Toyota trucks run around here with "Made in Texas" stickers on them, and it drives me crazy - "Assembled" and "Made" are not the same thing. To me, it's a sticker that says, "This truck supports Japanese corporations on the backs of hard working Texans!"averagef250 wrote:I noticed Toyota North American vehicle standards and design really took a big direction change in 1995. They stopped doing things the "Toyota way" and started doing things exactly the same as Detroit builders for the American market.
Toyota (Toyoda) is a world company, they are beyond huge. They have an amazing array of different vehicles designed for their specific markets.
An example would be the difference between the 100 and 200 series Landcruiser that is sold in North America and the 70 and 105 series cruisers sold in Japan and Australia. America wants a suppository shaped SUV with loads of plastic crap, a high revving V8 and in dash navigation. Asia and Australia customers want inline six and turbodiesels with solid front axles and durability. Australian Landcruisers get the A442 automatic or H150 cast iron 5 speed. American versions get the A340/A343 autos with no option of stickshift since 1988. Americans buy on looks, widgets and a HP number. We want hype, not facts. Other countries buy on quality.
Bottom line is manufacturers make what the customers demand. The USA consumer trend is to buy cheap crap. Just look at how many Harbor Freight (Hazard Fraught) stores there are out there.
The good news is that there are still a large number of successful manufacturing businesses in North America building quality products for the world.
Why does America end up with space-shuttle shaped SUV's? Smog-laws, safety-ratings, and MPG criteria. The same laws that forced the auto companies to eradicate the tried & true work-horse I6 from existence, and then backed them with autos because of warranty mandates, and (despite my love for a standard trans, admittedly, this may be well-founded) manufacturers don't trust the general public not to burn up clutches only to be replaced regularly by the dealerships for free. However, manufacturers also can't program a manual trans for mileage as they can an auto, so it comes full circle yet again. Try finding a new V8-powered 1/2-ton with a manual trans nowadays - Ram might make one, but Italian-owned Chrysler won't put one behind a Hemi, and I've heard that there are plans to do away with stick-shifts available behind the anemic Magnum 4.7 as well; meanwhile, there are no other choices. These are exactly the reasons I come here to praise the trucks of the good ole' days.