I would prefer if I could fix it myself but businesses need to make a profit and we still can fix some things ourselves.
Don Savik said:As technology and fields become more specialized, and our population increases, a DIY attitude is just bad for the society.
Think of us becoming less like a gang of 5 gorrilaz that sit around in the jungle and do everything ourselves, and transforming into a colony of a bajillion ants, each with certain roles.
Its the course of all expanding societies.
I would like to solve all my problems but guess what? Car repair doesn't interest a lot of people. ITS BORING. A lot of people would like to make their own food, but guess what? FARMING IS EQUALLY BORING. So if we can designate certain tasks to the individuals that ENJOY IT than everyone can be happy. I see no negative to relying on your fellow man for help. Screw old people and their selfish ways.
How's that the designers fault? People want cars with a billion gadgets, better fuel efficiency, sound proofing, more room, a dozen airbags, and this that and the other thing. They have to cut down the size and weight of the car while finding room for all that, all while keeping production costs down. Means they have to get up to funny stuff.loc978 said:Problem is, the advancement has been pretty superficial. Sure, my car doesn't have leather heated seats, an onboard computer, HUD, satnav, et cetera... but it gets better gas mileage than a Prius, travels about the same speed, costs far less in maintenance, and was built in 1974... and because it's owned by me, it'll probably be driving long after the last Prius goes through an extremely costly disposal process... but that's just one example.hulksmashley said:Also, there seems to be alot of "mechanical engineers are evil!!! They designed a car to advanced for me to fix!!" in this thread.
Maybe I'm wrong, but it seems like a reasonable cost of technological advancement to me.
Also, I can fix a new car, but it takes much longer, thanks to space-saving tendencies of engineers. The biggest problem with maintaining a new car is how tightly everything fits together. Want to get to the transmission? Pull the skid plate, exhaust, half a dozen fuel lines... and that's if you have a lift. Want to get at it from the top? Pull the engine.
Oh, and my favorite... wanna get at the battery? pull the front left wheel. Christ I hate modern cars. Don't get me wrong, there's a lot of great technology in 'em, but the people designing 'em need to be in on building and fixing prototypes. Physically.
Well said. Even Plato's been quoted for giving the whole "Them youngin's got no respect!" tirade. I think it would be awesome if someone too old to be alive today were to come on this thread and posted "Back in my day, we didn't have these fancy wheel machine thingys called cars. If you wanted to get somewhere, and it was too far to walk, you had to ride a horse!"Korolev said:Stuff that was entertaining to read.
1974 mini. 1L i4. 55mpg highway, around 46-48 city. Carbureted. Also about 20% faster than stock. Just takes a little tuning, no high-performance replacement parts. "Brand new" is a funny term, people like to assume that means "as good as it will ever be". The truth is often quite the opposite.halfeclipse said:How's that the designers fault? People want cars with a billion gadgets, better fuel efficiency, sound proofing, more room, a dozen airbags, and this that and the other thing. They have to cut down the size and weight of the car while finding room for all that, all while keeping production costs down. Means they have to get up to funny stuff.loc978 said:Problem is, the advancement has been pretty superficial. Sure, my car doesn't have leather heated seats, an onboard computer, HUD, satnav, et cetera... but it gets better gas mileage than a Prius, travels about the same speed, costs far less in maintenance, and was built in 1974... and because it's owned by me, it'll probably be driving long after the last Prius goes through an extremely costly disposal process... but that's just one example.hulksmashley said:Also, there seems to be alot of "mechanical engineers are evil!!! They designed a car to advanced for me to fix!!" in this thread.
Maybe I'm wrong, but it seems like a reasonable cost of technological advancement to me.
Also, I can fix a new car, but it takes much longer, thanks to space-saving tendencies of engineers. The biggest problem with maintaining a new car is how tightly everything fits together. Want to get to the transmission? Pull the skid plate, exhaust, half a dozen fuel lines... and that's if you have a lift. Want to get at it from the top? Pull the engine.
