Compare to the rest of the world, cars in America are dirt cheap, roads are like runways; wide and all in straight lines only, parking lots are aplenty and mostly free, gas is cheap like bottled water.
@2explorevideos4 жыл бұрын
Only in prairie states. Roads in mountains or hilly areas are windy, broken up (potholes), limited shoulders, low to medium for visibility. In other words, they were built upon a horse trail. The interstate system corrected much of that and made dedication to large radial turns, passing lanes, and limited access. We also have lots of buses, vans (in high demand when they do arrive in Europe), large commercial trucks that those in compact cars aren't thrilled about riding next to on crowded highways. compact cars suffer when they get on highways. milage drops a lot compared to a slightly bigger car with a little larger engine.
@bellezayverdad4 жыл бұрын
@@2explorevideos Look! An American who thinks we do not have buses, big trailers and lots of motorways packed with them in Europe.
@chriskonte19094 жыл бұрын
Could you technically import a car like a Renault Captur? I've heard that it's illegal and these cars would get destroyed immediately..
@samusaran73174 жыл бұрын
@@2explorevideos Mileage in most cars drop when one is doing over the speed limit... Tell me another story
@musclesmouse4 жыл бұрын
gas is sometimes cheaper than bottled water
@pedrotrindade68834 жыл бұрын
please every car can run 120kmh if driven properly (my 1.0 Up! can do at least 150 without any issues)
@MrJonton014 жыл бұрын
Even my old 2002 Skoda Fabia with 75hp goes to 140 easily and is still happy to go faster... Edit: I managed to reach 167km/h (about 104mph, the rated top speed) in that 18 year old car! When going downhill, even more than 180km/h (112mph) is possible.
@patriknestic89734 жыл бұрын
Maxed out my 1.0mpi 60hp Up! at around 160km/h. They may be low powered but not that slow.
@GiulioImparato4 жыл бұрын
heck i got to 140 kmh in my 50 hp citroen ax ...granted if i were to crash i would have been dead and to be collected with a spoon, ah and and the steering wheel felt like some sort of reciprocating industrial machine, but it can be done
@olivergunn27964 жыл бұрын
my 1.0 aygo (68bhp) can sit at 90mph easy
@SnoVVdogsPks4 жыл бұрын
Yeah, it takes a gazillion years to get there. Nothing more annoying than cruising around 160 km/h and some small city car moved over to the left...
@Scuba72Chris4 жыл бұрын
People get so hung up with 0-60 times and then spend most of their time in slow moving city traffic.
@simonweekes30684 жыл бұрын
*Americans
@rickfeng44663 жыл бұрын
Just a bit north of Abbottsford there's a highway entrance that has a yield sign, then only a little more than 100 metres for you to accelerate from 0~120kph before the lane merges into the highway. It's fine in regular times cuz I don't have to stop, but during rush hour it's a PAIN IN THE ASS to try to merge in as I guarantee you there will be lots of cars - at around 120kph cuz this is still in the exurbs and the gridlock that starts at the suburbs is still a dozen km ahead - I must completely stop and wait for a gap. If I floor it, my Volvo can make it pretty close to 120kph in that short distance but only just, lucky I no longer live there and don't have to experience the adrenaline from worrying if the gap in traffic is wide enough for me to merge in. So for suckers like me, who has to use that short onramp to get on to the hwy. If the car's 0-60 is significantly longer than 7sec then it could be a problem. I am more nervous take that onramp with the ford explorer cuz that thing takes around 8sec to get to 100kph.
@mattwolf76983 жыл бұрын
Not if you live in a more rural area.
@drzej3k7943 жыл бұрын
@@rickfeng4466 that’s why on European motorways drivers change to the left lane to allow cars to merge when approaching and passing a slip road. Just common courtesy and driving etiquette when you have slower accelerating cars. If there is a lot of traffic on the motorway then people let you in when trying to merge. Don’t see how this is a strange concept.
@rickfeng44663 жыл бұрын
@@drzej3k794 Two problems: First is the angle of that entrance, it's not a parallel entrance but a slight turn, obstructing vision. Second and more importantly, not all drivers do that. Yes, some still do so I can get in after only a short wait. What I felt is that in the 9 years since I got my driver's license, fewer and fewer drivers do that. Some don't move over when people trying to merge onto the highway, some don't even accelerate when merging onto the highway, a lot will pass a car with the lane change turn signal on even if they aren't very close. Some don't even use their turn signal at all! Hey, this is Vancouver, the city with THE WORST traffic in all of Canada. It's awful and your "common courtesy" is mostly just a memory from a few years back.
@imnotusingmyrealname45664 жыл бұрын
There are also taxes that scale with power or emissions which are also a deterrent to buying a powerful vehicle.
@AAutoBuyersGuide4 жыл бұрын
Yep, that's mentioned in the video
@imnotusingmyrealname45664 жыл бұрын
@@AAutoBuyersGuide Really? Then I must not have been paying attention because I only remember the higher fuel prices or my English isn't good enough.
@nc38264 жыл бұрын
@@imnotusingmyrealname4566 NP, I kept waiting for him to mention it too... but ofc that was after the higher petrol prices... BTW welcome to the land that brought Europe the SUV, the Big Mac and the best tobacco in the world.... lol.... Well at least the Americas can be proud of bringing, Chocolate to the world :)
@james20424 жыл бұрын
@@imnotusingmyrealname4566 He mentions it multiple times, but more in detail toward the end
@howardkerr81744 жыл бұрын
@@nc3826 Apparently you don't watch Trevor Noah? The 2 biggest cultivators of cocoa for chocolate are in AFRICA. In fact, those 2 countries account for 70% of the known cocoa and have decided to join together and form a cartel....the OPEC of chocolate.
@LogitechXibanga4 жыл бұрын
"European cars are smaller because european roads are smaller" And european people and thiner too
@AAutoBuyersGuide4 жыл бұрын
Sad but true
@dominikfranczak52824 жыл бұрын
@@AAutoBuyersGuide Look at Asians - smaller than EU people so they have even smaller cars.
@LogitechXibanga4 жыл бұрын
@Why Why Why Why Joe 'Groper' Biden you know smaller car its a normal car, if its not 6Meters long its a small car for an american
@jkutyna4 жыл бұрын
Actually 6 of the European countries in the EU as well as Great Britain have fatter populations than the USA does by 2020.
@LogitechXibanga4 жыл бұрын
@@jkutyna not really, you saw the overweight ratings, wich is normal its considered chubby, now in the USA they are obese asf!
@Wh3atley3 жыл бұрын
I'm probably a bit late here, given that this was uploaded in early 2020, but let me weigh in here as a German: Many of us Europeans tend to prefer smaller vehicles because: + as was mentioned, our infrastructure is smaller. This is due to the fact that most of our cities are fairly old (many 100s of years) and were thus founded at a time when cars weren't a thing (compare this for example to something like Las Vegas). This means that municipal pathways and parking spaces - while they have obviously widened over time - just cannot be as wide as they are for instance in countries that are much more expansive, like the US or Russia. + We are much more fuel-"sensitive", meaning we do gravitate to more fuel-efficient cars, given the expensive fuel we have to buy and the high taxing rates for high-displacement vehicles. We are also governed by highly ecologically minded politicians, who like to introduce very strict ecological policy rules, making gas-guzzlers fairly inattractive. + There is (weirdly) a shared sense of "he who's got a big car is a big j3rk". The thinking goes that people who feel the need to buy large, expensive, massive cars somehow have something to compensate which makes them seem less intelligent than people who go for the "optimal choice". + Lastly, our distances are just shorter and we are much more densely populated overall (233 people per km² in Germany vs. 33 people per km² in the States). I'm in the centre of Germany, if I drove four hours into any direction, I'd be leaving the country. Country-crossing trips are USUALLY only done for holidays and only if you really insist on going by car. Otherwise, people just like to fly. I don't. That's why I drove my Renault Scenic all the way down to Madrid and back :)
@R4donX3 жыл бұрын
Mate, i'm italian and It's good to know that the "big car, small d*ck" thinking was a thing in other eu states too HAHAHA
@joshuaychung3 жыл бұрын
In the US, most of the German brands except for VW are high end luxury brands (Mercedez, BMW, Audi, Porsche, etc.) so people tend to think that the folks driving around in a German car are jerks. =) I write this with no disprespect to Germany and the great cars that the German automakers build.
@baronvonjo19293 жыл бұрын
I refuse to belive the "oh hes got a big massive car he is a jerk" when Europeans have brands like BMW, Audi, MB, Rolls Royce, Bentley and all the other typical "privileged brands" like some of those cars are huge. And continue ue to get huge every generation they have
@SKYLIMI2 жыл бұрын
it's a waste of time to translate this video is for stupid people from the USA who don't even have a passport, it's American propaganda🤣🤣🤣 Reno citi car for old people and Hona Jazz Fiat 500 🤣🤣🤣
@maxsangorgonio66472 жыл бұрын
@@R4donX Yeah, here in the U.S. you get these people that drive these massive over-sized SUV's like the Suburban or Cadillac Escalade, and much of the time there's only one person in the vehicle - the driver. The guys with the oversized pickup trucks and SUV's are definitely trying to compensate for something.
@AMX30BB4 жыл бұрын
European cars aren't rated to carry americans, that's why we don't need 200 HP in every car.
@campkira4 жыл бұрын
EPA and shit....bumper for example... American just like to buy car like fastbfood... they don't buy car without tv adverts and local dealer take too much cut...
@benupde19794 жыл бұрын
I’m am American and I weigh less than 80kg. I’ve been to quite a few European countries and have driven plenty of European cars in Europe. How about driving a Dacia Duster on the German Autobahn? 110hp pushing 2 tons? Yeah, no.
@PIZZAAAAAAAAAAAAAful4 жыл бұрын
@@benupde1979 well the duster is a shit car
@eduardpatru87664 жыл бұрын
@@benupde1979 take a nissan navara 2.5l diesel, it pushing +2 tons
@luv-kalos4 жыл бұрын
@@benupde1979 a duster weights about 1.300 kg not 2000 kg ...
@ldmtag4 жыл бұрын
Most european cars can go way above the speed limit. The difficult part is to pass slow vehicleson the narrow road
@SimonPearce694 жыл бұрын
"If you have a 50hp car its going to be tricky to maintain 80mph on the auto-strada", says the man who's never been passed by a CinqueCento at 100+
@Ussurin3 жыл бұрын
I'm pretty sure that Fiats have some fairies in engines, cause I've seen them going so fast my old e36 had to struggle a bit to pass them.
@iankolic89953 жыл бұрын
or passing a tesla in a hyundai atos 1.1 55hp
@leonardo84613 жыл бұрын
or by a Panda that's even better....
@brrebrresen13673 жыл бұрын
the unfortunately cancelled Loremo LS had a 50hp engine and was going just over 200km\h... the GT had like 65hp and was doing 230... hell, even the Skoda Octavia wagon with the 1.6TDI loves cruising at 160km\h helps when you actually think a bit on aerodynamics and not designing you cars like bricks.
