Why SUVs Are Taking Over

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  • čas přidán 28. 05. 2024
  • SUVs are EVERYWHERE.
    It seems that every new car you see on the road now is an SUV. They might have a stupid name like a ‘crossover’ or ‘subcompact’ but they’re still SUVs - and they all seem entirely unnecessary (to me - anyway).
    I don’t like it. They’re big, heavy, worse on fuel and often more cramped than the equivalent Estate car (or station wagon if you’re someone who calls Aluminium A-loo-minum)
    But I must be wrong - surely? Everyone else seems to like them, so what am I missing?
    -
    I’ll admit, there’s a time and place for an SUV. Maybe you live in the middle of nowhere or on the side of a mountain and regularly need to ford rivers and climb steep hills.
    It’s the millions of ‘crossover’ SUVs and people that probably should’ve just bought a normal car that I have a major issue with.
    I cannot see any reason why you’d buy one over a regular hatchback or even an estate car. Crossovers are small, cramped inside, worse on fuel, heavy and have no more luggage space than most hatchbacks.
    Most of them are just front-wheel drive hatchbacks on stilts anyway! Only when you lift them, you suddenly sacrifice handling, fuel economy and sometimes even legroom and bootspace.
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Komentáře • 1,9K

  • @OVERDRIVE.studios
    @OVERDRIVE.studios  Před 2 lety +1300

    So, is it just me who thinks SUVs are pointless?

    • @drnerd
      @drnerd Před 2 lety +170

      It's definitely not just you! 😊👍👍

    • @AQ-101
      @AQ-101 Před 2 lety +69

      Well I guess they're only purpose is to be able to carry a family without having the ugly-ness (generalizing) of a minivan, btw I'm only taking about large suvs, not crossovers, because they're just pointless

    • @MrLense
      @MrLense Před 2 lety +84

      People who drive SUVs and don't see an inch of mud or gravel are pointless

    • @mr.jewell
      @mr.jewell Před 2 lety +12

      You should set up a poll 😂

    • @JLneonhug
      @JLneonhug Před 2 lety +46

      1) You are seriously undervaluing road dominance, I went from hatchbacks, estates to SUV's (sports cars and mx5's in-between), a car guy obviously, but sitting that 2-3inches above everyone else makes driving around cities or towns much less stressful, the opposite of driving the MX5 (ie fly on the wall).
      2) Buying a "sporty" estate costs easily 10% more than the similar sized "sporty" SUV variant typically in the new car market,*
      3) Corporate lease hire perspective, there are (were) more deals on SUV's than estates simply because there are more choices out there*. *Point 2, 3 you could say this is driven from people buying SUV's in the first place which drives the costs down...
      4) To experience 4wd there's not many estates which can do that in similar price brackets. From a pure handling characteristic perspective, not actually off-roading, its quite different,
      5) More 7 seater options for SUV than estate, yeah sure- you can get an MPV but that's just.... No...
      6) Climbing up/down - you also missed a point where if you have small children, its much easier to put them in when its waist level rather than bending over etc, I've had a hatchback prior and that was not fun.
      7) ISOFIX - SUV's have more options for isofix, not all estates have the 3-4 isofixings. Not specifically you have 3-4 kids, its useful if kids have friends etc...
      8) Vision looking out/surroundings, the Mrs rates this highly vs previous estate
      9) Kerbing of wheels, or there lack of...
      10) Its safer becuase you're not going to be overcooking that corner as the SUV simply will warn you beforehand with its lackluster 'uninspiring' handling. Saying that, I can zip around a lot quicker in the SUV than in the previous hatchbacks that's for sure...
      11) What is even more obnoxious than a BMW driver? A BMW driver that drives an SUV.... :)

  • @ThronedObject
    @ThronedObject Před 2 lety +1100

    I thought I was in the minority for loathing SUVs. It's nice to know I'm not alone.

    • @nuddin99
      @nuddin99 Před 2 lety +22

      You are in the minority, why else do you think they sell well?

    • @Mharve
      @Mharve Před 2 lety +53

      @@nuddin99 because it's all they make . Ford and Chevrolet don't even make sedans anymore

    • @Mharve
      @Mharve Před 2 lety +33

      @@nuddin99 they know they can stop making sedans and force you to spend an extra 25 grand so they make more money . When that's all you make then that's all that is bought

    • @Janshevik
      @Janshevik Před 2 lety +15

      @@nuddin99 Because currently, older generation has more buying power and is more interested in cars in general, so they dictate the market. And being older, they are more likely have back problems and is easier to go in and out of the car.

    • @riverrain3568
      @riverrain3568 Před 2 lety

      @@Mharve they do actually but not in US because people just loves SUVs :(
      Man fuck SUVs and everything they stand for

  • @Reeposter
    @Reeposter Před 2 lety +878

    The worst thing about SUVs is that since the trend started more and more pedestrians are killed in road accidents, so the argument "SUVs are safe" is just a drivers perspective.

    • @TiyamatFTL
      @TiyamatFTL Před 2 lety +122

      And it's not even true, Moose test, side impact etc. , only safer when you're going head on with something smaller

    • @TiyamatFTL
      @TiyamatFTL Před 2 lety +68

      precieved saftey sadly goes over real safety for alot of people, or they are just not aware most of the time

    • @xyz-je2wx
      @xyz-je2wx Před 2 lety +48

      SUVs handle worse and have higher chance or rolling over

    • @F1ll1nTh3Blanks
      @F1ll1nTh3Blanks Před 2 lety +23

      Yeh, it's only safer for the driver. For everyone else, they're kinda a menace.

    • @jamesengland7461
      @jamesengland7461 Před 2 lety +22

      First, only recently have cars been designed AT ALL to protect pedestrians. Second, even a microcar is going to hit, maim, and kill people. Even a bicycle can knock someone over hard enough to kill them.
      The rise in pedestrian deaths is due to pedestrian behavior; mostly distraction.
      All cars are safer than they used to be, because they're better built to handle a crash and protect occupants, and more recently, pedestrians. SUVs are also improving due to stability control.
      As for pedestrian behavior, I suspect that phones and earpieces are the cause. However, I'll add that here in the US, outside the dense urban areas. our young people no longer have the common sense to even know how to cross the street. Our schools actually discourage learning how to be a pedestrian.

  • @AmadeuszAndrzejewski
    @AmadeuszAndrzejewski Před 2 lety +743

    SUVs killed my car of choice - the minivan. Minivan allows for similarly high riding position but is waaaaayy more practical with the removable seats, flat floor and overall spaciousness and configurability - things I often need for work. And they still are more fuel efficient than SUVs. All this SUV madness just means I have less and less reasonable cars to choose from.

