What about Hyundai and their 100,000 mile powertrain warranty? What about Nissan and their all-electric leaf? What about Honda? My mom has an Accord and the thing is built like a tank. Over 100,000 miles on it and the only damage is to the exterior (big scrape on the front bumper). It still pulls 29 mpg, only falling 3 mpg from the day it was purchased.
There's a lot to be said for import cars, i.e. BMW, Volkswagen, Mercedes Benz, Honda, Hyundai, and a myriad of high-end companies (Lotus, Ferrari, etc.). They're good companies, and they all have their faults. Just because it's US made doesn't make it any better- a piece of garbage from Germany is just as useless as a piece of garbage from Japan, China, or the US.
-Penguin
We weren't talking about those companies. There is much to recommend Honda's powertrains. Say I, they make the best low-displacement engines in the world - and I can back up my assertion with data. That's something I know you're not going to be able to do with regard to your general question about the ridiculous Nissan Leaf. I used to work in EVs. There's a fundamental drawback to carrying your own oxidizer that air-breathers do not share.
Tell me, how much would you be willing to pay for a vehicle that has less than hundred mile range between lengthy recharges, limited cargo space and performance, and dubious safety bonafides? Care to take a couple of weeks to drive cross-country? Two words w/r EVs: commercially infeasible. That'll obtain until there is a technological breakthrough in batteries. Volt gets around the limited range issue, at least, by going serial hybrid. Even so and even with a large subsidy, GM has only managed to crap out but a few:
http://money.cnn.com/2011/02/01/autos/volt_vs_leaf_sales/index.htmUS-made, as a rule, I agree, says little. UAW, otoh, has become a bit of a badge of shame. However, and I won't say much here, if you look at the way we do production now, the UAW might just be "incentivized".
As for Hyundai, yes, they've been buying share. All my reports says that's what they're doing in both material cost and warranty terms. Th eonly mystery to me is how they're covering the shortfall.