Oh, and my favorite... wanna get at the battery? pull the front left wheel. Christ I hate modern cars. Don't get me wrong, there's a lot of great technology in 'em, but the people designing 'em need to be in on building and fixing prototypes. Physically.
Oh and a 2012 Prius will do 40-50 MPG. If it's from the 70s Whatever your driving may have done 25, maybe 30 MPG brand new. Now?
Now see thought you'd at least be driving something in the same weight class as a prius. saying your mini gets better fuel mileage then a midsize is just d. It's much smaller then the prius and probably 2/3-1/2 the weight. A better comparison would be those bitty things popular in Japan which get something like 60-70 MPG highway.loc978 said:1974 mini. 1L i4. 55mpg highway, around 46-48 city. Carbureted. Also about 20% faster than stock. Just takes a little tuning, no high-performance replacement parts. "Brand new" is a funny term, people like to assume that means "as good as it will ever be". The truth is often quite the opposite.halfeclipse said:How's that the designers fault? People want cars with a billion gadgets, better fuel efficiency, sound proofing, more room, a dozen airbags, and this that and the other thing. They have to cut down the size and weight of the car while finding room for all that, all while keeping production costs down. Means they have to get up to funny stuff.loc978 said:Problem is, the advancement has been pretty superficial. Sure, my car doesn't have leather heated seats, an onboard computer, HUD, satnav, et cetera... but it gets better gas mileage than a Prius, travels about the same speed, costs far less in maintenance, and was built in 1974... and because it's owned by me, it'll probably be driving long after the last Prius goes through an extremely costly disposal process... but that's just one example.hulksmashley said:Also, there seems to be alot of "mechanical engineers are evil!!! They designed a car to advanced for me to fix!!" in this thread.
Maybe I'm wrong, but it seems like a reasonable cost of technological advancement to me.
Also, I can fix a new car, but it takes much longer, thanks to space-saving tendencies of engineers. The biggest problem with maintaining a new car is how tightly everything fits together. Want to get to the transmission? Pull the skid plate, exhaust, half a dozen fuel lines... and that's if you have a lift. Want to get at it from the top? Pull the engine.
Oh, and my favorite... wanna get at the battery? pull the front left wheel. Christ I hate modern cars. Don't get me wrong, there's a lot of great technology in 'em, but the people designing 'em need to be in on building and fixing prototypes. Physically.
Oh and a 2012 Prius will do 40-50 MPG. If it's from the 70s Whatever your driving may have done 25, maybe 30 MPG brand new. Now?
As for the designers... I suppose it's not their fault. I could blame "our culture" which is my usual fallback, but what's the solution? I don't think there is one, aside from forcibly take people's toys away... but no one wants to live in a society that controls their lives at that level. Sad thing is, this one already figured out how, without taking options away. Group psychology is a dangerous thing.
What.the hell. was that?The .50 Caliber Cow said:[sub][sub]Moo! [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f9iIgQN5uZE][/sub][/sub]
Funny. My phone gets more battery power than an iPhone with a removable battery.broadbandaddict said:One thing to remember with non removable batteries is that you can increase the battery capacity by doing so. Apple reported a 40% increase when they switched to unibody construction because they didn't have to install a door, locking mechanism, physical sides to the battery shell, etc. Imagine if the iPad had a removable battery and got 60% of the battery life it does... no one would be happy.Zachary Amaranth said:And I'm especially annoyed that replaceable batteries are becoming a thing of the past. Are people really so clueless that they actually think sending their tablet in and paying an exorbitant service fee is a good thing?
Well hardware factors into battery life a considerable bit. New tech will usually (read: hopefully) get better battery life than previous tech. I had an iPhone 4 and recently switched to a Galaxy Nexus and the Nexus definitely gets better battery life while being removable but the phone is physically larger. The non removable battery was more of a thing for the laptops because they boosted the life from 4-5 hours to 7-8 hours. The iPad batteries would be weird to have anyways, think of how big they would be and I'm assuming they would be easy to damage as well.Zachary Amaranth said:Funny. My phone gets more battery power than an iPhone with a removable battery.