    • @James-kh8mq
      @James-kh8mq Před 2 lety +98

      100%. Same thing with the toy trucks here in the US. Now a working man who actually needs a truck has to pay god knows what for one, just so a bunch of midlife crisis dudes from the suburbs can commute in a drum braking GMC monstrosity.

    • @ad_fletch
      @ad_fletch Před 2 lety +18

      @@James-kh8mq Surely there should be laws against anything over 2500lb having drums….

    • @OhKnow379
      @OhKnow379 Před 2 lety +4

      @@James-kh8mq Hilux sounds like the solution but you don't have em over there

    • @johanjoe3012
      @johanjoe3012 Před 2 lety +5

      i think theres still a few good minivans. theres one from chrysler and toyota (i forgot their names , sorry) , and the kia carnival

    • @AmadeuszAndrzejewski
      @AmadeuszAndrzejewski Před 2 lety +2

      @@johanjoe3012 It's better in the US than in Europe, where I happen to live. Though getting a big minivan around here usually means importing it from the US anyway...

  • @incominglaunch
    @incominglaunch Před 2 lety +208

    As someone who daily drives an mx-5 it’s infuriating having absolutely no visibility in comparison to these huge cars that everyone now buys.

    • @murray6188
      @murray6188 Před 2 lety +60

      my mx5 is on coilovers and i cant see anything over 1 car ahead of me. Not to mention how every massive new car with bright led headlights has them pointing into my mirrors :(

    • @fders938
      @fders938 Před 2 lety +5

      @@murray6188 this.

    • @legmaballshityourchin
      @legmaballshityourchin Před 2 lety +2

      @@murray6188 my del sol on coilovers makes a ford sedan tower over me lol.

    • @fattyMcGee97
      @fattyMcGee97 Před rokem +1

      If you have a hardtop or the roof down, at least in the NA and NB, the car is a fishbowl with amazing visibility… until mr range over decides to put his fat ass in your face while mrs SQ7 shines her lights directly into your mirrors from behind.
      I’m fine with cars being big. The Volvo V70 is one of my favourite cars of all time. It’s big and heavy. It’s very practical and handles surprisingly well for being 1.7 metric tons. It had all of the early 2000’s luxury features you’d expect as well as being one of the comfiest things on the road. It managed to do that without sitting 10ft tall and getting in everyone’s way.
      I obviously love my mx5 NB. Mandatory miata love.

    • @bouss1
      @bouss1 Před rokem +11

      @@murray6188 I was in the market for a car. I ended up with an SLK. Loving every minute of driving it and hate night driving due to SUVs blinding me over my back mirror. Your points could not be truer. SUVs are a nightmare in the roads and mostly in the hands of people who cannot deal well with their huge footprint.

  • @TiyamatFTL
    @TiyamatFTL Před 2 lety +917

    Another point: people are generally scared of driving, sadly, often to an unreasonable degree. Sitting higher up reduces the sense of speed as you are farther away from moving objects, making you feel like the speed you are doing is safer than it is. Sadly this has the effect of making people drive more dangerously, and things can quickly get out of their control.

    • @martinfisker7438
      @martinfisker7438 Před 2 lety +125

      SUVs are also safer.. except for anyone not in the big murder machine

    • @krzysztof6123
      @krzysztof6123 Před 2 lety +47

      @@martinfisker7438 yeah the higher than "normal" crash structure makes them dangerous for non megalomaniacs

    • @TiyamatFTL
      @TiyamatFTL Před 2 lety +39

      @@martinfisker7438 Only if you are about to collide head on with someone in a golf tho, but the real winner in that battle are the 2.5 ton electric cars lol.
      SUVs generally are more dangerous than an equivalent estate, they have more mass to stop with similar crumple zones, the side impact protection needs to be alot stronger, and when even a Porsche Macan fails the moose test you know they are pretty hopeless at evading things and not rolling over.

    • @acerIOstream
      @acerIOstream Před 2 lety +49

      Additionally, SUVs are deadly for pedestrians compared to hatches, sedans and estates. Heavier and less steady makes for less stopping power. Taller and bulkier makes for less visibility, especially the Armada-like SUVs with tall square fronts that can hide a whole 5ft tall human being. Flat fronts and high hoods makes for more deadly impacts.
      Modern SUVs are also a nuisance to other road users. Their bumpers are too high for other reasonable cars on the road, making accidents involving SUVs way more costly and dangerous than they should be due to bumpers no longer aligning (The CRV bumper aligns with the Civic bumper though, so it's not entirely impossible. Good job, Honda!). Their headlights are also more often than not mounted way too high (modern pickups are also guilty of this) and can easily blind other road users.
      I hate SUVs, I will never buy one, I hate that manufacturers are making the roads unsafe for everyone else because "muh tall driving position" and I wish manufacturers would stop hyping them so much and people would rent a pickup truck the ONE time a year they need to get lumber from Home Depot.

    • @alunesh12345
      @alunesh12345 Před 2 lety +1

      @@martinfisker7438 Believe in JESUS today, confess and repent of your sins. No one goes to heaven for doing good but by believing in JESUS who died for our sins. Hell isn't fun. GOD loves you soo much unconditional❤🙌❤😋❤

  • @Vromiaris778
    @Vromiaris778 Před 2 lety +511

    I don’t own an SUV nor will I ever. I am a fan of tiny cars - they offer much better versatility in terms of driving & parking in the city and the only time I feel crowded is when there are SUV’s around me. I love that I do find parking spots on the streets much, much easier now! (Mini Cooper SE owner)

    • @batialexis9339
      @batialexis9339 Před 2 lety

      Family?

    • @WolfieNamira
      @WolfieNamira Před 2 lety +27

      @@batialexis9339 for a family of one or two, a small car is perfect

    • @batialexis9339
      @batialexis9339 Před 2 lety +18

      @@WolfieNamira sometimes i forgot i'm from a 3rd world country where roads are like a moonwalk, SUVs and pick up trucks are the way to go for ground clearance plus interior space.

    • @Odat
      @Odat Před 2 lety +16

      Try fitting a family of 5 with 3 kids that are 6 foot tall and above in a car. SUVs exist for a reason. I also like the way they look and how high up you are. I can’t stand cars!!. Different tastes.