@jerryorange69833 жыл бұрын
Some cars should not be allowed on auto-stradas. Unfortunately, all cars are the same in this regards.
@ast55154 жыл бұрын
A couple of notes: - Many of us live in cities and have no need to leave said city more than once a week. Base engines are considered the "city choice". But for most of us the Captur 0.9 is underpowered. You're gonna get good city fuel economy but it drops significantly outside of it due to the 5 speed gearbox and the fact that you have to floor it to go anywhere. Our bigger engines don't really consume more fuel outside the city but the EU test cycle seems to reward smaller engines which is why we have them. It's not about the consumer. They calculate CO2 emissions based on the fuel economy cycle and if it's over 95 gramms/km (45-ish US mpg equivalent) the manufacturer has to pay a significant penalty for each vehicle sold. - We love(d) diesels (thanks VW...) because they get you real world 45-50 mpg if you drive them gently and they have variable geometry turbos (something you don't find in 99% of turbo petrol engines due to problems with heat management) which means they have peak torque at 1500 RPM and even in that region there is virtually no lag. That responsiveness is missing from turbo petrol engines. They have peak torque down low but if you floor them at 1500 RPM it's gonna take 3 seconds to get into boost vs 1 second in a diesel. - Our parking spots are smaller but we learned to use them better. If a spot is 5-6 feet longer than your car, it's considered big and easy to park. 3 feet longer than the car is still fine for us. And we do that even if the car has no parking sensors or cameras. - Due to fuel prices it's often cheaper to fly to a holiday destination than it is to drive there so we rarely drive more than an hour at a time.
@james20424 жыл бұрын
-Well American Cities were built up a little over 100 years ago vs over half a millennium ago. So our infrastructure was designed with cars (model T's) in mind. This meant there was plenty of space for cars even in the cities, so vehicles like the gulf are as small as we need. Also with highway fuel economy being so important to auto manufacturers because of the dedicated epa rating, we got very tall overdrive gears for highway cruising, even on vehicles that realistically will never leave the city. But yea we don't have the same type of emissions regulations, but they get the same job done, but in a very different fashion. -Diesels in America and diesels in Europe serve 2 different purposes. Diesels in Europe are fuel economy champs, whereas in America they are workhorses. Fuel economy champs here go to hybrid petrol vehicles and quite honestly the hybrid petrol method of super high fuel economy seems to be the smarter way. Diesel here is usually tied to 5.9L+ inline 6 and V8 engines in large trucks designed to tow your house. No European would be crazy enough to buy a 15 mpg diesel torque monster -With the parking spot thing, in America there are regularly sold trucks that are 22 feet long and 7-8.5 feet wide. So while those parking spots seem colossal to a European, they might still be too small for some vehicles. Also Considering the size of said trucks engines, the hoods are usually bigger than some european compacts alone. So seeing over them is quite literally impossible so the new 360 cameras are a godsend. -Considering the distance most would have to fly here, especially coast to coast, a 20mpg vehicle (average highway fuel economy for the 3 most popular pickups) at 2.50 a US gallon would result in 125 dollars per 1000 miles, so double that for round trip. Tickets for a flight about the same distance would be about 800 round trip minimum so its wildly more cost efficient to drive. And since very few people will drive for almost 20 hours straight, a cheap hotel room for one night would still come no where close to a flight + rental car.
@ast55154 жыл бұрын
@@james2042 Don't get me wrong, most of our cars are perfectly fine on highways. I think the 0.9 engine in the video isn't a very good example because it's not what most of us drive. That engine really is meant for city use and nothing more. But yeah your EPA cycle makes much more sense than ours. It's ridiculous that larger engines are killed by fuel economy tests when in real life their fuel economy is often better than the tiny 3 cylinders. I do agree that hybrids are a smarter choice for fuel economy. But sometimes people want something rather than need something. Diesels are better to drive. At least when you're not stuck in traffic. They do get quite expensive when stuff breaks though. I don't know about the US but for us parallel parking spots don't really exist. You just have a line between 2 streets and park as many cars as you want. If you can fit your car, you park regardless of how long someone intended the space to be. I also don't think it's realistic to bring those huge trucks into cities. At least it's a rare problem from what I've seen. You can still park something the size of an F150 and most people don't have anything bigger than that. Cameras are surely nice but believe me, with the amount of space you have, it's way easier to park a truck without a camera than to park a small hatchback without parking sensors in most European cities. I spent 3 months driving around the US, mostly in California. I think I got an ok picture of what parking is like over there. I also realized most Americans have no idea how to parallel park properly.
@james20424 жыл бұрын
@@ast5515 I personally drive an older grand cherokee and visibility to the ground is shit. My skid plates are always hitting curbs and can never see lines without opening my doors, and there are much taller and bigger vehicles than mine, so trust me when I say cameras are a godsend
@ast55154 жыл бұрын
@@james2042 They are a godsend but they are not necessary. I don't see the ground either. I just know where the lines are. Help with curbs: Just look to the vehicle next to you and position your vehicle according to what you see from them. This goes for not hitting curbs in perpendicular parking situations. With parallel parking you just have to feel it. I guess you can lower your passenger side mirror to help but I reverse parallel parked a car and a horse trailer into a spot about 25 feet longer than the thing. Just feel it. As for lines, you can look in your mirror and look at the lines behind you. In most parking lots they line up across multiple rows so it's easy to orient yourself. Otherwise it's just feel or position yourself so that you are in the middle compared to the car on your left and right. That's if you see that they are within the lines before you start parking. Parking in reverse also helps because once again you see the lines in your mirrors.
@jeffluo89604 жыл бұрын
Don’t forget high speed rails. American only has slowtrak.
@SkywalkerWroc4 жыл бұрын
"Europeans are no necessarily shorter" - what a weird thing to say, on average Europeans are taller than Americans "Wider drivers, that could a little bit of a problem, because European vehicles tend to be fairly narrow on the inside"... we're not as fat as Americans.
@jay-uo2bi4 жыл бұрын
@Kathleen Henson No. USA is more fat than England. Europe is much prettier than the USA thanks to those old roads etc, it's their history. And whats wrong with Europe liking Manuals? That shows they are actually more engaged with their driving. moneyinc.com/most-obese-countries-in-the-world/ worldpopulationreview.com/countries/most-obese-countries/ www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/maps-and-graphics/the-most-obese-fattest-countries-in-the-world/
@Tore_Lund4 жыл бұрын
@Kathleen Henson Big and roomy is not only a question of preferences, it comes as a cost. The Renault in this video is not small by any European standard, and at 41 mpg, it is not a fuel sipper either. European compacts, 10-11 ft long get close to 60 mpg.
@kenoday75624 жыл бұрын
@@Tore_Lund If you need a space to park your 11 ft long compact, let me know, you can park inside the back of my GMC Acadia .....
@Tore_Lund4 жыл бұрын
@@kenoday7562 I would like to., street parking where I live is not free!
@kenoday75624 жыл бұрын
@@Tore_Lund I OWN four parking spots, 2 in my garage, 2 in the driveway. And there's also free parking on the street in front and alongside my house. Amazing what you can do when 60-80% of your money isn't going to the government ...
@DerDoJo4 жыл бұрын
10:00 - i was driving a 50HP car for almost 10 years on the Autobahn. maintaining 130-150 km/h (90-95 mph) was no problem. Getting there was tricky. But 120km/h (75 mph) was always possible easily.
@bighands694 жыл бұрын
That mean you were struggling. American cars could do that in their sleep. Most American cars feel like driving a Mercedes. I live in America and it never appealed to me so I drove European cars in America. How wrong I was until I tried driving an American car. They smooth to drive, powerful, spacious and can take lots of driving abuse. When I came back to Europe when I was driving european cars I was shocked at how flimsy the cars feel. The gear stick in European Cars feel like a toy.
@danielurecheanu4 жыл бұрын
@@bighands69 I dont know where they feel like driving a mercedes. I've driven mostly GMC and Ford. Also had the pleasure of riding around in some more expensive models like the Cadillac Escalade, and I gotta say they're handling is kinda shit. The biggest problem I have with American cars is it seems like no one figured out how to make a good suspension system yet. Going over a speed bump especially with a gmc feels like you're about to start flying. And while yes American cars are usually quite larger and more powerful we only tolerate it because the gas here is so cheap. While I had some fun with a 400 hp f series ford that thing drank fuel like a motherfucker. In germany where a liter can be up to 1.40 euros if not more I'd definitely prefer a smaller vehicle even with size restrictions. Most American's I see behind the wheel of trucks are either aged moms who god only knows why they need a f150 4x4 EcoBoost or some fatass who can barely fit in it already.
@bighands694 жыл бұрын
@@danielurecheanu Handling? That sounds like something a motor journalist would say when driving around a track. Cadillac are like driving a Mercedes as Are Lexus. We are not talking about over steer or understeer which is not relevant on a road. A Mercedes will have dreadful handling compared to a 1970s lightweight Porsche on a track.
@danielurecheanu4 жыл бұрын
@@bighands69 ok
@tzarcoal10184 жыл бұрын
@@bighands69 I have driven a Chrysler, with a gear stick that felt like the transmission is made out of gelatine pudding. I could move the stick an Inch in every direction without shifting. If it feels that wobbly i do not care how big the stick is. German or Japanese transimissions feel much better. American cars are better now than maybe 15 years ago, but still not really that great.
@MR07-94 жыл бұрын
in Europe e just have pulic transport that works and cities that are walkable, it's not a matter of horsepower or how big we like our cars. We use our cars to go on with our lives, otherwise in the US your life is completely influenced by your car
@TheLemminkainen4 жыл бұрын
Yes lets make American to pay the polluting!!
@bloopbloop20194 жыл бұрын
Public transportation is disgusting with trash everywhere and crack heads asking for money. Nobody wants to sit next to someone in a crowded train, we just want to have our own space.
@darrens34 жыл бұрын
@@bloopbloop2019 in Europe public transport is noting like that. Busses in my part of the UK have leather seats and air con.
@bloopbloop20194 жыл бұрын
@@darrens3 Wow, that's luxury. I think ours is different because it's old.
@CMCSS-to3to4 жыл бұрын
@@darrens3 public Transit in the US sucks
@DigitalYojimbo4 жыл бұрын
This video should be named, why we don't have American cars in Europe.
@DigitalYojimbo4 жыл бұрын
@M Bacon i think you missed a big portion of this video.
@quietcorner2934 жыл бұрын
Reference to the part he states gas cost $6.8 per gallon and many are way too big. In many countries, like Germany, tax yearly on the size of the engine. So a 6l engine is going to get pretty F'n expensive.
@lefebvrevictor35214 жыл бұрын
You mean "why don't europe got 3500kg V8 SUV that does 14 mpg and 0 to 60 in 12 seconds ?" No thanks, my 2L Renault Megane with 3 times less power than the average car in the USA would outrun it and consume 3 times less fuel. We don't need those useless cars
@sergheiadrian4 жыл бұрын
Because Europeans have "taste".