Pretty sure Apple only did it this way so that they could keep their battery power while maintaining their usual obscene profit margins. It has no correlation to what's doable, but what's cheap
...which never make it to the states because of our insane crash safety laws owing to our insanely easy-to-acquire licenses (but that's another debate entirely). Also, the Prius' weight class is pretty far above its size class, owing to the electric motors and batteries. You want an example with the same cargo space as one? Geo Metro/Chevy Sprint/Suzuki Swift from the early 90s. Again, with a little tuning, those get better gas mileage at about the same speed as the Prius... and they're cheap and easy to maintain. Progress nil.halfeclipse said:iGooglerloc978 said:1974 mini. 1L i4. 55mpg highway, around 46-48 city. Carbureted. Also about 20% faster than stock. Just takes a little tuning, no high-performance replacement parts. "Brand new" is a funny term, people like to assume that means "as good as it will ever be". The truth is often quite the opposite.halfeclipse said:How's that the designers fault? People want cars with a billion gadgets, better fuel efficiency, sound proofing, more room, a dozen airbags, and this that and the other thing. They have to cut down the size and weight of the car while finding room for all that, all while keeping production costs down. Means they have to get up to funny stuff.loc978 said:Problem is, the advancement has been pretty superficial. Sure, my car doesn't have leather heated seats, an onboard computer, HUD, satnav, et cetera... but it gets better gas mileage than a Prius, travels about the same speed, costs far less in maintenance, and was built in 1974... and because it's owned by me, it'll probably be driving long after the last Prius goes through an extremely costly disposal process... but that's just one example.hulksmashley said:Also, there seems to be alot of "mechanical engineers are evil!!! They designed a car to advanced for me to fix!!" in this thread.
Maybe I'm wrong, but it seems like a reasonable cost of technological advancement to me.
Also, I can fix a new car, but it takes much longer, thanks to space-saving tendencies of engineers. The biggest problem with maintaining a new car is how tightly everything fits together. Want to get to the transmission? Pull the skid plate, exhaust, half a dozen fuel lines... and that's if you have a lift. Want to get at it from the top? Pull the engine.
Oh, and my favorite... wanna get at the battery? pull the front left wheel. Christ I hate modern cars. Don't get me wrong, there's a lot of great technology in 'em, but the people designing 'em need to be in on building and fixing prototypes. Physically.
Oh and a 2012 Prius will do 40-50 MPG. If it's from the 70s Whatever your driving may have done 25, maybe 30 MPG brand new. Now?
As for the designers... I suppose it's not their fault. I could blame "our culture" which is my usual fallback, but what's the solution? I don't think there is one, aside from forcibly take people's toys away... but no one wants to live in a society that controls their lives at that level. Sad thing is, this one already figured out how, without taking options away. Group psychology is a dangerous thing.
Now see thought you'd at least be driving something in the same weight class as a prius. saying your mini gets better fuel mileage then a midsize is just d. It's much smaller then the prius and probably 2/3-1/2 the weight. A better comparison would be those bitty things popular in Japan which get something like 60-70 MPG highway.
"iGoogler." Or you know a basic understanding of mechanics, weight, and physics?loc978 said:...which never make it to the states because of our insane crash safety laws owing to our insanely easy-to-acquire licenses (but that's another debate entirely). Also, the Prius' weight class is pretty far above its size class, owing to the electric motors and batteries. You want an example with the same cargo space as one? Geo Metro/Chevy Sprint/Suzuki Swift from the early 90s. Again, with a little tuning, those get better gas mileage at about the same speed as the Prius... and they're cheap and easy to maintain. Progress nil.halfeclipse said:iGooglerloc978 said:1974 mini. 1L i4. 55mpg highway, around 46-48 city. Carbureted. Also about 20% faster than stock. Just takes a little tuning, no high-performance replacement parts. "Brand new" is a funny term, people like to assume that means "as good as it will ever be". The truth is often quite the opposite.halfeclipse said:How's that the designers fault? People want cars with a billion gadgets, better fuel efficiency, sound proofing, more room, a dozen airbags, and this that and the other thing. They have to cut down the size and weight of the car while finding room for all that, all while keeping production costs down. Means they have to get up to funny stuff.loc978 said:Problem is, the advancement has been pretty superficial. Sure, my car doesn't have leather heated seats, an onboard computer, HUD, satnav, et cetera... but it gets better gas mileage than a Prius, travels about the same speed, costs far less in maintenance, and was built in 1974... and because it's owned by me, it'll probably be driving long after the last Prius goes through an extremely costly disposal process... but that's just one example.hulksmashley said:Also, there seems to be alot of "mechanical engineers are evil!!! They designed a car to advanced for me to fix!!" in this thread.