    • @WolfieNamira
      @WolfieNamira Před 2 lety +11

      @@Odat wagon

  • @overcaves
    @overcaves Před 2 lety +112

    I've been driving the same honda accord for nine years and it went from feeling like an averagely sized car in comparison to traffic to feeling like it's going to get run over monster truck style by a gmc yukon every time I drive to the grocery store

    • @LivingTheDream77
      @LivingTheDream77 Před rokem +2

      THIS

    • @tramlink8544
      @tramlink8544 Před rokem +2

      now imagine how i feel in a 1990s P8 Starlet hatchback in EUROPEAN traffic which tends to be smaler than US vehicles lol. i feel like im in a 1960s Mini Cooper in the 2000s

    • @mehmeh5471
      @mehmeh5471 Před rokem

      @@tramlink8544 Corsa b is scary also

  • @fieldo85
    @fieldo85 Před 2 lety +93

    Been considering this for years. The best explanations I've come across:
    -Parents dont want to bend over to buckle up their spawn
    -Oldies dont want to bend their knees/hips
    -Women/short guys who want to feel tall
    They're basically just over-sized hatchbacks that people progress to when they run out of room.

    • @rektiumstuff3245
      @rektiumstuff3245 Před 2 lety +1

      live in an area where u can get sudden dumps of snow and you will enjoy having a SUV.

    • @fieldo85
      @fieldo85 Před 2 lety +21

      ​@@rektiumstuff3245 Nah, I own an AWD Subaru sedan (Liberty/Legacy) for that purpose (not that it will ever snow here in Australia, but we have plenty of dirt).
      When I drove around alpine area's of Switzerland I was amazed at the number of Subaru's... it figures because they definitely get a lot of snow.
      A lot of SUV's are FWD and would perform horrendously in the snow. Plus their weight make them much worse at braking in slippery conditions, especially on road tyres.
      See: czcams.com/video/S7j7jHIvoPc/video.html

    • @evancombs5159
      @evancombs5159 Před 2 lety +11

      @@rektiumstuff3245 driving ability is more important than the vehicle when it snows.

    • @scottearl7687
      @scottearl7687 Před 2 lety +5

      @@rektiumstuff3245 i do and the suv’s are worse than trucks or awd cars and most are fwd anyway

    • @rektiumstuff3245
      @rektiumstuff3245 Před 2 lety

      @@fieldo85 FWD is better in the snow in a car but worse in a SUV? Yes makes it harder to stop. Honestly tires make a bigger difference than a SUV over a sedan. But with the SUV i'll never high center because of said snow. Also your subaru Legacy is a modern day crossback or w/e they call a small SUV now.

  • @julshg
    @julshg Před 2 lety +362

    every time I see a new SUV gets announced, I cry in anger
    as a Car mechanic, these are the worst to work on and most experiences I had in my ford dealership (Germany) were a pain in the ass most of the time.

    • @TiyamatFTL
      @TiyamatFTL Před 2 lety +14

      lifting the tyre of a chayenne = pain

    • @99Lezard99
      @99Lezard99 Před 2 lety +25

      exactly. an suv tire change....customers have to pay more for tires brakes and fuel but they want to sit up higher.

    • @julshg
      @julshg Před 2 lety +3

      @@TiyamatFTL a former college of me worked at Audi before. Guess how bad it is with the 22' from an Q8 :')
      or "just" the 17/18' of a Ford Ranger

    • @Simon_r2600
      @Simon_r2600 Před 2 lety +14

      Ich arbeite bei BMW. Diese scheiß X5-Räder sind so schwer, vor allem wenn man sie ins Reifenregal ganz oben einlagern muss -_-

    • @julshg
      @julshg Před 2 lety +1

      @@Simon_r2600 fühl ich bruder...bin zum glück seit Januar fertig mit der Ausbildung xD

  • @marvinsamuels1237
    @marvinsamuels1237 Před 2 lety +433

    My wife said she preferred SUV’s for their greater visibility as you’re higher up until 1. I bought her a roadster and she was able to enjoy a spirited drive down typical country roads without feeling seasick, 2. She scraped it trying to negotiate a narrow underground car park. Now she agrees with me that they’re not all people make them out to be. I think for many people it’s a status or style choice, and not one a true “driver” would make. We have since traded our SUV in for a 5 dr sport back style EV.

    • @TiyamatFTL
      @TiyamatFTL Před 2 lety +29

      sadly most people only get to experience very few types of cars, and my guess is alot of people would change their opinion, especially when they somewhat enjoy driving.

    • @jonass1285
      @jonass1285 Před 2 lety +8

      I drove with 2 SUVs (not mine, I was just allowed by their owners), and I really hated it. The suspension was hard and bumpy, the high seating position made me feel disconnected from everything happening outside (the handling was weird and felt like butter). I was so happy when I got back into my station wagon.

    • @ambergris5705
      @ambergris5705 Před 2 lety +15

      I convinced my mom who wanted to go for an SUV to choose a saloon instead. She is regularly in awe of how little it sips fuel (she does a lot of highway driving), and is not going back. Also, she was impressed that it was possible to buy an equivalent or better saloon for a much lower price than an SUV. Now she wants a convertible though, and I fully support that 😂😂😂

    • @Simon_r2600
      @Simon_r2600 Před 2 lety +1

      Get her a VW T4

    • @Simon_r2600
      @Simon_r2600 Před 2 lety +4

      @@jonass1285 I work as a BMW car mechanic, and i drove tons of X1, X2, X3, X5... they are terrible. Especially chaning X5 tires is something i wish nobody

  • @afterbrnr
    @afterbrnr Před 2 lety +88

    The funny thing I noticed is that while they are supposed to be capable of offroading... a hatchback can do it arguably better without it being a sort of rally bred package like a Yaris GR for example.
    The only thing I dread is that in the future rally will be dominated by SUVs and that is a future I don't want to live...

    • @legmaballshityourchin
      @legmaballshityourchin Před 2 lety +13

      I honestly doubt it tho. A rally SUV would be a slightly bigger hatchback with how much weight reduction would have to be done

    • @sailor7537
      @sailor7537 Před 2 lety +2

      Paris-Dakar racers but everywhere xDDDD

    • @slurp3194
      @slurp3194 Před rokem +1

      No it wouldnt suvs destroy hatch backs in off roading its not even close ground clearance is impossible

    • @legmaballshityourchin
      @legmaballshityourchin Před rokem +3

      @@slurp3194 I mean if we're taking stock vehicles to rally race, then yeah I guess

    • @georgiishmakov9588
      @georgiishmakov9588 Před rokem

      @@legmaballshityourchin rally nascar? I'd fucking watch that

  • @rabidsminions2079
    @rabidsminions2079 Před 2 lety +118

    I enjoy watching SUV'S roll over in dash cam videos. Something that wouldn't happen to sedans, wagons or hatches in most situations.

    • @slurp3194
      @slurp3194 Před rokem +9

      The higher center of gravity wont make that much of difference unless u get into a very violent crash

    • @Sunstepa
      @Sunstepa Před rokem

      @@MidwestFarmToys so you are a sadist.