@Parrotdise2904 жыл бұрын
DigitalYojimbo No one could afford driving them regularly only because of the price of gasoline in Europe...
@bordersw12394 жыл бұрын
One thing you didn’t mention was that in Europe we road trip less and fly instead. I can drive the 1500km from London to Barcelona in Spain or I can fly for about £40.
@Jake-hb4bd4 жыл бұрын
The United States is the size of Euorpe (NOT INCLUDING ALL OF RUSSIA).
@bordersw12394 жыл бұрын
Enjoy skippas. Europe (not including Russia) is slightly larger than the U.S and also has a much larger population.
@Sindor334 жыл бұрын
Also we can use TGV, LGV or any high-speed train, wich is by far faster than any US high-speed train.
@bighands694 жыл бұрын
@@bordersw1239 Western Europe is not bigger than the US.
@paul1979uk20004 жыл бұрын
@@Jake-hb4bd He does have a point thought, flying is dirt cheap in Europe so cars are not as needed for long trips.
@stoff3r4 жыл бұрын
I think you have just misunderstood the whole concept of buying a car: to buy a car that suit your needs. So while you talk all big about American horsepowers, 0-60 and 1/4 mile times, you fail to realise that a fiat 500 wasn't even built for this. Same with all the other compacts. They are rental cars and for old ladys/first time buyers. Its not going to haul 2 tonnes of water up Ike gauntlet or compete against a charger on the highway. It's strange that you think that America is STILL a trendsetter but reality is it hasn't been since the 80's.
@CoolioXXX524 жыл бұрын
Na
@daniels47424 жыл бұрын
Spot on.
@marshallc.t.25544 жыл бұрын
Also young women prefer small cars like the fiat 500 in Europe
@tompompom22994 жыл бұрын
500 as a rental or cheap car? Hell no. 500 is a fancy city car. It's for a people who have more money, and they want to have good quality small car. For rental and first time buyers (if ever) there is Fiat Panda. Just like from Seat lineup, Leon, normal compact car is cheaper than same configuration Ibiza, that is smaller car.
@DesertStateInEU4 жыл бұрын
@Juden Arier Behind in what? lol Oh please take the bait and reply so I can pick your logic apart.
@tommays564 жыл бұрын
Enormous difference in how fuel is priced makes for very different choices
@jwenting4 жыл бұрын
yup. But even before fuel was as expensive as gold in Europe we drove smaller cars because our roads are more narrow and curved. Historical reasons for that, most of our roads have been there for hundreds of years and started designed for horses and hand drawn carts back in the middle ages. There's simply no room for a large US style car in many places in Europe. My dad had several and it was always a problem getting around older parts of cities, and getting into and out of parking garages. More than once he had to back out of a parking garage or road because the turns were so tight he simply couldn't make them in his Thunderbird, and a few times he nearly got stuck under an overpass with his Cherokee. Don't have that problem with a Golf or Focus.
@VeyronBD4 жыл бұрын
Yeah, as a european I can't imagine buying some 4 cyl when I could get a V8 or something fun and barely cost me any more
@aashaytambi32684 жыл бұрын
@@jwenting a Thunderbird is a massive car.
@lillexus55893 жыл бұрын
That's were LPG comes in
@GreySharr4 жыл бұрын
I drive a 1.2L 60Hp Fiat Punto and trust me, even though it is NOT fast by any mean, I can easily get to 130km/h on the French highway, and I even did 170 just for fun one day, so really the size of the engine is by no way defining its abilities. And while driving in a city, it is a perfect engine, it doesn't consume that much and has a nice enough acceleration for the road conditions. Even if I'm considering buying a ~150Hp Peugeot 308, this is just because I want more horsepower, not that I need more. Also it would have been cool to see other european cars like the 208/308/2008/3008 from Peugeot to compare
@Fury-lx6pc3 жыл бұрын
I did with Dacia Dokker, 1.5L diesel 95hp, 192km/h in Italy on the freeway.
@ticklepickle77862 жыл бұрын
@@Fury-lx6pc thats impressive
@scrambler69-xk3kv Жыл бұрын
Top speed is fine. the problem with them in the USA is they must acccelerate very quickly to enter an interstate highway because many times people are unable to merge over to allow you to enter and the last thing you want to do is stop at the end of the merging ramp because merging on from a dead stop could be life ending for you.
@GreySharr Жыл бұрын
@@scrambler69-xk3kv Trust me, even low HP cars can accelerate quickly enough haha, in France on the Autoroutes 🛣️ (= interstate in the US) I will usually go from 50km/h to 130km/h in a few seconds and still have plenty of time to merge ^^
@jamespatagueule90134 жыл бұрын
9:00 WRONG, 13 14 15 seconds for 0-60 is very slow in Europe
@jeh66774 жыл бұрын
cries in 11.6sec
@rccup94 жыл бұрын
@rogue I've driven punto naturalpower in work delivering food - when new, 0-60 was 19 sec, and this car was so tired after years of abuse... anything below 15 feels like rocketship to me right now
@WhatDayIsItTrumpDay4 жыл бұрын
Most American cars can do 0-60 in 5-6 secs. And then the more powerful ones, can do it between 3 and 5 seconds. My 3.5L V6 Twin Turbo EcoBoost in my Supercab F150 can do it in the sub 5 sec range. Haven't tested it exactly, but a tuned version did it 4.3 secs, so I'd imagine that my stock version could do it at least around 5 seconds.
@CadillacFan774 жыл бұрын
Yes it‘s very slow but yet very common here. Because faster cars get very expensive.
@gkgameplaycz4 жыл бұрын
i can't get over 60 kph, so ...
@zackzada4 жыл бұрын
19:07 Kia Soul is not a European car. It may be sold in Europe but it's a Korean brand. Thanks.
@betterbeavailable4 жыл бұрын
Yeah, obvious error. Kia (soul) is Korean junk. This guy knows nothing about cars.
@Marco-wz3ff4 жыл бұрын
@@betterbeavailable Kia makes great cars, what are you talking about?
@LuisGonzalez-sb9lx4 жыл бұрын
It’s Asian but it was thought for European market
@LuisGonzalez-sb9lx4 жыл бұрын
gas-powered-crusader yeah, because the Polo is a perfect car lol
@MaggaraMarine4 жыл бұрын
That's why he said "sort of European" (and used air quotes), meaning that it's not an European company, but it's an "European-style" car.
@silveriorebelo29204 жыл бұрын
wonderful logic: American cars are too big for European roads, and that's why there are not many compact European cars in the USA... lol lol lol lol
@rich74473 жыл бұрын
There aren't many cars at all. Cars account for only 20% of all vehicle sales.
@stoff3r4 жыл бұрын
I dream about a world where I understand the units of measurements in all youtube videos. Right now it's ridiculous...
@ga-america50304 жыл бұрын
Inch, your middle knuckle on your index finger. A foot is about the size of your elbow to wrist. A yard is about one pace.
@stoff3r4 жыл бұрын
@@ga-america5030 what is a pace
@roger18184 жыл бұрын
F a As I have said before, I think Americans refuse to abandon the British Imperial system because deep down inside they regret the revolution and want to be subservient to Britain.
@MrPaukann4 жыл бұрын
@@ga-america5030, ok, 1 cm is the width of your index finger, a decimeter is the lighth of your index finger, a meter is the hight of your waist.
@waifubreaks15724 жыл бұрын
The British use it too. Their speed limit signs are in miles.
@akyhne4 жыл бұрын
As mentioned in the video, we have a fleet of small cars with 0.9 to 1.2 liter engines and 65-70 ps/hp. What he doesn't mention is, that the same cars often are offered with same or a bit bigger engines with 100-160 ps/hp.
@nirfz4 жыл бұрын
also that the 100-160 hp Diesel engines often offered have enough torque to not beeing an obstruction on the road.
@Horizon301.4 жыл бұрын
nirfz very good point, the 1.4TDI 75bhp polo is pretty good. Felt just as capable as the larger and more powerful engines
@Horizon301.4 жыл бұрын
Darth Wheezius yeah I would rather have a diesel personally.
@user-xg6zz8qs3q4 жыл бұрын
Darth Wheezius Diesel models of small manual transmission cars are easier to drive. And they consume a lot less fuel compared to gasoline. Oh and gasoline is 1.5x the cost of diesel (in France).
@Horizon301.4 жыл бұрын
Darth Wheezius maybe so. The only benefit I see is that manual petrol cars are slightly quieter. On larger cars though like the A4, 3 series etc there is very little difference. I would rather take the diesel in which case and get far better MPG. Also driving a manual diesel can be harder, in a petrol you can pretty much just be in whatever gear.
@rgoonewardene3803 жыл бұрын
In London, where the average speed is about 8mph, with traffic lights every few hundred yards, whether your 0-60 is 3 or 13 seconds, is of little consequence.
@rmyikzelf560410 ай бұрын
Dito in American cities. But Americans like power even if it is useless.
@michel10604 жыл бұрын
This video showcases good reasons for the US to finally really using the metric system and ISO Standards ;)
@jkutyna4 жыл бұрын
Metric doesn't work. The people in the USA are smart enough to know this. People who make airplanes and fly them are smart enough to know you don't use metric when lives are at stake. Don't believe me? Then tell me how far the moon is from the Earth in metric. I guarantee you will get it wrong and try to tell me the distance in an incorrect format such as kilometers. Why don't Europeans measure their time in metric? Oh yeah, they tried it for a few years in post revolutionary France, along with their calendar, then gave up and went back to the good old honest 24 hours to a day. So shut up about your stupid metric. It doesn't work.
@jkutyna4 жыл бұрын
For the record, any metric idiot will look it up and tell you it's about 360,000 - 405,000 kilometers and they are WRONG. Everywhere you see that listed on the web as the distance by metircards, but why aren't they doing it properly? I have yet to find ANYWHERE on the net where they state that the distance is 360 MEGAmeters to 405 MEGAmeters as would be correct in metric. Use your damn system CORRECTLY or don't, but until you do, stop harassing those who are smart enough to stay away from it. I can't find a single metric watch or clock easily on the internet either. Nobody I know of has ever gone by ten hour days, ten day weeks, ten month years, ten minutes to an hour, and ten seconds to a minute. All navigation on the planet uses the Coordinate system, not the metric system. We use latitude and longitude along with radians for the compass headings, NOT the metric method of navigation which I doubt any of you can even find a book on to tell you how to do it. No aircraft of any kind on the planet navigates with metric.
@tm.83994 жыл бұрын
Jkutyna wrote books to troll and no one read more than the two first lines lmao
@Gunrunn3rTV4 жыл бұрын
@@jkutyna I can't really tell if you're trolling or serious, but it seems like you have some misconceptions about the metric system. I could tell you the distance in centimeters and it would be equally correct. Time and Navigation are just straw man arguments. Tell me again what those 'klicks' are, your military likes to use...
@jkutyna4 жыл бұрын
@@Gunrunn3rTV we used nautical miles so i dont know wtf you are on about and the one and only reason to use metric in any argument is the decimilization so if you refer to the distance between the Earth and the moon in cm or km, then you are outright wrong.
