadrupeds in that assessment as well.

I owned a 1998 Integra GS-R. The shifter was brilliant even back then. What a pleasure to row.

But I don't think we can blame the banks for bland colors. I think the owners themselves are looking towards resale value. A car is such a big investment these days, people don't want to feel like they lost (more) money when they sell it.

Here's your choice of colours for cars today:

* Fleet Sales White

* Blacky-Greyish-Silvery Black-Grey Silver

* Massive Asian Market Red

* Marketing Said "Oh, for the love- we can't shoot an ad with these bland colours, we need something that stands out on a TV screen" Hypercolour Ultra Pearl Metallic Cosmic Chartreuse ($4500 premium)

[Ha! Maybe that's the reason for the occasional odd color! Acura does have a color called "Tiger Eye Pearl" which is very handsome, although it would make one stand out like a sore thumb as Cecelia noted. Closest description in standard English might be "gold." --Mike]

On the car colour question, I was told by someone with knowledge of the business that for many years Americans typically went to the dealership and bought (or leased) something from the lot. Dealers ordered boring colours to sell to the widest possible group of customers.

In Europe, so I’m told, customers typically ordered their cars, which allowed them to select the colour. So you see more variety in Europe.

Covid manufacturing delays may have changed this. When I bought my last vehicle, I had to order it and wait months for it to arrive. Buying from the lot was not an option. And no haggling on price!

I have a 2023 Civic Si in what I think is the beautiful Aegean Blue. It's not the most powerful car, but it's a nice balance of fun to drive and economy. I can get close to 40 mpg highway, or I can step on it and have fun. It has a similar short-throw shifter to the ITS.

But also, being a bright blue, it's easy to find in a parking lot. It stands out in a sea of white, black, and grey.

I always buy white vehicles because they are so much cooler in the summer and, contrary to common “wisdom”, they hide dirt much better than black or other dark colours.

I agree with Joel Becker that bland colours (I don’t consider white to be “bland”) are more about resale value. Unusual or unusually bold colours are most often a passing fad, I think. A few years down the road, assuming you have purchased rather than leased, resale will be more difficult with cars with colours that are no longer vogue.

That said, I find the current offerings of the grey-blue (light dusky blue?) to be very appealing. I might spring for that next time, though my ‘09 CR-V shows no signs of needing to be replaced any time soon. By which time that colour will be long gone.

200 HP from 1.5L is pretty good. My 2008 Honda Fit had 1.5L and only 117 HP. Yes, I bought it because it had a manual.

I too decided that I wanted the Acura ILX because of the manual option, but my wife wanted an SUV. I remember being quite excited when you bought the ILX. You have fine taste in vehicles!

I now drive a 2018 Subaru Crosstrek, mainly because it came with a manual. It was probably the only remaining model of SUV style vehicle with a manual. I hear the manuals are now being discontinued by Subaru. Mine is NOT the base model, which I find amazing! It's under-powered and the suspension is soft, but I like it. It's very good in the snow and relatively easy to maintain. It's a bland metallic dark grey, which isn't the colour I wanted (white, the only non-bland option), but it is what they had. No surprises there!

I do ramble on, don't I?

Living in Texas, land of the scorching Summers, I have to whole-heartedly agree with Earl Dunbar that white is the preferred color for survival.

Never thought though about the reverse in really cold climates were white cars are hard to differentiate from white snow. Could be a problem.

So, maybe selecting certain car colors can also be a regional preference.

Back in the day I had a third generation GS-R four door. Put a Recaro in the driver's seat and a CompTech exhaust on it (more low roar as opposed to loud). Ranks right up next to my '85 VW GTI as a most fun car to drive.

And can't forget the 8,000 rpm red line. We visited that neighborhood many, many times. Boy do I miss that car.

66 Falcon, blue, used
75 LeMans, silver, new
83 Accord hatchback, blue, new, best car ever
96 Caravan, blah red, new, about the worst
04 Accord Sedan, blue, new
16 Fit, Blue, new.

I'd buy either of the Accords again if they showed up new. The Fit is coming up 130,000 K (not quite 81,000 miles for Americans) and still going strong. I hate the thought of having to buy another car. I really dislike the so called 'infotainment' screen. An ugly word for an ugly concept.

As long as we are on the subject of cars I'll add my 2 pennies worth.
My "daily" driver is a 16 year old Toyota. Never have I had a more reliable friend. Color: silver. It gets washed when it rains. Always looks not dirty but not clean as in just washed. Now, I'm wondering If I should replace it. I should remember never to replace a good, reliable friend with an unknown quantity. But variety is the spice of life be it cars or cameras.

The one colour choice I can't understand is brown. A fine colour for a variety of things - chocolate, coffee, trees - but on a car, it's just terrible.

Our daily driver is a 2015 VW Passat 1.8 turbo. It is silver and it looks like old money. Love the car even with an automatic transmission which I occasionally use in manual mode.
Near Honda reliability (we have had two CRVs) and a 600 mile range on a tank.
Over the years Mrs Plews and I have owned two Saab 900s sedans. Glorious cars with the reliability of something from East Germany.
Never saw cars that loved the hook like those two beauties. I swear if I got behind a tow truck in traffic the car would try to climb up on it by itself.
Least reliable cars I ever encountered and I have two Triumphs in my past.
Still when they were running driving one was sublime.
Love is strange.

As a driver in a major metro area that includes drivers from 3 states and DC, with so many crazy/bad/incompetent drivers, what I want is some kind of super high visibility paint job, like black and fluorescent yellow or orange, or blue and fluorescent yellow livery like British traffic police drive.