    • @basmca1
      @basmca1 Před rokem +12

      @@slurp3194 Which always makes a difference, regardless of the type of crash. The more energy the worse the crash is.
      Not to mention that in an SUV you are more likely to have the crash, because it handles so much worse.
      Higher bumpers and center of mass are also fking lethal to everything else on the road, especially cyclists, pedestrians and motorcyclists.
      In an SUV you are 60% more likely to end up killing someone in an equal crash. But most SUV drivers don't care about anyone else so that makes sens.e

    • @Vanamutt
      @Vanamutt Před rokem +2

      @@slurp3194 Ever heard of the moose test? No contact needed to roll over.

    • @gravemind6536
      @gravemind6536 Před rokem +8

      @@slurp3194 Center of gravity makes all the difference. Tesla cars are almost impossible to roll in a crash due the fact all the battery packs are low down meaning the weight is only a couple of feet from the floor. An average hatchback requires a significant crash to roll, a sedan or wagon are hard to roll too. SUVs are always rolling in crashes and ones not that significant, SUVs also like to roll just from evasive manourves.

  • @rvrsprk
    @rvrsprk Před 2 lety +1424

    you're doing god's work. I only wish more people would realize how unnecessary and even worse off SUVs truly are in most cases

    • @lethuzulu4966
      @lethuzulu4966 Před 2 lety +33

      I see your point ( ultimately the point of the video) but most people gravitate towards SUV's simply because of ease and ego. In South Africa ( where I live), most people who live in big cities have family in rural areas and/or townships. The roads to these areas often are low quality and have potholes.(the government here is rotten with corruption.)
      People see these issues and think: "SUV's were made to go off road, if it can handle the Drakensberg or Alps, then a few potholes shouldn't be too bad." So they'd rather pay a premium for a GLC over a C-Class estate.
      The other reason is just ease of loading and off loading items from the boot. South Africans often buy in bulk, and having a higher up boot is often a huge factor then buying a car. This is why SUV's are seen as more bang for your buck down here.
      Fun fact, VW's Tiguan and Toureg out sold the Golf and the Arteon down here. We only get the GTI and Golf R varients of the Golf now.

    • @raymundhofmann7661
      @raymundhofmann7661 Před 2 lety +17

      First came SUVs, then came covid.

    • @pian-0g445
      @pian-0g445 Před 2 lety +27

      @@lethuzulu4966 I don’t think he’s talking about areas like that. It’s very understandable on why people use it in environments like that, but he’s talking about the issue in more developed urban areas

    • @alunesh12345
      @alunesh12345 Před 2 lety +6

      @@lethuzulu4966 Believe in JESUS today, confess and repent of your sins. No one goes to heaven for doing good but by believing in JESUS who died for our sins. Hell isn't fun. GOD loves you soo much unconditional❤🙌❤😋❤

    • @bhavishmanoj4373
      @bhavishmanoj4373 Před 2 lety +11

      @@alunesh12345 what are u on about?

  • @forfluf
    @forfluf Před 2 lety +191

    I love small hatchback cars, park anywhere, practical, fun.

    • @Fulmynato
      @Fulmynato Před 2 lety +23

      You can do it with SUVs too. Just park on the walkway or the bike lane.
      - sarcasm mode off

    • @u9477
      @u9477 Před 2 lety +2

      Yep. Was looking to buy a troc but ended up choosing a polo instead. Similar practicality, size and quality but so much cheaper! The only difference is with extra height i would worry bit less about potholes but oh well

    • @dagoose.
      @dagoose. Před rokem

      Yeah, even non-hot hatches are fun to drive

    • @tramlink8544
      @tramlink8544 Před rokem

      i have a 1992 P8 Starlet and my friend got to drive it, he was in awe of the turn radius and just how fast a 75hp engine can go on a 600kg car

    • @everydayfun9531
      @everydayfun9531 Před rokem

      You can Park an Suv too..

  • @gajxo
    @gajxo Před 2 lety +167

    Great video, I really really don't like SUVs for the reasons you mentioned. They represent so many things wrong in society - greed, feelings over facts, not caring for the environment, bad traffic and parking in cities, danger to pedestrians. I hope it's mostly a boomer greed thing and 'normal' practical cars like estates and minivans will return.

    • @slurp3194
      @slurp3194 Před rokem +6

      Tf are u on about none of ur points are valid what so ever u just have a completely different preference. What are u trying to tell me a hell cat is safe? Td

    • @dagoose.
      @dagoose. Před rokem +21

      @@slurp3194 Dodge Challenger and Charger had a 5 star safety rating, while the Durango, an SUV with a hellcat model scored 4 stars

    • @Vageta1999
      @Vageta1999 Před rokem +3

      @@dagoose. bro really tried to sneak a hellcat in there.

    • @MsJassi13
      @MsJassi13 Před rokem +1

      Small SUVs are better for parking in cities than station wagons cause they’re shorter and more of them will fit

    • @schmausa795
      @schmausa795 Před 11 měsíci +3

      @@MsJassi13you mean a hatchback?

  • @Knackebrot
    @Knackebrot Před 2 lety +279

    Finally, someone else who shares my opinion. You forgot to mention the heightened risk for literally everyone outside of the SUV-drivers car when it comes to accidents.
    More weight also means more severe injuries, except for the person inside the SUV. I hear the argument a lot that people want a safe car, but choosing an SUV just because of that is moronic and egoistical.

    • @germanogirardelli
      @germanogirardelli Před 2 lety

      absolutely, try driving a normal car on the highway and being surrounded by huge SUV beasts. They're the scum of the streets

    • @darlyndungs9969
      @darlyndungs9969 Před 2 lety +9

      Nobody buy a car to have an accident. That happened so it’s pointless, if everybody drive well it would be less accident no latter what car u have

    • @slurp3194
      @slurp3194 Před rokem +1

      Wtf are u even saying? All your points are pulling at strings

    • @ew6546
      @ew6546 Před rokem

      So you are telling me I should get an SUV.

    • @Knackebrot
      @Knackebrot Před rokem +6

      @@ew6546 Absolutely not. I maybe should've elaborated a bit further in the comment, but what i was trying to say is that small cars aren't inherently less safe than bigger, heavier vehicles. Lane keep assist, pedestrian detection, allround airbags are features you'll find in a Suzuki Swift (~900kg/~2000lbs kerb weight) nowdays. Such cars also tend to brake better.
      We should all be buying only the lightest vehicle that fits our needs. No need to 1up everyone else. It's viscious cycle that ruins the roads, kills more pedestrian and bicycle users (especially children), wastes resources and increases pollution (tire debris, brake dust, CO2).
      Bigger vehicles are also more expensive in upfront cost, repairs and fuel costs. There's more money to make out of these huge cars than smaller, cheaper ones. That's why the market pushes them so hard towards the consumer.