@bullsharkreef3 жыл бұрын
I rented a Peugeot 308 diesel while traveling in Greece. This thing cost nothing in fuel, the first day I thought the fuel gauge was broken because it wasn't moving, yet I never felt like I was underpowered even in mountainous roads. I would purchase this car immediately, as in I would be on my way to the dealer right now, if it was available in North America(Canada).
@EdwinV19854 жыл бұрын
The Kia Soul isn't European, Kia's are from South Korea. Last time I checked, South Korea isn't in Europe...
@thekrieg42514 жыл бұрын
@Pufferfish eating a carrot ?? What?! No way
@lorezn94164 жыл бұрын
The Soul in Europe is smaller than the US version
@wayneelliott82774 жыл бұрын
@@lorezn9416 no it really isn't. It's the same size.
@popsandbangs88584 жыл бұрын
Lore Zn you mean Kia stonic
@giovannibez95094 жыл бұрын
"0-60 in 11 second is slow" Dude, my 69hp Yaris does 0-60 in 18 seconds (and i am optimistic).
@Francisco-j1e4 жыл бұрын
Enough for you to get a ticket
@nielsdebakker32833 жыл бұрын
It is still fast enough to lose your driving license.
@Boborjan19863 жыл бұрын
But why would you want to speed crazy? Think, plan ahaed, leave in time, and you will get there anyway. And theres so much things to see while on the road.. :)
@matejlieskovsky96253 жыл бұрын
Y'all do realize 60mph is *slow* for a european autobahn, right? People 'round here are interested in 0-60 time (ok, 0-100km/h) since it is a decent indicator of what merging onto a motorway will feel like.
@ocallaghan38653 жыл бұрын
The thing is many kei cars get a 8 second 0-60 with 5 horsepower less Because it's actaully built for affordably
@EdgyNumber14 жыл бұрын
Headlamp levelling adjustment is a legal requirement in the EEA/EU as it takes into account vehicles towing trailers/caravans. Its usually deleted for other markets and the headlamp level fixed in place. A rear fog lamp is also mandatory in the EEA/EU as an early visual warning in low visibility fog for cars at the rear... believe me, they really are a useful in safety device in poor visibility... but an absolute pain when some arsehole uses them in the rain. No one uses gallons any more, just litres so it might be easier to include and apples to apples comparisons in future reviews.
@Telencephelon4 жыл бұрын
thanks for the explanation. but you are wrong about the gallons. I am telling you as an European. Just respect each other.
@nirfz4 жыл бұрын
The manual headlight adjustement is only used in "older" light forms (halogen bulbs) Xenon by law has to be self leveling, as do all the newer (LED) ones. Maybe due to the american models beeing higher trim they only sell the expesive light solutions there. Thumbs up for the mention of the foglight rain morons! But i have to say considering my 22 years of driving, i think the rear foglights should be removed. I have met more (more is an extreme understatement) drivers misusing their rear foglights those using them like intended. (people switching them on when still beeing able to see 200m ahead, not switching them off when another car is behind them and they can clearly see the headlights of the car behind them, using them just because it's dark outside, using them in light rain...)
@EdgyNumber14 жыл бұрын
@@Telencephelon Nah... If we're gonna have to use gallons then use British gallons.. Rule Britannia! 🤣🤣🤣
@Telencephelon4 жыл бұрын
@@EdgyNumber1 Right. Come to think of it. The ambiguity of national units like the ton, mile and gallon has led to a lot of engineering disasters with a big deathtoll over the decades. But then again abolishing it had the same effect. See wikipedia and documentaries here on youtube. Something's gotta give sooner or later. Let's see where China is heading: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_units_of_measurement
@EdgyNumber14 жыл бұрын
@@Telencephelon SI units are the way to go... even American professional engineers have to use them these days. The only other country I know that officially only uses the old measurements that don't make any sense is Liberia. A third world low index country.....
@randywatson83474 жыл бұрын
The reason why we don't have American cars: Too large for small resident roads and too wide to park. Fuel is too expensive. Though I've seen some idiots driving a Dodge Ram, pure for thrills.
@stn71723 жыл бұрын
So basically you're emasculated
@usarkarzts42073 жыл бұрын
@@stn7172 the bigger the car the smaller the dick. Ever heard of compensation?
@jrgboy3 жыл бұрын
Don't all the US high earners drive Mercs, Bentley and BMW. seems your average American is told from birth that they should always buy American regardless...
@mateuszzimon82163 жыл бұрын
Just look under that pickup and u see a LPG installation to reduce costs. Even sometimes they just throw bottle on tray/bed/whatthisiscalled
@GhostOfAMachine3 жыл бұрын
Bigger vehicle is for emasculated soyboys to compensate for the lack of manhood. A true man drives something like a VW Up
@rightlanehog31514 жыл бұрын
Alex, What happened to the #wagons? They make up around 20% of European sales.
@mtumasz4 жыл бұрын
Right Lane Hog Alex didn’t mention them but they are still strong and for some models they outsell other variants. A good example of this on this list is the Octavia. Also the Golf and Focus have Wagon variants that also sell well. For example Focus Wagon is a very popular fleet car for reps in Poland as are similarly sized Renault, Opel, Peugeot and Toyota models.
@alaind8314 жыл бұрын
yeah I wish we would get those wagons here - plenty of room and efficient design.
@rightlanehog31514 жыл бұрын
@@mtumasz Precisely!
@rightlanehog31514 жыл бұрын
@@alaind831 Exactly!
@rightlanehog31514 жыл бұрын
@Pauline Weinberger The European wagons referred to are just better versions of hatchbacks not the 3 ton behemoths of yesteryear. BTW we have bloated, behemoth SUVs aplenty today.
@makatron4 жыл бұрын
I drive the #5 in Europe the Skoda Octavia TDI. Honestly loads of good cars that never reach north America.
@afcgeo8824 жыл бұрын
Isaac Alonzo If Skoda was sold in the US, they’d be the same price as Volkswagens due to import costs from Europe. That would destroy Volkswagen as a brand. The same for Séat. It’s a major issue for European manufacturers. It’s also why the US won’t get the standard Golf Mk8. Its manufacture was just moved back to Germany from Mexico. Imports from Mexico have been tariff-free due to NAFTA.
@makatron4 жыл бұрын
@@afcgeo882 it's a shame since loads of great cars don't reach the north America market
@afcgeo8824 жыл бұрын
Isaac Alonzo I agree, but that happens everywhere.
@jamesmedina20624 жыл бұрын
Isaac Alonzo Where do you live? Here in US some people are obsessed with speed and power, and so the nice, torquey diesels are not so popular. I drove 2015 Golf TDI and sadly someone else took it quickly because it really goes effortlessly and get good mileage. I was scared about service though on the particulate filter.
@afcgeo8824 жыл бұрын
James Medina That’s not at all why Diesels aren’t popular. They’re not popular because their fuel costs more than premium gasoline, negating all fuel saving aspects and because Diesel was banned for passenger cars since the 1970s. The Diesel cars are also more expensive here than gasoline. In Europe, they’re cheaper and the fuel is cheaper than gasoline. Their added noise, vibration and refueling mess are trade-offs of them being cheaper to buy and own, but in North America, they’re just added inconveniences.
@jve894 жыл бұрын
Alex: "European cars are smaller" Rolls Royce Phantom EWB: "Am I a joke to you?"
@AnarchistMetalhead4 жыл бұрын
a crew cab Silverado is half a meter longer, and far more common than any Rolls Royce
@andrecarpy68904 жыл бұрын
jve89 pretty sure he meant cars commonly sold in Europe, not European car manufacturers
@michaelwalsh62764 жыл бұрын
Land rover/range rover: oh, come on.
@JibbarJabbar4 жыл бұрын
Which is why the U.S. is the largest market for Rolls-Royce.
@carloslaend16354 жыл бұрын
Really... Still that joke uh?
@gustavopedrosa814 жыл бұрын
In Europe this type of car (small city) exists in almost every family, either because it is a second car for the city, the first car of a young person or the only car of families with less resources. There are usually other cars in the families, usually from above segments (such as a Golf SW, a 3 Series, or an average SUV). These small cars are economical in European cities, are practical and cheap to maintain.
@lamebubblesflysohigh4 жыл бұрын
yea I call them shopping bags on wheels... I would rather take Polo than Superb for a quick run to get me a beer and pretzels :D especially during rush hours when parking lots fill to last spot
@Londronable4 жыл бұрын
@@lamebubblesflysohigh "shopping bags on wheels" Haha, I have the same attitude towards it. We would never just own a big car. You always want a smaller one as well. I'll take the X5 BMW with 300+ HP to go on holiday throughout South-Europe or move the boat around. But to get the big shopping done I'm taking the 206 Peugeot(daily shopping is on foot)
@niklasrose90504 жыл бұрын
In 2013, I went to the USA for a road trip. The rental company gave me a 2012 Jeep Liberty 3.7l V6 with 213hp and 235 lb-ft of torque. My own car here in Germany at that time was a 2010 Renault Grand Scenic 1.9l diesel with 130hp and 221 lb-ft of torque. Both vehicles were about the same size (same width, the Renault a few inches longer, the Jeep a little higher). Disappointingly, the Jeep offered much less space inside (the usual disadvantage in space economy a SUV has compared to a minivan). As expected, the jeep accelerated much better from a standing start, but the perceived difference at motorway speed was only slight. But my Renault was significantly quieter at highway speeds and hardly needed more than half of the gas the Jeep guzzled (I know, the comparison with a diesel is not fair, but ultimately the result counts). This comparison showed me quite clearly how different the priorities between American and European drivers are and why American cars sell so badly in Europe an vice versa.
@maxsangorgonio66472 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I heard a Japanese automaker executive say "Americans just want the biggest vehicle with the biggest engine and the most horsepower"
@harrylundstrom18874 жыл бұрын
The headlight adjustment has been mandatory in some eu countries for well over 20 years now. The reason all new cars don't have a switch is because some lights (usually xenon and led) are required to have automatic adjustment.
@JETZcorp4 жыл бұрын
Does anyone else find it suspicious that Alex on Autos, and Alec from Technology Connections are never seen in the same room together? Seriously I just realized you guys are like brothers, bordering on clones.
@TWBrit654 жыл бұрын
This is a very good video!! I drive a diesel ford Mondeo (sold as a Fusion in the Us), it's a great car, quick, returns 56.9mpg on a run (47.37mpg US). it's 6-speed manual and on some of our roads, I wouldn't want to have an auto box on this car. A manual transmission means you have to be more aware of the vehicle, the road etc. as you also use the gearbox to help brake especially on mountain roads in southern Europe - a place where brake fade is all too easy to happen. Now, when in the US, I prefer the bigger cruising SUVs. But while remote towns in places like Italy require a tiny car, around town and basic urban driving doesn't require speed and long-range comfort so most homes have both a small car and a larger car for comfort and distance driving. I did street mapping work across the southern Italian mountains in an automatic diesel Golf and while it handled the mountains fantastically, and the vehicle torque was astounding - the car was physically too big for several places. But the whole thing is driven by economy - more miles for less money due to the fuel prices - which you touched on perfectly.