Maybe I'm wrong, but it seems like a reasonable cost of technological advancement to me.
Also, I can fix a new car, but it takes much longer, thanks to space-saving tendencies of engineers. The biggest problem with maintaining a new car is how tightly everything fits together. Want to get to the transmission? Pull the skid plate, exhaust, half a dozen fuel lines... and that's if you have a lift. Want to get at it from the top? Pull the engine.
Oh, and my favorite... wanna get at the battery? pull the front left wheel. Christ I hate modern cars. Don't get me wrong, there's a lot of great technology in 'em, but the people designing 'em need to be in on building and fixing prototypes. Physically.
Oh and a 2012 Prius will do 40-50 MPG. If it's from the 70s Whatever your driving may have done 25, maybe 30 MPG brand new. Now?
As for the designers... I suppose it's not their fault. I could blame "our culture" which is my usual fallback, but what's the solution? I don't think there is one, aside from forcibly take people's toys away... but no one wants to live in a society that controls their lives at that level. Sad thing is, this one already figured out how, without taking options away. Group psychology is a dangerous thing.
Now see thought you'd at least be driving something in the same weight class as a prius. saying your mini gets better fuel mileage then a midsize is just d. It's much smaller then the prius and probably 2/3-1/2 the weight. A better comparison would be those bitty things popular in Japan which get something like 60-70 MPG highway.
So... your point is that if they can get a heavier car to get decent gas mileage, that's an excuse to design cars heavier than they need to be? I understand that heavier cars are less efficient... that's why designers used to try to make lighter fucking cars.halfeclipse said:"iGoogler." Or you know a basic understanding of mechanics, weight, and physics?loc978 said:...which never make it to the states because of our insane crash safety laws owing to our insanely easy-to-acquire licenses (but that's another debate entirely). Also, the Prius' weight class is pretty far above its size class, owing to the electric motors and batteries. You want an example with the same cargo space as one? Geo Metro/Chevy Sprint/Suzuki Swift from the early 90s. Again, with a little tuning, those get better gas mileage at about the same speed as the Prius... and they're cheap and easy to maintain. Progress nil.halfeclipse said:iGooglerloc978 said:1974 mini. 1L i4. 55mpg highway, around 46-48 city. Carbureted. Also about 20% faster than stock. Just takes a little tuning, no high-performance replacement parts. "Brand new" is a funny term, people like to assume that means "as good as it will ever be". The truth is often quite the opposite.halfeclipse said:How's that the designers fault? People want cars with a billion gadgets, better fuel efficiency, sound proofing, more room, a dozen airbags, and this that and the other thing. They have to cut down the size and weight of the car while finding room for all that, all while keeping production costs down. Means they have to get up to funny stuff.loc978 said:Problem is, the advancement has been pretty superficial. Sure, my car doesn't have leather heated seats, an onboard computer, HUD, satnav, et cetera... but it gets better gas mileage than a Prius, travels about the same speed, costs far less in maintenance, and was built in 1974... and because it's owned by me, it'll probably be driving long after the last Prius goes through an extremely costly disposal process... but that's just one example.hulksmashley said:Also, there seems to be alot of "mechanical engineers are evil!!! They designed a car to advanced for me to fix!!" in this thread.
Maybe I'm wrong, but it seems like a reasonable cost of technological advancement to me.
Also, I can fix a new car, but it takes much longer, thanks to space-saving tendencies of engineers. The biggest problem with maintaining a new car is how tightly everything fits together. Want to get to the transmission? Pull the skid plate, exhaust, half a dozen fuel lines... and that's if you have a lift. Want to get at it from the top? Pull the engine.