  • @ambergris5705
    @ambergris5705 Před 2 lety +195

    SUVs are seen as providing everything : room, lifestyle, 'design', security, and 'sport'. Most of it is an illusion, but people seem OK with making a compromise on prices and fuel economy for the added clout. Even though I fail to see anything that would attract a living being other than molluscs to a fourth gen RAV4, except the fact that maybe it's a bit tougher than the others?

    • @arctus35
      @arctus35 Před 2 lety +1

      ong

    • @TiyamatFTL
      @TiyamatFTL Před 2 lety +12

      only redeeming quality a RAV4 has is the ability to run for like 20 years without an oil change, wich is mostly a toyota thing though. great as an affordable offroade but yeah, pointless everywhere else

    • @ravenclawgamer6367
      @ravenclawgamer6367 Před 2 lety +7

      Yep. SUVs are way more versatile. Especially when you live in a country like India where you can easily end up going on inexistent patches of terrain for visiting common tourist spots outside the city. SUVs provide way more peace of mind, knowing that your car can handle the job without you having to rely on external help to drive short distances. For these reasons, I like AWD crossovers the best. If somebody wants to go extreme off-road, I'd suggest a truck, as it's way more versatile than a big cramped box.

    • @ambergris5705
      @ambergris5705 Před 2 lety +20

      @@ravenclawgamer6367 in countries where a bit of off-roading is your everyday, SUVs make sense. But SUVs with no off-road capabilites, and in countries where you never need them is absurd

    • @ravenclawgamer6367
      @ravenclawgamer6367 Před 2 lety +4

      @@ambergris5705 True. Where utility is not required, it makes no sense.

  • @BadPhD777
    @BadPhD777 Před 2 lety +73

    Love love love this video!!! I saw an article last week that said 80% of new car sales in America are SUV's, crossovers and trucks. Truly sad. I'll NEVER buy an SUV.

    • @mrwhips3623
      @mrwhips3623 Před 2 lety +8

      Yah at least in Europe cars still sell ok but here in North America the situation is truly lame smh!

    • @am0eba168
      @am0eba168 Před 2 lety +7

      Well I can see how big pretentious Americans like big pretentious cars, it's all relative

    • @everydayfun9531
      @everydayfun9531 Před rokem

      Americans love Big stuff and We Mean BIG STUFF*

    • @beebsbubbles
      @beebsbubbles Před rokem +2

      Yeah, mostly because they don't even SELL anything else in America anymore.

  • @neo_falcon
    @neo_falcon Před 2 lety +170

    Where I'm from, I believe the SUV appeal comes from our crumbling infrastructure, and poor driving education---especially here in the Midwest U.S. (A.K.A. The Salt Belt). Many consumers here likely go for the SUVs believing they are safer and can handle the unnecessary beatings from the poor infrastructure because they're bigger....while in turn making it less safe for others in smaller and lower vehicles.

    • @slurp3194
      @slurp3194 Před rokem +1

      So what everyone can buy suvs 🤷🏽‍♂️. Your mentioning how its unsafe fod the smaller lower cars well that shouldnt be ur concern they can buy an suv too instwad

    • @neo_falcon
      @neo_falcon Před rokem +13

      @@slurp3194 Well yeah, it is my concern because I drive a lowered vehicle along with a utility wagon that’s comparably low in ride height to the average SUV. My reasons were outlined because SUVs are very likely a bandage over much bigger, yet avoidable issues that should NOT require purchasing an SUV in the first place. Also, there are enough people around who cannot afford, or do not need-or even want an SUV-especially considering they cost an average of $5000 USD more than a comparable sedan or hatchback. And enough of us do not want to own and drive the same cookie cutter vehicle/form factor as the average Joe.

    • @hockeymaskbob2942
      @hockeymaskbob2942 Před rokem +1

      The SUV appeal comes from marketing by GM and Ford, cause it's where they make the most money, until gas prices go up, but they'll just get bailed out again, thanks Obama.

    • @neo_falcon
      @neo_falcon Před rokem +1

      @@hockeymaskbob2942 People are still buying SUVs regardless of gas prices-One reason being SUVs are practically all that’s available new with some of these brands, nowadays. In fact, many people are still willing to purchase “unchipped” vehicles over MSRP regardless of the chip shortage, and Ford (among other brands) is willing. Then they plan to install the missing chips at no cost once they’re available.

  • @dobbsgraphica4988
    @dobbsgraphica4988 Před 2 lety +41

    I've noticed traffic light rollovers are increasing with the average ride height increase, be it SUV's or 4WD's. Someone doesn't give way, slight nudge, and over they go!

  • @crustydownunder
    @crustydownunder Před 2 lety +303

    I absolutely agree with you. Big, ugly, over-powered gas-guzzlers. Give me a diesel Golf, and I'll be a happy man.
    And if every car on the road is an SUV, there's no benefit at all from an elevated driving position.
    I will say, getting in and out of my Audi S4 at my age is getting harder, but so is climbing up into my Hino truck.
    Some people say safety is a big reason for buying an SUV, but that's only if you hit a small hatchback. They are not as safe if you hit another, maybe bigger, SUV, and they do not handle as well as a sedan or wagon. So they are not as safe.

    • @vavra222
      @vavra222 Před 2 lety +4

      Im a Golf owner, not a diesel one but still, its perfect if you dont have a garage or your own place for parking, and even then, anywhere i go, i can park on easy mode.
      Plus its fucking nice to have infinite supply of cheap and readily accessible parts.
      While i miss driving a Subaru, i cant say i miss the bills.

    • @JakobM-hz7jx
      @JakobM-hz7jx Před 2 lety +1

      Non American

    • @crustydownunder
      @crustydownunder Před 2 lety

      @@vavra222 I hear you on the Subaru, not so reliable. One car I've never owned is a Golf, even though I've always wanted one. I bought a S4 Audi a few years ago, and I'm a bit sorry I did. Don't get me wrong, I love driving the Audi, it's just a stunning car to drive. But, if the timing belt goes, it'll cost me $9,000 to fix it. Plus, it's heavy on fuel, being a V8. But I love the sound, of the thing.
      I have had my eye on an R32 Golf, what a gorgeous little machine they are. But, I figure with a diesel, a 1,000 ks from a tank would be perfect for me. Fuel is going to get more and more expensive, and I could always convert it to run on bio-diesel or cooking oil? LOL.