Also, I used to drive a stick and loved it, but my sales manager told me I was crazy when I picked him up in my Subaru Outback in downtown Boston. Got me thinking, so now I'm automatic---but with paddles! Thanks F1!

I had sticks until I got tired of shifting in the Chicago traffic. My 3er wagon's eight speed auto shifts even better than me in sport mode.

BTW, If I remeber correctly, the Integra was always based on the Civic.

I saw a sticker on the back of a pickup truck that said "Millennial Anti-Theft Device" with a drawing of the familiar manual shift "H" pattern.

That description of an "ideal engine" above—that's what an electric motor is like.

I believe I'm on my 5th car right now (2010 model year Camry; actually purchased in 2009). My first-ever automatic; while that year Camry theoretically had a manual option, no dealer here had one, and I bought it when driving diagonally across the metro during rush hour most weeks, and the automatic got the same mileage. As I expected, I'm perfectly happy with the automatic.

The 1995–2001 Integra Type R is widely regarded as one of the best front-wheel-drive cars of all time.

Wikipedia

Mine was red and delivered 60,000 trouble-free miles in just two years. Fun to drive and easy on gas.

When I retired from photography(food photographer) I worked at an auto auction.
There were a lot of used Mercedes on the lot. Problems were mostly electrical. Interesting
to learn that. Bill

For your cruising pleasure:

-black or other very dark color for the night because they catch the gleams of street lights

-light toned colors for day driving.

I think it was light blue that photographers in the olden times film days liked best for new model events because it showed up best on film.

I finally sold my 2009 Pontiac G8 GT. It was beginning to have problems. I bought it new for $32,000 at 0% and just sold it for $12,000 with a minimal repair history.
I seriously looked at a Civic SI but it was too tight a fit both in terms of the very bolstered seat and foot well (small with 3 pedals). I've read that the 1.5 turbo engine isn't Honda's best, with a number of people having problems.
I ended up purchasing a Mazda 3 Premium with a manual transmission. After a bit of a adjustment period, the G8 being a very different car, I think I made a good decision for my probably last car. Nice manual, very comfortable seats, and beautiful interior. Given your Mazda history, I'd seriously look at this one.

If you want gobs of power, test drive an EV. A study up here in Canada just calculated that the lower cost of running one will offset the higher initial cost of purchase in 7 years for an average driver. And their mechanical simplicity obviates most trips to a mechanic. No more oil changes!

We just got a 2024 Hyundai Kona EV which suits our low-mileage rural needs, but you'd probably prefer the Ioniq 6 which is a sedan. The Kona's rear suspension is nothing to write home about but the Ioniq has been winning awards.

Coolest part on the EV experience is regen, the ability of the car to recharge its battery when slowing around corners or coming to a stop. In the Kona, paddles behind the steering wheel turn the regen level up and down. With a little practice you can use them to decelerate/accelerate through corners. Driving our winding mountains roads feels just like driving manual with paddle shifters, except you have even smoother control!

(My comment links to a short photo essay about the new Kona.)

A recent article documented that yellow cars had the best resale value. I'd guess that's because yellow is available only on a few performance cars now, and these low-production models are holding value better. Those buyers want to be seen in a fast car, so it's not all about the color. With non-automotive products, rarity greatly increases value. If a person wants a yellow car (or even brown, yum), they'd have to buy it from me. I'd know that when I set the price.

Sadly, modern drabness doesn't stop with cars. Last month I went out to buy a couple of flannel shirts. All I found were dingy gray plaids that looked fit for a lumberjack's funeral! When I tried that joke on a store clerk, she patiently explained that you wear a bright t-shirt underneath, for contrast and color. I left without a new shirt; when I'm at a thrift shop, I'll look for an old one.

When looking at real estate online and on cable TV, it's an endless stream of black countertops and white cabinets, or - let's get kwayzee here - the reverse. No warmth, no ornamentation and definitely none of the woodwork that the Boomers loved.

I'm going to stop now, and try to envision the coming colors of spring.

Two cars ago, I had a purple Honda Fit. It was purchased for my now-ex wife and I ended up with custody of it in the divorce. The color was not bad, for purple, and it was very easy to find when parked. My current and previous vehicle were both silver Honda HR-Vs; they are practically invisible in the sea of silver compact SUVs out there. This is great for anonymity, but really awful for trying to find your car on a public street or parking lot (esp. when your ADHD brain often refuses to retain the critical "parking location" datum). My next car will be green or red or blue or something, because there is definitely such thing as a car that's too anonymous.

[Mike replies: My very first car, a Mazda 323, was silver and as anonymous as can be. It also had a physical non-retractable antenna. Parked on the street in DC once, a breast-cancer awareness group came along and left flyers on all the windshields and also tied little red ribbons to all the antennas of the parked cars. I tried to take it off, but they had really knotted it on there and I figured I'd attend to it later. Well, that red ribbon was there for the whole rest of the 11 years I owned the car! At first it was just laziness, but as time passed the reason became what you mentioned--it made it a lot easier to find the darn thing.

Nowadays I'm in the habit of always parking in the same place at the places I go to regularly. It's curiously humiliating to lose your own car in a parking lot. It shouldn't be; it's not like anyone else can tell you've lost it, so you're not being laughed at. But it's not a good feeling anyway. --Mike]

It's always easy to find your car if you park as far away from the business as possible. My Silver Storm Metallic Honda Fit is the lone car parked 1.5 football fields from the entrance of the store.

I don't do it for that reason -- I'm trying to keep uncaring people from parking next to me and dinging my car -- but it's an added bonus. Plus, free exercise.

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