@bighands694 жыл бұрын
Italian towns were places that the poor lived in. Hence why they were so small.
@asamoricraft4 жыл бұрын
Taxes is most important. The Tesla Model 3 was actually the best selling car in the Netherlands in 2019 because you don't have to pay rigorous road taxes and taxes for emissions.
@UhOhUmm4 жыл бұрын
Automatic transmissions also engine brake, unless they're bad.
@TWBrit654 жыл бұрын
@@UhOhUmm Yes the Golf I used in the Italian mountains was an Auto, with the "flappy paddle" style leavers. You had to learn to be quick and in "sport mode" for it to be effective, and in that case it was very good.
@ImpetuzViscus4 жыл бұрын
"Why dont we have these small little efficiant cars to America" Doing it the American way, instantly starts talking about HP :-) *facepalm* A similar silly arguement would be "Everything in Europe is just scaled ½ of the US" , that would make just as much sence One of the real reasons, is car taxes, in some EU countrys they are INSANE high, i think Denmark was the highest, clocking in at 180%. Imagine that for a sec US people, paying allmost for 3 F-Series truck, everything you get one ?, but if you bought a VW Up, you would only have 50% tax or something, what would you then buy?
@lixon15013 жыл бұрын
True! And really in Europe when you talk with friends 'Oh how good that car would be!' refering to a luxury car. For sure your friends will say 'Yeah you will need a gas station for that!'. The fuel consumption is the biggest part in buying a car in Europe.
@ocallaghan38653 жыл бұрын
Meanwhile in japan even the newest hatchback with a computer screen on the dash is lighter than the orignal mini cooper
@PlottingMax3 жыл бұрын
Most of european brands (Renault, Fiat, Seat, Peugeot, MG) are available in Mexico, Brazil, Argentina or Colombia, and those countries are AMERICA too...
@dans39553 жыл бұрын
He’s talking about the US here.
@CuoreSportivo4 жыл бұрын
it's so frustrating to pause the video every 20 seconds and convert the lengths on google. i found out that my car is 14 ft long though, thx for that.
@darek44883 жыл бұрын
It's like saying a car is 37 burgers and 5 fries wide.
@Konuvis4 жыл бұрын
I'm French and live in Houston so I'm acutely aware of the differences. I never even owned a car until I moved to Houston because you can't walk anywhere and there's no public transportation (or very little). I keep hoping for Citroen sedans in the US though :P
@willswomble72744 жыл бұрын
UK - what is a sedan?
@mateuszzimon82163 жыл бұрын
It's possible we in this or next year US get's more Citroens and Peugeots under Stelatis umbrella.
@stephen10.3 жыл бұрын
malheureusement Peugeot devait revenir aux US mais ils ont choisi Alfa romeo à la place, c'est des crétins.
@PURENT2 жыл бұрын
@@stephen10. Je ne suis pas sur que j'ai vu une personne qui ont une voiture d'Alfa Romeo dans ma ville ici aux US.
@PURENT2 жыл бұрын
For a city that drives so much, Houston has some terrible roads.
@bigpete85674 жыл бұрын
I live in UK, you have hit all the main points but also forgot some others, our housing is generally a lot smaller, most have no parking specific to their house in semi-detached or terraced style in cities. With people owning 2/3 cars per house parking is a nightmare so smaller cars help. I’d say the other main issue is people’s salary, I’d imagine we are on a LOT less than people in USA for doing the same job so smaller cars are a better option. The average car buyer looks at MPG before anything else. This is due to smaller incomes, a V8 petrol as a daily driver could cost you a daily take home for a weeks worth of work. We like our cars but due to the above we are forced into a huge compromise.
@wetlettuce47684 жыл бұрын
This is how I like it becuase it lowers the price of good cars on the used market becuase people are too scared of fuel guzzlers so they go and spend lots of money on some shit like a Vauxhall.
@morarmihai48814 жыл бұрын
"We're driving at higher speeds" :)). Really ? Where?
@ilpatongi4 жыл бұрын
Yeah I didn't get that bit, most US freeways have a limit of 55 or 60 MPH which is much less than our 130/150 Km/h. Dafuq
@Quarknjaguar4 жыл бұрын
@@ilpatongi especially as in most countries exept Italy nobody cares about the speed limit
@ilpatongi4 жыл бұрын
Quarknjaguar I wouldn’t consider this true at 100%. Ever country has people who don’t know how to drive and don’t respect speed limits but the problem in Italy is that the same people think they’re better than everyone else. It’s mostly due to the fact that a lot of people who drive come from ignorant parts of Italy, you know, the stereotypical regions with a lot of small groups of homes with old people...
@morarmihai48814 жыл бұрын
@@ilpatongi I think it's the same problem that we have in Romania. we have a lot of idiot drivers on the road. I call them "professional suiciders". Anyway the point is that the Us has lower speed limits then the EU. And even if the roads are narower we go faster. I like a lot of things made in america but to compare gasolin prices from us to europe and not mention that european gasoline has a much higer octane rating an to forget that in europe there are a lot of really fast cars on the road(bmw, audi, porche are euroean brands right?) is somehow misleading. And by the way. in eu 1liter of 95 gas is about 1.23$, in the us is about 0.77(theyr 80 to 90 octane rating). the average car in eu can go 100km with about 5.5l of gas and the american one uses at least 10. so in eu the price for 100km is about 6.7$/100km and in the us is about 7.7$/100km. Cheaper my ass.
@ilpatongi4 жыл бұрын
@@morarmihai4881 I don't know about octane rating, I've always knew that American had higher rating because they use PON instead or RON but lol
@cedricfranzen85584 жыл бұрын
"low" horse power European cars don't struggle with high speeds on the interstate network at all. My first car was a '99 VW Polo with 60HP, it had no trouble going down the Autobahn at 180km/h, that is about 115MPH, so way faster than you could legally drive in any other country than Germany.
@MTGNoobma4 жыл бұрын
Bruh in America that's called 12am on the freeway
@edipires154 жыл бұрын
Chase Unfried well that’s regular Tuesday in the Autobahn
@plutohorse4 жыл бұрын
I would like to say that, at least in nl but also many other european countries the road taxes are very expensive and based on the weight of the car. For example a 1300 kg Petrol car costs 56 euro per month for road taxes, an 800 kg car about 25 euro per month. In other european countries its based on cylinder capacity or CO2 emissions. Also insurance costs are based on new price and a large car usually has a higher new price Than a small one. This, together with the high petrol price makes it very expensive to maintain a big car, its not really worth it. You can see this effect clearly in the prices of second hand cars since large second hand cars are usually dirt cheap compared to small ones comparable in Milage and age because noone wants the large ones because of the costs. So this makes the depreciation also considerably more with an large car. Also, i have owned several cars with 50 hp or less, and i can tell you that driving 80 mph is not really a problem. I drove 150 km/h all the time in my polo 1liter 44 hp . Point is they have less drag because they are so small and light and therefore the top speed is not really an issue. Overtaking at high speed and wind can be more of an issue though.
@nirfz4 жыл бұрын
Wow, your tax for weight sounds cheap to me! We pay depending on kW (hp) of the car. 170 hp are a tiny bit under 1000€, 525hp around 3300€ per year.
@bighands694 жыл бұрын
European taxes on cars are to stop American cars from entering the market. It has been this way for 60 years.
@nirfz4 жыл бұрын
@@bighands69 While it is one effect of them i don't think it is the sole purpose. In most cases the "original intention" once was that whoever can afford an expensive car or uses more fuel can afford to pay more tax. Expensive cars always were bigger cars with more hp and mor displacement, not just american cars. (And in most places in europe these taxes started whith the first oil crisis) The AMC Pacer was a european sized car and still there were none over here. The Chrysler Voyager on the other hand was pretty common on our streets. The heights our taxes for cars have arrived at nowadays are because the manufacturers adapted their cars to the taxes and so the countries Budgets were getting less tax money they relied on, so they adjusted the taxes.
@jlust66604 жыл бұрын
@@bighands69 Road wear and tear as a consequence of heavier vehicles also plays a big role.
@delonsch39614 жыл бұрын
@@nirfz we're paying back for it with the highest fuel prices in europe, €1,82 per liter
@jonpetter89214 жыл бұрын
Speaking about height: american and italian have same height average.
@dzengerink4 жыл бұрын
So both midgets
@bloodcarver9134 жыл бұрын
Yeah, short.
@ga-america50304 жыл бұрын
Considering there are varying ethnic backgrounds from every country that live here .. Majority of which lower the avg height.
@ikuzoburandeon4 жыл бұрын
Laughing in Nordics (6.3)
@markkarm92534 жыл бұрын
@@ikuzoburandeon i know plenty tall italians (even taller than you). Old italian generation were short, especially from some regions, now all teenagers are at least 6 - 6.1 tall.
@martinostlund18794 жыл бұрын
Living in Sweden, I would consider a 5 hour drive a rather long one.
@willswomble72744 жыл бұрын
And the police in UK would too if you didn't have a break and crashed, killing someone.
@ivankuzin83883 жыл бұрын
@@willswomble7274 Oops, wonder what they would think of me - regularly doing 16-18h drives from Baltics to Germany and back. I honestly never thought that the length of driving non-stop would affect the punishment in case of accident, how would they even know that?
@rich74473 жыл бұрын
@@willswomble7274 Five hours is just getting started. It's not that hard to cover 1,000 miles in a day if the traffic isn't too bad. Last October I drove from Boise ID to Maryland between Baltimore and DC over the course of 3 days.
@tomjoad13633 жыл бұрын
and expensive !
@bohemian_history_and_other3003 жыл бұрын
@@ivankuzin8388 It's illegal to drive more than 11 hours or so, because it's dangerous
@ElroyMcDuff4 жыл бұрын
And an ad for a Ford Expedition bragging about how ginormous it is interrupts this video about sensible vehicles...
@eroche9134 жыл бұрын
It also looks terrible. I mean really dreadful.
@devongee17764 жыл бұрын
KZbin Red life
@MKBorn20004 жыл бұрын
I had an ad for the electric Mustang. That’s as European as it gets. An electric SUV.
@JC-rm6pm4 жыл бұрын
Honestly $7 per gallon I think is the main reason
@james20424 жыл бұрын
Sadly it isn't
@TheUrbanEpicure4 жыл бұрын
The size of our cities and streets weighs equally. You just cannot use a full-size truck in a European city. You can barely use it in big American cities, actually.
@james20424 жыл бұрын
@@TheUrbanEpicure okay but what about a mustang gt500? On premium fuel it gets 15mpg average, still smaller than that dodge journey in the vid
@TheUrbanEpicure4 жыл бұрын
@@james2042 Well, 15 mpg is pretty horrible, but people mostly don't buy it because it's 40% more expensive here than in the US, which pits it against much more refined sports cars. The latest Mustang took a big step but it still doesn't corner very well, and it's too heavy - Europeans appreciate handling more than straight line grunt.