    • @grayaj23
      @grayaj23 Před 2 lety +3

      There is a benefit to the elevated driving position. For me it's independent of what other people are driving. Visibility, and the fact that I don't need to bend over to get into it. That's 100% of the value proposition for me.

    • @josh3221ify
      @josh3221ify Před 2 lety +2

      Actually if you are in an SUV you can still see the road ahead through the windscreen of the SUV in front, however in a lower car all you see is the rear door

  • @omarlinp
    @omarlinp Před 2 lety +46

    I like small sedan cars. but living in a place where the roads are not as good, having the clearance to go over holes, bumps, and less than ideal roads is the reason why people in my country choose them over anything else.

    • @Daekar3
      @Daekar3 Před rokem +9

      And that makes total sense. I am with you. But how do we explain the numbers in light of the fact that the majority of the population doesn't live in the country, and wealth to buy new vehicles is concentrated in the city?
      There are a lot of 4x4s purchased for use in environments where they make zero sense.

    • @omarlinp
      @omarlinp Před rokem +2

      @@Daekar3 that it's true. To me it mostly come to status symbol. If you have the money you want a big vehicle to show status.
      I mean the same could be said about the US and their obsession for trucks but that out of the scope of this video.
      But that does not apply for everybody. I do know people that for like the flexibility that an SUV provides over any other vehicle.

  • @grumpychocobo
    @grumpychocobo Před 2 lety +8

    I just bought my first SUV/crossover/whatever and for me it was primarily 2 things. 1: I ended up with a 110lb dog and my Mazda 3 hatchback wasn't really cutting it. 2: My back problems finally got bad enough that it could be difficult for me to repeatedly get in and out of a low car. Got a CX-50 and I've been pleased with the change.

  • @liamm-c1287
    @liamm-c1287 Před 2 lety +184

    I envy the results they got. I recently drove across america and saw about 3 wagons/estates. Theres a decent amount of hatchbacks but nothing close to the number of SUVs. These stats are lovely.

    • @apocello42
      @apocello42 Před 2 lety +7

      If you only saw 3 estates you clearly didn't spend much time in the Pacific Northwest. Subaru Outbacks may be the single most common vehicle around here.

    • @xyz-je2wx
      @xyz-je2wx Před 2 lety +2

      US has a lot of pick up trucks right
      i think people get SUVs cause they are more comfortable in long drives as they are big but at the same times less ugly than a mini van

    • @kriche74
      @kriche74 Před 2 lety +8

      @@apocello42 not trying to be a know it all but most people consider the Outback an SUV.

    • @apocello42
      @apocello42 Před 2 lety +1

      @@kriche74 Well as someone who has owned two and gone through the registration, licensing, and insurance process with them I can assure you your anecdotal evidence is wrong. Just because "compact" SUVs have encroached on its footprint doesn't change the fact that the outback existed, as a wagon, long before SUVs were even a thing, let alone compact SUVs.

    • @dualsportwannabe3708
      @dualsportwannabe3708 Před 2 lety +3

      @@apocello42 I respect that you love the Outback, and I do mean that in all honesty. They're great vehicles. I am left questioning the accuracy of your statements though. The Subaru Outback first entered production in 1994 for the 1995 model year. The Jeep Cherokee entered into production in 1984, and is considered to be the first compact SUV. If we want to be really picky, the first SUV's started showing up in the 1930's, though the term "SUV" had yet to be coined. Evidence, by nature of being anecdotal, is not automatically assumed to be incorrect, though that is what you've insinuated with your statement. Ironic considering the evidence you've provided in the defense of the Outback's status as a wagon was anecdotal in nature anyway. One would need to hold a poll to conclude whether the average American considers the Outback to be an SUV or a wagon. You, as an owner, are still a sample pool of only one person. It's nothing personal against you seeing as I don't know you any differently from the next guy in the comment section. Hope you have a great day.

  • @drnerd
    @drnerd Před 2 lety +26

    SUV's make my soul hurt! 😂😂😂

  • @kpafucakpafuco1796
    @kpafucakpafuco1796 Před 2 lety +26

    I agree with you completely as I don’t have or want an SUV, but I kinda see their appeal at least in my city (Jakarta, Indonesia). Some of our roads are really bad (including big speed bumps) and we have seasonal flooding, as such, the ride height of an SUV kinda make sense. On top of that, people here have big families and haul loads of stuff but very few manufacturers produces estates/station wagons (currently, Mazda 6 is the only good and reasonably priced estate - please cmiiw if anyone knows).
    I drive a BMW G20 and I love it. But can’t deny i get a bit annoyed every time I drove over bad roads/big speed bumps and hit the side of my undercarriage or have to turn around if I can’t get through shallow flooding 😅

    • @ethannorton564
      @ethannorton564 Před rokem +3

      I wish we had Mazda 6 wagons/estates in the US. Last time that was a thing here was 2007. Even the stock Mazda 6 is going away.

  • @vid8152
    @vid8152 Před 2 lety +15

    We have one SUV because we live in an area where it snows alot therefore the extra ground clearance and 4x4 mean you can go to work without shoveling the driveway or wait for the ploughs to clean the road. Also handy to go on steep forest roads, I only wish it had low range gearbox.

    • @jkliao6486
      @jkliao6486 Před rokem

      @@MidwestFarmToys Snow tires. Simple answer. I good set of snow tires cost you $1000 on a hatchback, and I'm talking about the best. 4x4 with all-season tires means you are not safer in slippery and cold conditions. You just think you are. Don't believe me? My GTI on snow tires is the only thing that moves on the road when there was a sudden snow in mid November.

    • @jkliao6486
      @jkliao6486 Před rokem

      @@MidwestFarmToys Then don't make yourself sound like an average American situation. In your case, yes, 4x4 is very much necessary. But most of the places don't even snow that often. And if me living in Michigan where the roads are the worst and it can snow in early April can get away with snow tires on hatch, which is a GTI and still cheaper than a crossover on all-season tires, weather is not the excuse.

    • @jkliao6486
      @jkliao6486 Před rokem

      @@MidwestFarmToys Sounds like a salty man who always gets below 20 mpg because of his obsession with the SUVs.

    • @jkliao6486
      @jkliao6486 Před rokem

      @@MidwestFarmToys You just don't sound like you know car at all. The only good thing you deduced from a hatchback is that it has better fuel economy than an easy to roll over SUV, yet you claim it's necessary in US, how pathetic.

  • @JanTonovski
    @JanTonovski Před 2 lety +36

    Finally someone who understands it!