Oh, and my favorite... wanna get at the battery? pull the front left wheel. Christ I hate modern cars. Don't get me wrong, there's a lot of great technology in 'em, but the people designing 'em need to be in on building and fixing prototypes. Physically.
Oh and a 2012 Prius will do 40-50 MPG. If it's from the 70s Whatever your driving may have done 25, maybe 30 MPG brand new. Now?
As for the designers... I suppose it's not their fault. I could blame "our culture" which is my usual fallback, but what's the solution? I don't think there is one, aside from forcibly take people's toys away... but no one wants to live in a society that controls their lives at that level. Sad thing is, this one already figured out how, without taking options away. Group psychology is a dangerous thing.
Now see thought you'd at least be driving something in the same weight class as a prius. saying your mini gets better fuel mileage then a midsize is just d. It's much smaller then the prius and probably 2/3-1/2 the weight. A better comparison would be those bitty things popular in Japan which get something like 60-70 MPG highway.
Weight is a far bigger factor on fuel efficiency then size, something like a 2% loss of efficiency per 50 kilos? The battery and motors will be what it 150 kilos at worst? Even if you hauled that out if Prius doesn't have something 500 kilos on the Geo I'd be shocked. Size is of course a concern as well, but WAY to much math to work that out.
Even assuming the Geo or Sprint got the same MPG as a Prius (It doesn't unless the person driving the Prius is a dumbass, or mostly drives highway.) you still need to adjust that for weight. Scaled down the Prius would still get something like 15%-20% better fuel mileage. 19%-26% if you include the battery weight.
I wish I had your optimism. I'm afraid (as in, me personally) that not enough people have the willpower (or intelligence) to embrace the power of technology that would enable them to better serve themselves. Allow me to explain with an example.Kilyle said:I'd say that there's at least an encouraging counter-point to all of this: Thanks to the Internet, consumers are becoming more aware of their options and more willing to shop around, or even to get the information they need to do something by themselves rather than forking over hard-earned cash for every minor annoyance.
loc978 said:So... your point is that if they can get a heavier car to get decent gas mileage, that's an excuse to design cars heavier than they need to be? I understand that heavier cars are less efficient... that's why designers used to try to make lighter fucking cars.halfeclipse said:"iGoogler." Or you know a basic understanding of mechanics, weight, and physics?loc978 said:...which never make it to the states because of our insane crash safety laws owing to our insanely easy-to-acquire licenses (but that's another debate entirely). Also, the Prius' weight class is pretty far above its size class, owing to the electric motors and batteries. You want an example with the same cargo space as one? Geo Metro/Chevy Sprint/Suzuki Swift from the early 90s. Again, with a little tuning, those get better gas mileage at about the same speed as the Prius... and they're cheap and easy to maintain. Progress nil.halfeclipse said:iGooglerloc978 said:1974 mini. 1L i4. 55mpg highway, around 46-48 city. Carbureted. Also about 20% faster than stock. Just takes a little tuning, no high-performance replacement parts. "Brand new" is a funny term, people like to assume that means "as good as it will ever be". The truth is often quite the opposite.halfeclipse said:How's that the designers fault? People want cars with a billion gadgets, better fuel efficiency, sound proofing, more room, a dozen airbags, and this that and the other thing. They have to cut down the size and weight of the car while finding room for all that, all while keeping production costs down. Means they have to get up to funny stuff.loc978 said:Problem is, the advancement has been pretty superficial. Sure, my car doesn't have leather heated seats, an onboard computer, HUD, satnav, et cetera... but it gets better gas mileage than a Prius, travels about the same speed, costs far less in maintenance, and was built in 1974... and because it's owned by me, it'll probably be driving long after the last Prius goes through an extremely costly disposal process... but that's just one example.hulksmashley said:Also, there seems to be alot of "mechanical engineers are evil!!! They designed a car to advanced for me to fix!!" in this thread.
Maybe I'm wrong, but it seems like a reasonable cost of technological advancement to me.
