GabeBoyTheGreat
Well-Known Member
I really don't think any vehicle made in the past 10 years will be serviceable for 50 years. The reason older vehicles are serviceable is because aftermarket parts can be swapped in when the OEM eventually stops making the parts.When you buy from a start up manufacturer that's a real risk. If it's built by the big 6 it will be serviceable for at least 50 years in my opinion and in documented history. Not to mention even the fisker owners have a network of independent shops that can service them just fine according to the fisker owners association.
There are too many sensors on newer vehicles and they all have to be functioning in order for the vehicle to work properly, and they are not very forgiving when it comes to modifications. As long as the software can cause a "limp mode" scenario due to a faulty sensor that would otherwise be completely unnecessary, these vehicles will not be serviceable once the OEM stops supporting them.
The JL/JT might be the exception simply due to the vast aftermarket support for them, but my opinion is you are smoking crack if you think a 2025 Toyota Corolla will be serviceable for 50 years. To each their own. I know you reference documented history but there is not 50 years of documented history on modern vehicle design, so "documented history" is completely irrelevant.
I have come across independent shops that simply will not touch modern vehicle electronics due to the complexity and pickiness of the software. So if the OEM stops servicing these vehicles and independent shops can't/won't service them, who do you expect will do the work?
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