  • @someonejustsomeone1469
    @someonejustsomeone1469 Před 2 lety +87

    Why is it that in this age where we have the highest standard of car safety we are having the greatest of accidents and only agreeing to having the largest affordable cars available? There are more highways being built now more than ever before, is there really any need for off-road concern? Did people not manage it in the past?

    • @tsubadaikhan6332
      @tsubadaikhan6332 Před 2 lety +13

      As a group, we're idiots. That would also explain Trump, Boris Johnson, Putin, Bolsanaro and Company.

    • @jamesengland7461
      @jamesengland7461 Před 2 lety +1

      Distracted driving. Period.

    • @jordanp7927
      @jordanp7927 Před 2 lety

      @@jamesengland7461 Jesus loves you

    • @jamesengland7461
      @jamesengland7461 Před 2 lety

      @@jordanp7927 why yes he does!

    • @accord_aero_r
      @accord_aero_r Před rokem +6

      @@tsubadaikhan6332 I notice that you somehow didn't include Biden in your list of "I have to make this political"...

  • @mikosoft
    @mikosoft Před 2 lety +17

    What a rant!
    And I wholeheartedly agree.
    On the other hand, it made buying a rational car much more affordable.

  • @artistjoh
    @artistjoh Před 2 lety +9

    I am a Land Cruiser owner in Australia who has owned cars and 4 wheel drives since the 1970’s. An average “family” size saloon car back then (like a Holden Kingswood or Ford Falcon) was exactly what most people wanted. Fairly simple, so the owner could maintain them, had good cargo space, could tow a caravan or trailer, and were quite good on rough country roads, and had a largish straight six, or smallish V-8 engine that were well liked. Then over the years that category of car became lower to the ground so could not be driven off road, became too complex, were too lightweight for a good sized trailer or caravan, and started incorporating uninspiring engines like V-6 and largish 4’s and started incorporating unpopular technologies like the dreaded start/stop, or CVT. These technologies had a reputation for being reliable only in the first few years of car life, but the reality is that the average car is 12 years old, an age where things like a CVT becomes a potentially expensive liability.
    So the move to the larger SUV. It might also have problematic technologies, but at least you can tow a good size trailer or caravan, and you can drive off paved surfaces without damaging the floor of the car. And not a CVT in sight. Larger, more enjoyable engines, like my V-8 diesel, and dramatically more comfortable ride on long journeys. Five to 10 hours in a small car is very tiring, but 10+ hours in the Land Cruiser is comfortable. The suspension is so much more comfortable than those harsh “sport tuned” suspensions on small cars, and it is easy to get in and out of the vehicle, and once out the door closes with a satisfying sound of solid build, while doors on small cars close with a tinny sound that screams cheap and lack of sold materials. I have a large bull bar where my big driving lights, and 2-way radio aerial are mounted and many people have brackets for fishing rods and such things. Family sized cars of 50 years could easily accomodate these sorts of things, but the rounded plastic front ends of most small cars are lousy for adding the practical things like that.
    The problem with modern saloon cars is they moved away from the practical needs of average car buyers. Hatchbacks suit young people without families, but the average family needs to use a vehicle to go camping and other family recreation, need to be able to tow rubbish to the tip, trailers for recreational vehicles, caravans, etc. and need to go off road at least sometimes. And as we get older, we like the comfort of a vehicle high enough to get in and out of easily, and suspension appropriate for long journeys.
    A saloon car of 50 years ago was a cost effective choice that could do most things passably well. The current saloon cars do not. That is why most people don’t want to buy them. They are built to meet emissions standards but to do so they ignored basic driver needs. As a result, an SUV is more than what most people need, but there is no alternative because the smaller cars are not good enough to do what the average family needs to do, or wants in a car.
    Also not mentioned is seating numbers. A saloon car of 50 years ago was a six-seater. Modern saloon cars are only five-seaters. That is not enough seats. My family size made buying a seven seat vehicle a significant part of the buying choice. I am at the age where there are grandchildren plus parents, plus us two. A five seat vehicle is simply out of consideration.
    Meanwhile hatchbacks do well for those who prefer a smaller car for the practical reason that you can lay down the seats to carry larger items. Just like SUV’s, it is the practical uses we put cars to that dictates actual buyer choices. Reviewers who tout modern “features” and styling rarely get it that we buy cars for far more ordinary things than the number of speakers or color choices, or miles per gallon. We are more interested in fitting all the grandkids in, or what it feels like at highway speed with a caravan, or whether or not we can drive through the creek to get to a camping spot.

    • @tramlink8544
      @tramlink8544 Před rokem +3

      id disagree on the size part. friend of mine bought a brand new Jeep Compass and can hardly fit her childs stroller in the boot whereas ive moved cabinets in the back of my liftback 1992 Carina ll with no problems. the whole SUV offer more space thing is an illussion bar a few like Mitsi Prados or 110 defenders

    • @artistjoh
      @artistjoh Před rokem

      @@tramlink8544 My Land Cruiser seats 7 people. Your Carina II can't do that. With beefier suspension and larger wheels I can take a lot more weight.
      The Jeep Compass is a smallish SUV compared to a Land Cruiser, and I wouldn't expect it to carry much at all. They are soccer-mum cars, best suited to picking the kids up from school. My Land Cruiser is well suited to carrying supplies for expeditions into very remote desert locations. mI would not consider the Jeep Compass as a good indication of what a good 4WD can carry.

    • @mecklas
      @mecklas Před rokem +1

      @@artistjoh you're argument would hold weight if I didn't know a few dozen families of 3 with gxl land cruisers and prados that have never seen dirt beyond a driveway. Which would be fine if they used them to tow anything, but they use their hiluxes etc for that. Feel that for the majority of people they could spend 100k so much better
      Also what cars in Aus had CVTs beyond Holden captivas and Honda's?