Also, I can fix a new car, but it takes much longer, thanks to space-saving tendencies of engineers. The biggest problem with maintaining a new car is how tightly everything fits together. Want to get to the transmission? Pull the skid plate, exhaust, half a dozen fuel lines... and that's if you have a lift. Want to get at it from the top? Pull the engine.
Oh, and my favorite... wanna get at the battery? pull the front left wheel. Christ I hate modern cars. Don't get me wrong, there's a lot of great technology in 'em, but the people designing 'em need to be in on building and fixing prototypes. Physically.
Oh and a 2012 Prius will do 40-50 MPG. If it's from the 70s Whatever your driving may have done 25, maybe 30 MPG brand new. Now?
As for the designers... I suppose it's not their fault. I could blame "our culture" which is my usual fallback, but what's the solution? I don't think there is one, aside from forcibly take people's toys away... but no one wants to live in a society that controls their lives at that level. Sad thing is, this one already figured out how, without taking options away. Group psychology is a dangerous thing.
Now see thought you'd at least be driving something in the same weight class as a prius. saying your mini gets better fuel mileage then a midsize is just d. It's much smaller then the prius and probably 2/3-1/2 the weight. A better comparison would be those bitty things popular in Japan which get something like 60-70 MPG highway.
Weight is a far bigger factor on fuel efficiency then size, something like a 2% loss of efficiency per 50 kilos? The battery and motors will be what it 150 kilos at worst? Even if you hauled that out if Prius doesn't have something 500 kilos on the Geo I'd be shocked. Size is of course a concern as well, but WAY to much math to work that out.
Even assuming the Geo or Sprint got the same MPG as a Prius (It doesn't unless the person driving the Prius is a dumbass, or mostly drives highway.) you still need to adjust that for weight. Scaled down the Prius would still get something like 15%-20% better fuel mileage. 19%-26% if you include the battery weight.
As for suzuki 1L 3-cyl engines and fuel economy in a car that weighs a little over a ton (and yes, I know the Prius weighs about a ton and a half, 3042lbs to be exact. That's one of the things that's wrong with the design. It's a compact hatchback that weighs as much as a mid-sized sedan)... I used that example because it's what my uncle drives. He gets a little better mileage than I do out of my mini (1993 Metro, averages around 58mpg from it). I guess you could say that's progress, but it happened between the 70s and the 90s. We've had plenty of technological breakthroughs since then, but not many that are implemented for increased efficiency or longevity of the vehicle.
'Course, building a reliable vehicle isn't good for business expansion. Too many people like my dad who have been driving the same car for over 30 years.
Prius, mid-size. Uh-huh. Ever stood next to one? I've compared one with a metro rather in-depth... the size difference is minimal, the Prius has more small nooks and crannies for storage, but the geo can actually carry larger items... stock, the Prius is a bit quicker off the line, but with a couple of filter changes and a $20 muffler, the Geo becomes the faster of the two (and gets better gas mileage for the part swap).halfeclipse said:loc978 said:So... your point is that if they can get a heavier car to get decent gas mileage, that's an excuse to design cars heavier than they need to be? I understand that heavier cars are less efficient... that's why designers used to try to make lighter fucking cars.halfeclipse said:"iGoogler." Or you know a basic understanding of mechanics, weight, and physics?loc978 said:...which never make it to the states because of our insane crash safety laws owing to our insanely easy-to-acquire licenses (but that's another debate entirely). Also, the Prius' weight class is pretty far above its size class, owing to the electric motors and batteries. You want an example with the same cargo space as one? Geo Metro/Chevy Sprint/Suzuki Swift from the early 90s. Again, with a little tuning, those get better gas mileage at about the same speed as the Prius... and they're cheap and easy to maintain. Progress nil.halfeclipse said:iGooglerloc978 said:1974 mini. 1L i4. 55mpg highway, around 46-48 city. Carbureted. Also about 20% faster than stock. Just takes a little tuning, no high-performance replacement parts. "Brand new" is a funny term, people like to assume that means "as good as it will ever be". The truth is often quite the opposite.halfeclipse said:How's that the designers fault? People want cars with a billion gadgets, better fuel efficiency, sound proofing, more room, a dozen airbags, and this that and the other thing. They have to cut down the size and weight of the car while finding room for all that, all while keeping production costs down. Means they have to get up to funny stuff.loc978 said:Problem is, the advancement has been pretty superficial. Sure, my car doesn't have leather heated seats, an onboard computer, HUD, satnav, et cetera... but it gets better gas mileage than a Prius, travels about the same speed, costs far less in maintenance, and was built in 1974... and because it's owned by me, it'll probably be driving long after the last Prius goes through an extremely costly disposal process... but that's just one example.hulksmashley said:Also, there seems to be alot of "mechanical engineers are evil!!! They designed a car to advanced for me to fix!!" in this thread.