@james20424 жыл бұрын
@@TheUrbanEpicure yea you people run around with the fiesta rs and focus rs. Here we get mustang's, explorer st's and Raptors. The only non suv crossovers ford sells stateside are the mustang and the fusion, everything else got axed. And like said in the vid, most americans like trucks more than anything. I drive a grand cherokee with a 5.7 hemi. I plan on trading it in for a Sierra 2500hd with the diesel later this year. I'm going from one gas guzzler to another because quite frankly it doesn't cost that much and the usefulness outweighs the extra cost in fuel. The ability to hook a 7200lb trailer to my jeep is a massive convenience
@tommaxwell49664 жыл бұрын
I am a Brit who recently moved to the USA. I guess I must follow a stereotype because for my first car since moving here, I bought a Golf Wagon with manual transmission. I kinda like how it’s a little more unique over here vs the UK and how it stands out from the crowd of trucks and SUVs. The only engine available on the Golf Wagon in the USA (until recently) was the 1.8L turbo and by European standards that’s huge! When visiting family the UK we always rent the smallest and cheapest possible car and there is something to be said for them. Tiny engines with light clutches are a ton of fun to throw around the European roads and roundabouts. Thanks for the video. Really well put together!
@SDav214 жыл бұрын
Yall missing out on the best small hatches... The VW Polo, the Peugeot 208 and the Renault Clio. Plus the VW T Cross small SUV is really good. Citroen has by far the most captivating and unique vehicles.
@maksymporokhnavets36083 жыл бұрын
focus rs
@darek44883 жыл бұрын
@@maksymporokhnavets3608 Except that Focus RS is a thing of the past now
@scrambler69-xk3kv Жыл бұрын
When many of those brands were sold in the USA they turned out to be unreliable pieces of shit. Just could not stand up to the high number of annual miles we put on them. Long stretches of high speeds burnt them out. we gave up on them quickly.
@SDav21 Жыл бұрын
@@scrambler69-xk3kv They aren't now though. In my country people drive their 208s, Corsa, Polos, Clios long distances multiple times a year at least 1200kms in one sitting. Easy.
@rmyikzelf560410 ай бұрын
@@scrambler69-xk3kvyou forgot to mention that Americans can't drive.
@grantheathman4 жыл бұрын
C'mon I was just in France for the past week with Skoda 1.0 turbo it was DOPE....perfect car
@willswomble72744 жыл бұрын
He's a dope!
@Parrotdise2904 жыл бұрын
I am Swiss and I’m always surprised to see how many big SUV’s and luxury cars there are nowadays... even compact cars become much larger.
@fohpono88844 жыл бұрын
I’ve owned cars from almost every major Japanese manufacturer as well as a few European ie. Renault, VW and Volvo. IMO, European cars are sexier and more comfortable than Japanese cars. But Japanese cars are cheaper and more practical to operate. But I prefer both to American cars.
@Donax6954 жыл бұрын
I never had one, but it always makes my day when I see one of these fast Renaults overtaking me, such a cool little cars.
@MG-yu6do4 жыл бұрын
Donax695 where do you live?
@Donax6954 жыл бұрын
@@MG-yu6do Czech republic
@BernardoMVCA4 жыл бұрын
I think old Renault cars from the 80's were sold as AMC in America.
@BernardoMVCA4 жыл бұрын
Slow? Renault 21 2.0 turbo 😊✌️ kzbin.info/www/bejne/mmeapodsl5torpI
@jorgesegura99374 жыл бұрын
55.4 mpg (UK) = 46.13 mpg (USA) Not what you said.
@EpicThe1124 жыл бұрын
If you do the reverse comparison it's this you have to use 1 us mpg = 0.83 imperial but inverted it's 1 UK & Canada mpg = 1.2 US MPG.
@Martin-ov3iy4 жыл бұрын
Stop saying inches, America is not the center of the world
@hamsterama4 жыл бұрын
American here, and I've been to Germany a few times. European cars might be slow, but the public transportation system is awesome. Why would you want to do a road trip by car, when you can take an amazing ride on the ICE train, which can go 150+ mph? Or why struggle to find parking in the city, when you can take a comfortable ride on a street car? Also, many roads date back to the middle ages, and were originally built for horses. I've been on a cobblestone road in rural Mecklenburg-Vorpommern that was built in the 1400's. You can only navigate old, narrow roads like that in a small car. If you had a Ford F-150 or a RAV4 or something in Germany, you'd be seriously limited in where you could go.
@ThermoNuclearLlama4 жыл бұрын
Same as the UK, though I would say our public transport isn't nowhere near as good as Germany. Our roads are very narrow too. I drive lorries for a living and some of the main roads I go down are barely wide enough for the truck. Especially in country lanes when you meet another truck coming the other way. You're practically driving in the dirt so your mirrors don't smash.
@hamsterama4 жыл бұрын
@@ThermoNuclearLlama Oh yes, Germany's public transit is amazing. Though I am a car enthusiast, I feel bad for any American who chooses to rent a car when visiting there, instead of experiencing their public transit. Those ICE trains - whew! It's like flying, except you're on the ground. Who cares about the Autobahn, when you can experience a high-speed train that can go faster than any car? Oh, and everything's always exactly on time, never a minute too late. The German obsession with punctuality extends to their public transit system. I don't know if things have changed, but at least it used to be that trains in the UK were always late, and that arrival times were just suggestions.
@epbski4 жыл бұрын
I love your videos! A lot of the generalizations about Europe are fair, although talking about height and physical size of an average "European" is quite silly. As you said, the Dutch as an example are the tallest people in the world on average. You can't compare that to other countries in Europe or frankly the world. The overall point is that of course the USA is physically a larger country, but gasoline is subsidized by the government to keep it inexpensive. This is to help the fossil fuel and oil industry/companies who practically control the US government in many ways.
@rogeriopenna90143 жыл бұрын
We do. FIAT and Volkswagen have always been very big players in the car market of Brazil, America.
@darssmare9154 жыл бұрын
Nice coverage of the topic. The power numbers you mentioned are for the peak of the curve. Europeans tend to drive closer to maximum power maybe more often than North Americans. But that being said, in US on highway or wide roads, people tend to drive in bursts of acceleration and breaking, especially at rush hours. I live in Canada and do have a rather low power car, a Nissan Versa Note with max power of ~ 109 HP I think. I took my car for a trip to Long Island where I stayed for a couple of days for work and I had to commute a few times. There is no way my car could ever keep with the bursts of power most people practice when driving in traffic! And that includes many of the trucks and SUV on the road. Also, in Europe there are high power cars (especially luxury models) and it is those which really can take advantage of high (or no) speed limits. I can also go easily 130/140 km/h on the highway, is just that, if traffic slows down to lets say 70/80 km/h, and then picks up speed rapidly, I'm doomed. The lack of power in cars is the most painfully evident when trying to accelerate from 70/80 to 130/140 km/h as at low speed the transmission is usually geared such that one gets reasonable-ish acceleration.
@dsilber44 жыл бұрын
Thank you great alternative discussion. You only briefly touched on what I miss most is a huge option of manual transmission choices.
@larsnorlin40604 жыл бұрын
In Sweden more cars have automatic transmission sold than manuals. The dual clutch transmissions now give you more milage than a manual can achieve in the long run. This has lead to more and more automatic transmission cars being sold to save fuel. I still have two manual gearshift cars out of my three but they are getting more unusual. RoadTax is payed on emission and weight and this is one more incentive to get a automatic.
@jdidve4 жыл бұрын
Never get used to americans saying "Neesan" rather than Nissan
@CoolioXXX524 жыл бұрын
That's the correct way
@lula221h4 жыл бұрын
Nee-san, did you brush your teeth yet
@MsciwojPL4 жыл бұрын
Ara ara, maybe Americans love their older sisters more.
@willswomble72744 жыл бұрын
And NYYYkon!
@willswomble72744 жыл бұрын
And ZEEE as in ZEEE 6
@Kerleem4 жыл бұрын
As an American expat in Amsterdam, I really appreciate this video
@redwhite_0404 жыл бұрын
I feel sorry for you to live in Amsterdam. It's the most horrible place in Netherlands to live in, too many people, overoveroverpriced real estate, and they are led by "The Greenies", which are very car unfriendly and they ban all the fun stuff.
@supercooled4 жыл бұрын
redwhite_040 still have red light district no?
@redwhite_0404 жыл бұрын
@@supercooled Yes it's still there, but the left wing party wants to stop it, but there's a lot of resistance
@weetikissa4 жыл бұрын
@@redwhite_040 Why on earth would you want cars in busy Dutch cities, that's insanity! It's like trying to push cars into Venice.
@quietcorner2934 жыл бұрын
@@weetikissa Ya most large European cities have good mass transit systems. I was just in Florence in October, WTF would anyone bring a car into that city. Park in the suburbs and take the train in. WTF weren't they planning for cars back in the Renaissance? jk I love European cities, Stockholm is one of my favorite. Again, Vikings didn't plan for cars when they made Gamla Stan.
@milanfrydecky4 жыл бұрын
Nr 1.reason ... cars in Europe are much more expensive compared to US. Less space, narrow roads, taxes, low emission pressure all rarther artificial reasons.
@RafaelPernia4 жыл бұрын
Cities. Cities were planned centuries before cars were invented so it's really hard to make it work as an American city. All that that you mention, the road sizes, the gas, the taxes are deterrents. They don't want small cities filled with cars because it's nightmare
@weedmastersr4 жыл бұрын
You are right. If you take the price of fuel, most of it is made up of taxes put in by insane left wing governments. If you removed all fuel taxes, it would come closer to $3 a gallon, instead of $7. Same goes for emissions. The roads are narrow but not everywhere. Countries like Germany, Sweden or parts of Eastern Europe have quite wide roads. It's just the old historic cities of France, Italy, etc. Still, there are plenty of places here where you could enjoy a large car. The problem is the insane taxes. A new Mustang V8 would cost you about 5000 Euro a year just in taxes in most place.
@nirfz4 жыл бұрын
Cities in europe weren't planned, which is the main reason. Most of them grew from little settlements, villages... into cities. And the raods couldn't grow in the same rate as the city itself because of buildings. @Protector of the Republic: easy to blame left wing governments, but if i take my country it's BS. Since WW2 we had a coalition of left and right for most of the time, and the taxes on fuel and cars in general were always put in place by both (and no not just tolerated by conservatives they actively wanted them). As for wide roads, it doesn't help you if you can drive a F150 on the highway or over land if you then have to park it ouside the village/city you wanted to go. A drive always has a begin and ending and those too are problematic if the vehicle is that big. Yes there are few places where it doesn't matter, but Italy and France aren't the exception, they are the norm. (even in Germany, Sweden and eastern Europe.)
@RafaelPernia4 жыл бұрын
@@nirfz yeah that's mlre accurate. Let's bsay that they were there long before the car arrived.
@nirfz4 жыл бұрын
@@RafaelPernia absolutly.
