So just to clarify, the Worst of the chinese (and indian) cars had interiors of lower quality than flagship holden models (and im guessing you mean flagship as you said you went and looked at an SSV wagon before you bought your Skoda)? And that because the interior and tech of the VE was so poor thats why it sold so little??
We have a VE R8 and a 2 year old Golf GTD. The Golf has all the warm and fuzzy bits inside you keep referring to such as soft touch dash, reverse park assist, touch screen, sat nav, heated seats, etc etc etc. We bought it for my Mrs. Its a shopping Cart and errand runner. When I looked at the R8 the last thing i was worried about was soft touch dashes and heated seats...And we would both take the R8 over the golf any day.
For me the interior of the VE was the deal breaker and I tried to want one. And I am a car nut who really values the drive. Most people just sit there in traffic ignoring the world around them don't really car that much how something drives as long as it is acceptable so the interior they can touch and see every day ranks much higher for them than me. The fact that R8 sells for near double the price of a Golf GTD so the fact that the Golf's interior is notably superior in quality doesn't look great for the Commodore. I sorely hope that the VF redresses this.
Different deals on different days I suppose but the point still holds that the interior of the VE was out of step with its pricing and it only gets worse as you work up the price range. It was a deal breaker for me after 4 Holdens in a row despite the fact that I thought the HSVs were a great drive. Obviously I'm not alone because the sales reflect this. As I say though, hopefully Holden has redressed this with the VF which we will know soon enough once they hit the showrooms.
Mate the hsv has ap brakes all round, 19 inch wheels, a 6l V8 is just a much bigger car overall and was 15k more. What are just the brakes and rubber alone worth 10k?
You won't get a gtd with leather, park assist sat Nav etc for much if any cheaper than that.
And at the time the clubby with leather was that price.
I'm not trying to run down the golf, it is really a good car. Point I'm trying to make is that the holden/hsv is a lot of car for the money and some of the comments about how poor the interior is (comparing it to Chinese vehicles) are just ridiculous. And as this is a holden/hsv forum I thought that would be ok...
I think the 'low sales' has more to do with the fact the model was out for 6 years..
Last edited by 701let; 14-03-2013 at 08:57 PM.
I'm not criticising your choice of the R8 or knocking the overall value of the Commodore, just saying that the interior was not in line with the price, a problem that got more pronounced the further up the model range you went. For me it was a deal breaker and I have always believed that it is at least part of the reason why Commodore has been losing market share. Not the whole reason, but not helping the situation either.
Building a car with a dry sump was too much for Holden (The W427, Holden built it with a wet sump LS3, HSV had to take it out and put in the LS7). How do you expect them to build anything other than conventional passenger cars?
At the time of WW2 and many years after, Holden had higher skills even on the production line because more things were done by hand (welding/painting) and also in house (The Woodville Tool Room as an example). Nowadays car factories are more about the final assembly of components bought in Just-In Time from suppliers and many other skills are out-sourced or replaced by machines.
About the only thing Holden has to offer in terms of manufacturing something other then passenger cars is a big factory space. Mind you Holden does possess very good engineering skills as can be seen by the development of the Camaro.
Cheers, Matthew
I spent most of my money on unreliable cars and less reliable women, the rest I wasted.
W.C. Fields
Holden is suffering the effects of a few doubtful calls over the last few years, a parent company who went bust (well saved by the govt but hardly in a strong position) and unfair market conditions. It shouldn't be forgotten that the rest of the world is busy pushing their currencies down in a dubious currency war at the expense of Australia's competitive position. Really, things couldn't be worse for Australian manufacturing than at the moment. The question is whether they can hold on until things get better, which they most likely will. Good product will help a lot though.
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