Maybe I'm wrong, but it seems like a reasonable cost of technological advancement to me.
Also, I can fix a new car, but it takes much longer, thanks to space-saving tendencies of engineers. The biggest problem with maintaining a new car is how tightly everything fits together. Want to get to the transmission? Pull the skid plate, exhaust, half a dozen fuel lines... and that's if you have a lift. Want to get at it from the top? Pull the engine.
Oh, and my favorite... wanna get at the battery? pull the front left wheel. Christ I hate modern cars. Don't get me wrong, there's a lot of great technology in 'em, but the people designing 'em need to be in on building and fixing prototypes. Physically.
Oh and a 2012 Prius will do 40-50 MPG. If it's from the 70s Whatever your driving may have done 25, maybe 30 MPG brand new. Now?
As for the designers... I suppose it's not their fault. I could blame "our culture" which is my usual fallback, but what's the solution? I don't think there is one, aside from forcibly take people's toys away... but no one wants to live in a society that controls their lives at that level. Sad thing is, this one already figured out how, without taking options away. Group psychology is a dangerous thing.
Now see thought you'd at least be driving something in the same weight class as a prius. saying your mini gets better fuel mileage then a midsize is just d. It's much smaller then the prius and probably 2/3-1/2 the weight. A better comparison would be those bitty things popular in Japan which get something like 60-70 MPG highway.
Weight is a far bigger factor on fuel efficiency then size, something like a 2% loss of efficiency per 50 kilos? The battery and motors will be what it 150 kilos at worst? Even if you hauled that out if Prius doesn't have something 500 kilos on the Geo I'd be shocked. Size is of course a concern as well, but WAY to much math to work that out.
Even assuming the Geo or Sprint got the same MPG as a Prius (It doesn't unless the person driving the Prius is a dumbass, or mostly drives highway.) you still need to adjust that for weight. Scaled down the Prius would still get something like 15%-20% better fuel mileage. 19%-26% if you include the battery weight.
As for suzuki 1L 3-cyl engines and fuel economy in a car that weighs a little over a ton (and yes, I know the Prius weighs about a ton and a half, 3042lbs to be exact. That's one of the things that's wrong with the design. It's a compact hatchback that weighs as much as a mid-sized sedan)... I used that example because it's what my uncle drives. He gets a little better mileage than I do out of my mini (1993 Metro, averages around 58mpg from it). I guess you could say that's progress, but it happened between the 70s and the 90s. We've had plenty of technological breakthroughs since then, but not many that are implemented for increased efficiency or longevity of the vehicle.
'Course, building a reliable vehicle isn't good for business expansion. Too many people like my dad who have been driving the same car for over 30 years.
The Prius is a mid size. Whats the average for those, 3500 lb?
You're not going to see huge fuel economy improvements. The ice is a PoS, 37% theoretical efficiency (20% average, 25% with a really good engine.), you can only make things so aerodynamic, and weight can only be decreased so far before you're just being stupid.
I also don't see your point about cars dying sooner. They don't. They've got more fiddly bits that break, sure but so? People what pretty clearly want their ABS, air-conditioned, 12 airbag, oiltight, watertight, no tune-up required etc, cars. Things can be a bit of a pain to get at from time to time, but the repairs are still simple.
The big parts will still last for a couple hundred thousand miles if you don't abuse them.