devellis
Been here awhile...
- Joined
- Nov 20, 2017
- Messages
- 511
- Reaction score
- 204
- Points
- 43
- Location
- North Carolina
- Genesis Model Type
- No Genesis Yet!
Actually, it depends on the specific car, I think. I've had a couple of BMWs (a Z3 that I drove and a 323 that my wife drove) and neither was high on the luxury barometer. Sure the 7-series is luxurious but dollar-for-dollar, I never considered the BMW terribly luxurious in comparison to some of its competitors. My brother was part-owner of a dealership that sold Mercedes and he used to say that "German cows must not be happy" (a reference to the "happy cows" ads for California dairy products) as a way of noting that the leather in Mercedes and BMW always felt more utilitarian than luxurious in comparison to comparable Japanese cars. Jaguar also seems to get the luxury concept better than BMW. And BMW in particular has a way of withholding features on lesser models (true of Jaguar, too) to create a differentiation between those and the higher-tier models. My wife's current Subaru Outback V6 has more nice little luxury touches and nicer leather than her BMW did, by far. With every Japanese car I've owned, I had the experience of finding little features that I hadn't expected, that weren't touted in the advertising lieterature. With the German cars, it was just the opposite. Stuff I'd assumed (like that both the driver and passenger seats were powered) would turn out not to be there.
Of course, the highest tier of German luxury cars are loaded with nice features and materials. But at the level of the G70, I've not found the BMW or Mercedes (ridden in literally dozens of them when my brother was still in the business; and my sister owned several) to stand out in terms of luxury. Nor have I found the touted "German engineering" to be that great. The German cars I've owned (VWs and BMWs) were more problematic than any of the Japanese cars I've owned, with failures of major components being commonplace with them. Even the notoriously problematic RX-7 rotaries (three of them) I've owned were far more reliable (actually, pretty trouble-free in my case) than the German cars. And, again, my brother never felt that Mercedes (which is the brand he was most strongly associated with when he was in the car business) was great at reliability. The company was hugely innovative and would come up with ideas that other manufacturers would then copy, often implementing them more reliably than Mercedes had.
Audis do seem to do much better with luxury. Not so much with reliability.
Of course, no car is perfect and it's always a matter trading off some things for others. Different drivers will judge some aspects of a car to be more important that other drivers will. For me, once a car has the features I want, additional "luxury" really doesn't enhance its value. But I certainly know other people for whom more luxury touches are really important. Wood grain trim (real or fake) on the interior has never been a factor that influenced my buying decisions in the least. But I know other people who are wild about it. We're all a bit different.
Of course, the highest tier of German luxury cars are loaded with nice features and materials. But at the level of the G70, I've not found the BMW or Mercedes (ridden in literally dozens of them when my brother was still in the business; and my sister owned several) to stand out in terms of luxury. Nor have I found the touted "German engineering" to be that great. The German cars I've owned (VWs and BMWs) were more problematic than any of the Japanese cars I've owned, with failures of major components being commonplace with them. Even the notoriously problematic RX-7 rotaries (three of them) I've owned were far more reliable (actually, pretty trouble-free in my case) than the German cars. And, again, my brother never felt that Mercedes (which is the brand he was most strongly associated with when he was in the car business) was great at reliability. The company was hugely innovative and would come up with ideas that other manufacturers would then copy, often implementing them more reliably than Mercedes had.
Audis do seem to do much better with luxury. Not so much with reliability.
Of course, no car is perfect and it's always a matter trading off some things for others. Different drivers will judge some aspects of a car to be more important that other drivers will. For me, once a car has the features I want, additional "luxury" really doesn't enhance its value. But I certainly know other people for whom more luxury touches are really important. Wood grain trim (real or fake) on the interior has never been a factor that influenced my buying decisions in the least. But I know other people who are wild about it. We're all a bit different.