@aronk50993 жыл бұрын
Yes yes, in America you have big cars and big engines. But you haven’t lived unless you’ve said your prayers going 110 mph downhill in a Lada Niva on the German Autobahn.
@tomjoad13633 жыл бұрын
Nice try, but we all know that the Lada will fall apart waaaaaay before reaching 65mph.
@aronk50993 жыл бұрын
@@tomjoad1363 I believed so too. But it kept going faster, and faster, and faster, and then god told me I had disrespected the order of the universe and sent a slow truck to the left Lane.
@SilentRicochet4 жыл бұрын
Really upset we aren't getting the new Focus ST. Seems like Ford has completely given up on selling Compact cars, and maybe even Sedans in general, in America.
@bobdylan91174 жыл бұрын
they have officially announced that they have given up on cars.
@judithkelly25563 жыл бұрын
It's due to you not buying them . The profits on the SUV and pickup market with a sprinkle of muscle car. I love my focus ST it's a good size, fast enough, good in the corners and not too bad on fuel/insurance
@rich74473 жыл бұрын
@@bobdylan9117 Cars only make up 20% of the US market and sales are dominated by the Japanese. Why would Ford bother competing?
@imnotusingmyrealname45664 жыл бұрын
Finally someone is showing Americans what we drive here. An American lawnmower has a more powerful engine than some of the crossovers in Europe. Edit: Probably not but the cars here aren't powerful at all is what I'm saying.
@bobdylan91174 жыл бұрын
That is why I will just drive a lawnmower across Europe.
@wetlettuce47684 жыл бұрын
@@fcex558 Quite true my 2003 Jaguar XJ Super V8 has 400hp, when you look at what America had in the same class they had the Cadillac DTS which would make 300hp or the Lincoln Town Car which made 235hp.
@burgitech86433 жыл бұрын
I live in Germany and own a Volkswagen Stationwagon 1.4l TSI (four-stroke-Otto-Engine) with 125 hp. This is enough to go well above 125 mph up to 130 mph, which is permitted on the German motorway (with more powerful cars you could go even faster). What I ask myself: When it is not permitted to go faster than 85 mph, like in the US, why would you have a car with more than 75 hp? I one had a Ford Fiesta with 75 hp, which could go up to 100 mph. Even that would be well above the US speedlimit.
@startingbark03563 жыл бұрын
Yeah they also say bigger cars can go “further” how ? Isnt a bigger car gonna consume way more fuel then a small car that can go just as far with 30 litre’s of fuel
@irnbrukidsm4 жыл бұрын
A very informative and entertaining video. You’ve clearly identified and comprehensively explained many of the key differences in the European Vs US car markets...different needs for different cultures. 🏴
@MrJorgitogrande4 жыл бұрын
As a small European OEM engineer, the American culture is considered very litigations by our standards. Dealing with US customers (or rather their money chasing lawyers) requires an expensive US local legal department and can in the worst case bankrupt a small company. Related to that is the certification system in US (self certification), completely alien to European (and Chinese). Europe has a system of witness testing, where regularly compliance is demonstrated by an OEM in front of a government appointed inspectors and results in official certification, issued by government agencies. In US an OEM has an obligation to interpret the (non emission related) regulations and conduct all tests to prove compliance on their own. The results and evidence does not have to be presented to the US government, until something like “unintended acceleration” happens and lawyers start asking questions. It’s a big risk and turn off for small car companies
@JTR2534 жыл бұрын
What small companies are we talking about? If foreigners like Toyota and Hyundai can hack it then so can the German and the French. I think the bigger issue is that there is no entrepreneurial spirit in Europe and generally the continent is full of itself. It has become a self fulfilling prophecy where EU has no google, apple, Cisco, Microsoft, Qualcomm or even Facebook
@jeffluo89604 жыл бұрын
I don’t think anyone will trust American regulators now that they have the blood of 346 people (ET 302 and JT 610) on their hands.
@SDav214 жыл бұрын
@@JTR253 Hyundai and Toyota do not sell many of the cars they sell in Europe to the US. European cars always feel more upmarket. Toyota doesn't sell the Aygo there, or the Avanza, or the Innova, or the Hilux. Hyundai doesn't sell the i10, the i20 the Atos etc. Toyota and Hyundai have alternatives to sell there like massive Land Cruisers and Pallisades etc. Peugeot and Renault and Citroen do not have cars any bigger than a VW Tiguan. So why would they even spend time developing such large vehicles when you don't even need something that large.
@vannisettineri5554 жыл бұрын
@@JTR253 it's always funny reading these comments of americans saying every other place and everything made outside the us is bad, if a small manufacturer doesn't want to take the risk of an already saturated market of japanese and american trucks and can't afford to retest and potentially modify their cars they won't take the risk
@jvengence4 жыл бұрын
You don't need 350hp+ and a 4 second 0-120km/h to drive 120km/h or 50km/h in the city's. Also everything in america is bigger. Houses, vehicles, people
@rich74473 жыл бұрын
Nope. We don't base every life decision on what we need. I happen to have a 350hp vehicle that will not get even close to 120 km/h in 4 seconds, but it pulls a 14,000 lb trailer like it doesn't exist. It's all about what you want to be able to do. If you have the means to have a big vehicle and/or house and that is what you want then who should tell you otherwise?
@michaelheimbrand54244 жыл бұрын
Nothing strange about that you saw a lot of pickups here in Sweden. And they will not have a problem finding parking because of size. We have always preferred larger cars in Scandinavia. The best selling car for decades has been Volvos top models. And yes, we love pickups too. And apart from some really old parts of the cities, we have no issue with small roads and streets. And i have never seen a parking space that will not fit a large car. We do however have stupid politicians who think that a war on normal motorists is going to save the world. Not so good if you consider the size of Sweden. We are not the US of course, but you can drive for days without running out of country. Regards from a Swede who has a 40-foot motorhome and live in a very small village. But if you look around here, you will find everything from 60's Cadillacs, Ford F350's and other full-size US pick-ups. Most of my friends drive BMW X5/5-series or Mercedes or Volvo SUV's. And a couple of days ago i even saw a Humvee. In my garage i have Chrysler Voyager, Isuzu Trooper, Volvo 240 and 940 and a Mercedes S-class. Oh, i forgot... Regardless of direction, if i go for half an hour i will see a company that works with restoring or selling classic US cars.
@rizzlerazzleuno47334 жыл бұрын
I think Sweden + Scandinavia has more 1959 Cadillacs that the USA....................🙂
@jamesmedina20624 жыл бұрын
Michael Heimbrand Yeah! I sold a classic 1972 Ford auto part to a guy in Norway year ago. It surprised me!
@michaelheimbrand54244 жыл бұрын
@Coni Glione ?
@nicolaspeart39104 жыл бұрын
Never saw a big ass ford here in finland. The hillux is the main pick up here. Nordic countries in Europe are known from wagons (~20% share). Example notice Volvo models v 90/60.
@HB451754 жыл бұрын
@@nicolaspeart3910 Finland has an unusually high Toyota presence tho, much more popular than in Sweden. Altho I have seen one or two Toyota Tundras here. They're big.
@shroomyesc4 жыл бұрын
I have a car that gets to 100km/h in around 10 seconds, and I've found that the only place where you actually need fast acceleration is an on ramp to a motorway and correct me if I'm wrong, those are typically a *lot* shorter in North America compared to modern motorways in Europe. If I'm getting off lights, etc. I'm not gonna put my foot to the floor in any case, so the motorway is the only scenario where I find a sub 10 second 0-100 even desirable.
@MrHarpette4 жыл бұрын
I'll correct you: in the US the expressway entrance ramps are a hell of a lot longer than those in France
@rich74473 жыл бұрын
@@MrHarpette It depends on the location. Detroit on ramps are really short.
@MrHarpette3 жыл бұрын
@@rich7447 Texas is what i know.
@rich74473 жыл бұрын
@@MrHarpette Texas is a dream. We lived in Frisco for a while and loved it. They just finished the DNT/121 interchange when we left.
@bobdobalina29314 жыл бұрын
Interior plastics are a lot thinner on American vehicles. They feel cheap and nasty and warp and crack easily. I've had two Cadiillacs over here in the UK that, whilst well appointed, have been let down with cheap materials. But let's not forget just how pioneering US manufacturers were in the 1980s, managing to squeeze a breathtaking 150 bhp out of a 7.2 litre engine.
@mauriciocastro75054 жыл бұрын
Alex does great videos with great content. So basically cars are smaller in EU because gas is more expensive and parking spots are smaller.
@hsjawanda4 жыл бұрын
Excellent explanations!! 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼 In India the cars are even smaller (no space, fuel prices are astronomical (esp. relative to incomes) & taxes are high), so the Captur in India (though with a 1.5 L 110 hp diesel) is considered an up-market vehicle (if it is the same vehicle as in Europe, which it looks like...) 😜! PS: lived in the US for 7+ years, last 2.5 years there owned the Mark 5 VW GTI.
@Holtenstein4 жыл бұрын
The US 25-year import rule needs to be removed. Bring back the Freedom to buy whatever car we want again!!
@thorbennielsen38454 жыл бұрын
Americans CO2 footprint are much higher
@656hookemhorns4 жыл бұрын
That's a good thing, since CO2 is plant food and is not causing global warming. The Sun controls the temperature.
@prowiec4 жыл бұрын
@@656hookemhorns wow, I guess the European education is also much better...
@bighands694 жыл бұрын
@@prowiec Europeans create Nazi's and Communists. Tell what is so great.
@prowiec4 жыл бұрын
@@bighands69 You are correct, we created Americans too. Absolute shambles we are.
@jlust66604 жыл бұрын
@@656hookemhorns Under what rock have you been living?
@Messametti4 жыл бұрын
Iam from germany and own a 2011 Mustang. Here its a giant car, sometimes too big for some roads and parking spaces.
@AGMTB.4 жыл бұрын
All you talk about is horsepower and slow 0-60 from European cars. We don't have long, wide and straight roads, they're narrow and twisty. Thats why lighter cars with less power actually go faster!
@christopherx74283 жыл бұрын
Interesting comparison, from the US perspective - thanks! I regularily drive my Skoda Octavia diesel on 52-58 miles per US gallon. I have done even better in the summertime with a lot of driving outside cities. On the Autobahn, average 130 km/h with some stretches of 160 km/h to catch a ferry, it crept down to about 50 miles/US gallon. (AC is always on) With the fuel prices we have, you just cannot drive a gas guzzler. Mu cupholder is between the shift stick and the hand brake. I do have a cruise control, but I never use it.
@scrambler69-xk3kv Жыл бұрын
Remember the USA gallon is small than the gallon in Europe. Also,diesel is much more expensive than regular petrol in the USA, so not many diesel cars at all You will see heavy duty diesel pickup trucks in the USA most are used for towing and plowing snow from car parks.
@kadasenouci33453 жыл бұрын
In Europe, people do think about fuel/emissions and the environment, Americans do not !!
@nigratruo3 жыл бұрын
Yep, that is why VW got discovered for their intentional fraud about emissions in the USA, right? And this is why Tesla, an American company, is now revolutionizing the world by creating emission free car that sell better than any other electric car in the world? www.statista.com/statistics/960121/sales-of-all-electric-vehicles-worldwide-by-model/ (no competitor comes even close)
@monkeydui72413 жыл бұрын
Yeah weird how we make Tesla
@carloslaend16354 жыл бұрын
In USA there is not enough demand to justify them. We europeans value efficency over size, our countries a generaly more densely populated and gas is more expensive here. It is that simple.
@TheUrbanEpicure4 жыл бұрын
0:24 "European cars are smaller because Europeans are less fat and wasteful than Americans" There, fixed it for you.
@valdius854 жыл бұрын
Also, outside NA, bigger is really not better.
@bighands694 жыл бұрын
And neither is smaller better. European cars are simply too small to raise a family with. Americans used to laugh at little 1 litre european lawn mowers.
@valdius854 жыл бұрын
@@bighands69 Most of the World's kids are raised without massive pickup trucks and SUVs...
@jlust66604 жыл бұрын
@@bighands69 You're not supposed to raise your family in your car
@DesertStateInEU4 жыл бұрын
@Friedrich Every time I see somebody as brainwashed as you with some insane world view that you just displayed I wonder what kind of a shitty life you must be living.
@bighands694 жыл бұрын
@Friedrich Those not options for lower income families trying to get up the social ladder. A new Passat in Germany starts at $36000. In the US that price is in V6 luxury car category. Fuel is cheaper in America so your European little go carts are not really needed. American bigger is better hence why it beat Nazi Germany into the ground go and ask Grand Pa Himmler.
@blueshoe13224 жыл бұрын
This is an excellent review. Really enjoyed your video, always been interested in particular topic American/European cars and how they differ. Keep up the good work👍🏻
@Santu19394 жыл бұрын
Thank you again for the video. I have definitely took our American cars for granted
@aadi85683 жыл бұрын
American cars are shit lol, I don't see many advantages.
@johanvanroekel82533 жыл бұрын
@10:07 This is total BS. these engines are smaller, because it makes them fuel efficient, and modern cars use their power more efficient. My 1.2 polo has a 75HP engine. No it is not a fast car, but 80mph is easy. Any of those cars with small engines he mentions can do 100mph without breaking a sweat.
@ronaldl90853 жыл бұрын
Pickup trucks don't make sense in a rainy country like the Netherlands. All your shoppings would get wet on your trip back home, or stolen when you leave them in the back when going to another store.
@darrencurd44624 жыл бұрын
That was the first time (as a UK resident) that a USA commentator has talked so informatively and understandably at the differences between EU & USA car choice and everything in-between! Thank you 🙏
@73twall4 жыл бұрын
Back in my day, our Escorts in the USA had 88 horsepower brand new, and we were glad to have it. Only Cadillacs, Corvettes, and a few mustangs and Camaros tipped in at a robust 120 with their v8. You greedy kids and your turbo injected magical engines. Get off my lawn.
@marc90803 жыл бұрын
En France ou en règle générale dans l'Europe pas besoin d'un gros V8 pour 120cv! c'est ridicule, nous le faisons avec un 4 cylindres robuste plus économique et vu le poids de s voitures américaines 2 fois plus rapides ! alors je vois pas le besoin d'un tank américain qui bouffe 15 litres à 90 km/h alors que moi je consomme pour la même vitesse maxi 6 litres sur autoroute.
@JackoBanon13 жыл бұрын
Nowadays every 1.0l engine of a minicar can reach 120 easily.
@darek44883 жыл бұрын
I have a European 1997 Ford Escort originally 1.8 115hp and then swapped for 2.0 150hp. It's my first car and I still have it and still use it. I have plenty of other cars, but how can I sell my little Escort if it is still making me smile when I drive it? I had it for 12 years and it is a never ending project car.
@rich74473 жыл бұрын
They didn't make a lot of horsepower because they turned pretty slow. The 1986 Ford Escort GT (1.6L) had a power curve that fell of a cliff at just over 5,000 rpm. Seeing that torque is multiplied by engine rpm and then divided by 5,252 rpm to calculate horsepower the max HP number was actually not that bad. The newer small engines get their peak horsepower numbers by spinning the shit out of a low torque engine.
@philippedemontauvant55653 жыл бұрын
Who needs crazy acceleration in a narrow medieval city street?
@blikkis14 жыл бұрын
Alex, I love these kind of informative videos! Please do more of these!! You are great at it.
@SvikDK4 жыл бұрын
Nice video. I still don´t get the 0-60 obsesion in the US, but guess you are dragracing at all red lights, and need to win to feel good ;) The biggest reason for the difference is in the enviroment. America still don´t belive, that Co2 emisions is something we need to take serious, thus not providing the regulation goverments in Europe does. Many of the US cars would not be allowed in many German city, due to that fact. Power and size means more polluting, and we are not allowed to pollute here in europe, or if we want to, the prize is high :)
@betterbeavailable4 жыл бұрын
I guess yanks are in a hurry to get to the next traffic lights. Doesn't matter if your car takes 3 or 13 seconds to 100 in town. Well it matters in your gas bill.
@mauricejanssen59263 жыл бұрын
Hilarious. Even 50 HP will get up to 80mph easily.
@richardszuban73954 жыл бұрын
I would not buy small European car. I have been living in Germany for the past four years (finally going back to US). It is true that majority of vehicles sold here are smaller than those in America but it is due mostly to gas prices, not parking spaces. There are actually quite a few Durangos, Grand Cherokees, Rams, Edges and few other ones driven here on German Autobahns. Some are sold with European specs (mostly diesel engines) but some are imported to EU with US specs. What they do with these vehicles is they convert them to LPG. That cuts the costs of fueling by about 40-50%. The only European vehicles that could potentially make sense to sell in North America would be the wagons as not everyone likes big SUVs. Almost every European manufacturer sells one in Europe. I particularly happen to like Mazda6 wagon that is being sold in Europe but is not available in USA.
@AAutoBuyersGuide4 жыл бұрын
"quite a few" translates to so few that they represent less than 0.1% of cars on European roads.
@billharris72354 жыл бұрын
If only my 18 Mazda 6, which I love, was a wagon!
@richardszuban73954 жыл бұрын
@@AAutoBuyersGuide I don't know what percentage Alex but they are here. Not a lot of them but here. For example Ford Kuga (Escape) is selling in Germany well. The problem with "US made" cars sold in Germany (and EU in general) is also VAT and duty. Any vehicle imported from USA to Germany gets hit with 19% VAT (tax) and I think 20% Customs duty. In Poland for example it is 22% VAT and 20% duty plus 5% import tax.
@richardszuban73954 жыл бұрын
So with these additional costs, how do you stay competitive? You can't.
@edipires154 жыл бұрын
Richard Szuban the Ford Kuga was designed in Europe and is based on the Ford Focus. There’s no import tariff it them because they are built in Europe
@SG-sz5vh4 жыл бұрын
Regarding size of vehicles in the usa vs europe....there is a difference between “want” and “need”. Do americans need large vehicles? No, but we want them. We should keep that in mind
@marcgamez31194 жыл бұрын
Maybe you don't need a larger vehicle, but plenty of Americans do. Lifestyle is one determinant influencing choice for many people and American's don't live like Europeans. I live in Texas and lifestyle is only one reason I don't have a small car (I own a Ford Edge). I have to drive long distances to visit my family, buy groceries, and go to work (necessitating a comfortable vehicle). And I live in a large city, not in a rural area. Also, do Americans really need a tiny car? I wish laws would push Americans to buy newer more efficient vehicles (through taxes, registration fees, etc...) but as it stands, there is no reason for most Americans to choose to go small.
@afcgeo8824 жыл бұрын
We all want them. Europeans get hard-ons every time they see an American pick-up or a Durango. They want big cars too. The difference is that in the US, we can afford to buy and own them, while the cast majority of Europeans cannot. Cars are MUCH more expensive there. The rich Europeans drive Range Rovers, G500s, etc. Not small by any means.
@unknownunknowns4 жыл бұрын
In the US, they are used for farming.
@startingbark03563 жыл бұрын
@@afcgeo882 i see them more driving large mercedes SUV’s or other large german cars then rather range rovers here in the netherlands but do people really want a car that cant barely park anywhere or needs a special large parking spot to park, also we do want them but why really they only good at the open country side not in big cities where you can barely move
@loganburnett58794 жыл бұрын
One key thing you have left out, which is a major part of our buying preferences, more so than fuel! is insurance, insurance in Europe is some of the highest around the world, and me being in the UK gets slightly more shafted than the rest of Europe too... With prices for new drivers being astronomical. For example, my 1.2l 2008 Vauxhall Corsa cost me £1620 to insure and tax, so basically now I can drive it, but it cost me £1700 to buy! (This is with a black box, a device that monitors your driving and goes to the insurance company to evaluate if your a safe driver or not, otherwise my insurance would've cost £2000+) now keep this price in mind, I qouted many bigger engine cars when I was first looking 1.6l engines would cost me around £2-2.5k with a box, and for a 2.0l I'm looking at about £3k with a box. Now compare to my friend in New Jersey, he just got a 2.5l Nissan Xterra and paid $1000 to insure it, and he's good to go, he got the car from his uncle so price I'll say very similar, but the insurance is near half what I paid and doesn't pay for as much fuel either. But I'd say I like the smaller engines, one thing you no one seems to mention is how fast some of our sub 2.0l cars can go, with us having smaller engines for so long, the performances of there engines can be the same as the bigger displacement American cars, for example the 1.6l turbo version of my car can do 0-60 in 6.8 seconds, with only 180hp, and other cars being able to better or very similar all within the 2.0l engine range.
@paul1979uk20004 жыл бұрын
From my impression having lived in both the EU and US, cars are something you need in the US whereas in Europe, they are something most have but are not really needed as public transports is a lot better in Europe and overall, a lot of the services that the people need is in closer reach. Also, I get the impression that Europeans prefer smaller to medium size cars whereas the US seems to prefer big cars, two different markets with different ways of thinking.
@r.chavez55134 жыл бұрын
Why is gas more expensive in europe
@paul1979uk20004 жыл бұрын
@@r.chavez5513 Probably taxes to pay for the social benefits Europeans get.
@r.chavez55134 жыл бұрын
@@paul1979uk2000 yeah true
@r.chavez55134 жыл бұрын
@@paul1979uk2000 so its tru EU gas is expensive
@paul1979uk20004 жыл бұрын
@@r.chavez5513 It's more expensive but I wouldn't say it's expensive if you put it in the context of life, I've lived in both the US and EU and quality of life is high in them both, just the way money is distributed around the economy is different where in Europe we are fine with paying higher taxes to gain a lot of benefits from them whereas the US want to pay lower taxes but they tend to pay through the nose for basic things that we in Europe get for free or dirt cheap. This is why overall the quality of living and purchasing power isn't that different over the two but I do think the European system is better because it looks after the poorer and middle classes a lot better whereas the US system feels like your all on your own with little help from the system.