    • @artistjoh
      @artistjoh Před rokem

      @@mecklas Yes there are plenty of city types driving 4WD of all types. But if you pull up to a remote outback pub, around 80 to 90 percent of the vehicles there are Land Cruiser. As to cars that use CVT. Here is the list in the US. Some of them won't be sold here, but it does show that they are widespread across many manufacturers. They are spreading because while they have a shorter lifespan compared to more conventional transmission types they do improve fuel consumption and in countries that demand fuel consumption improvements, using a CVT is an easy way to achieve that.
      Buick: Encore GX
      Chevrolet: Malibu, Trailblazer, Spark
      Chrysler: Pacifica Hybrid (plug-in hybrid)
      Ford: Escape Hybrid, Escape Plug-in Hybrid
      Honda: Accord, Accord Hybrid, Civic, Clarity Plug-in Hybrid, CR-V, CR-V Hybrid, HR-V, Insight
      Hyundai: Accent, Elantra, Venue
      Infiniti: QX50
      Kia: Forte, Rio, Seltos, Soul
      Lexus: ES 300h, NX 300h, RX 450h, RX 450hL, UX 250h
      Lincoln: Corsair Grand Touring (PHEV)
      Mitsubishi: Mirage, Mirage G4, Outlander PHEV, Outlander Sport
      Nissan: Altima, Kicks, Maxima, Murano, NV200, Rogue, Rogue Sport, Sentra, Versa
      Subaru: Ascent, Crosstrek, Crosstrek Hybrid (PHEV), Forester, Impreza, Legacy, Outback
      Toyota: Avalon Hybrid, C-HR, Camry Hybrid, Corolla, Corolla Hybrid, Highlander Hybrid, Prius, Prius Prime (PHEV), RAV4 Hybrid, RAV4 Prime (PHEV), Sienna, VenzaBuick: Encore GX

    • @mecklas
      @mecklas Před rokem

      @@artistjoh again, you'd have a point, but I live in rural North Queensland. For big families it makes sense to have a big car. The luggage space in a cruiser is enormous, and their ability to seat 7 people comfortably is a solid justification to purchase one. But for the price, most people would be better off not putting themselves in 100k of debt and instead purchasing a smaller vehicle and saving money on fuel, maintenance as well as gaining the practicality of not driving a land yacht

  • @drnerd
    @drnerd Před 2 lety +17

    There's a good reason Nissans model sounds like Cashcow! 😂

    • @jamesbarisitz4794
      @jamesbarisitz4794 Před 2 lety +1

      We had one. When you powered the rear passenger windows, the roof would shake violently and deafen you with subsonic bass . Hated it.

    • @yaniv_akrish
      @yaniv_akrish Před 2 lety +1

      How "juke" sounds like Cashcow?

    • @marv2507
      @marv2507 Před 2 lety +1

      @@yaniv_akrish He means the Qashqai

    • @josh3221ify
      @josh3221ify Před 2 lety

      @@jamesbarisitz4794 I had one too, first generation, no issues, very reliable little car, longest car I have owned. How did you get the roof to shake 😂, once had a tree fall on my qashqai roof and left a small dent, still never seen it shaking. Its a solid car and would highly recomend for anyone looking for a small budget SUV

  • @obiverse
    @obiverse Před 2 lety +17

    I live in sudan, our roads make all SUVs suffer, although most of of us drive a small compacts and sedans because of very high car prices

  • @DCuerpoJr
    @DCuerpoJr Před 2 lety +2

    In the United States it’s an arms race. When full size trucks are still the top sellers, people want to buy a bigger vehicle (SUV) to feel safer in the event they ever get into a collision with a 2.5 ton Ford F-150.

  • @roco9504
    @roco9504 Před rokem +16

    I never understood it either..
    From what I asked others, they “feel safer” even though they don’t look into actual safety numbers/ crash results.
    Even then, as you pointed out with the moose test, they typically can’t handle as well thus also making them less safe in a pinch.

  • @unripetomato4312
    @unripetomato4312 Před 2 lety +42

    wagons are:
    •Cheeper
    •Lighter
    •Faster (and sportier)
    •Sleeker
    •Bigger inside
    •Better on fuel
    •Better looking
    •Cooler (imo)
    •easier to drive
    •less bad for the enviornment
    •E
    •T
    •C
    But nooo I'll take an evoke 🙄

    • @06dpa
      @06dpa Před 2 lety +3

      Wagons are still the best option. They aren't much bigger than hatchbacks and are way more practical than sedans. SUVs tend to provide the same interior space (apart from the taller boot, which could be made use of like once a year), but are bigger on the outside too. In my opinion the current best car is the Octavia VRS TDI estate, with its excellent fuel economy and practicality, while still providing good performance and low maintenance.

    • @yannickgeudens5192
      @yannickgeudens5192 Před 2 lety +1

      I don't like the look of wagons and estate cars. They are so long and flat it makes them ugly.

    • @thedalillama
      @thedalillama Před 2 lety +3

      Lower to the ground. END OF STORY.

    • @unripetomato4312
      @unripetomato4312 Před 2 lety +1

      @@yannickgeudens5192 look up e63 AMG and rs6 Avant and I guarantee your mind will be changed

    • @unripetomato4312
      @unripetomato4312 Před 2 lety

      @@06dpa in the land of Canadian we do not have such brands as renault, Octavia, skoda, etc so I don't know much about them.

  • @PsYDaniel
    @PsYDaniel Před 2 lety +5

    "I have a big family i need to buy an SUV"
    -Literally everyone who can fit three children in the back of a Super mini/Small hatchback.

    • @CGJ7755
      @CGJ7755 Před 7 dny

      The average family around me is two parents and two kids. A full size sedan is more than enough room and yet they HAVE to get a ghey as fuck suv or crossover

  • @mgs.915
    @mgs.915 Před rokem

    Busted London for the first time last month (stayed for 5 days) and noticed some surprising things from someone coming from the states. I saw one Subaru which over here is one of the most common cars it seems like and saw only two pickup trucks which is impossible to do unless you close your eyes. Absolutely love these videos the effort and humor that goes into these is why I’m here on CZcams!

  • @kofiskingley5336
    @kofiskingley5336 Před rokem +2

    This video convinced my partner to get a Mini Cooper instead of a T-Roc so thank you 😂

  • @nowiecoche
    @nowiecoche Před 2 lety +10

    Bought a hatchback for the practicality of any SUVs minus all the heavyweights. Easier to maintain my hatchback than many bulky, extra heavy, tall SUVs.

    • @youraveragejdmenthusiast430
      @youraveragejdmenthusiast430 Před 2 lety

      My family loaned a ford fiesta hatch and it did not sip any fuel since the fuel is 2€ a litre it could be a great choice.

    • @dshaprin
      @dshaprin Před rokem +1

      How the hatchback has the practicality of a SUV? It doesn't have the ground clearance and the trunk space (i am guessing that you have AWD hatch). Also a hatch has better gas mileage, it is easier to find parking spaces and probably has a better onroad handling. Completely different practicality

    • @youraveragejdmenthusiast430
      @youraveragejdmenthusiast430 Před rokem +1

      @@dshaprin the suv’s space is just used in passenger comfortability and safety and trunk space which is almost never fully used. But yeah even if it doesn’t seem like it it has secretly more space but people just seem to not use it to it's full potential usually.

    • @everydayfun9531
      @everydayfun9531 Před rokem

      Lol sometimes I get this vibe that I'm driving around mom's toyota yaris even though it's a toyota highalnder lol man wish I was short lol would appreciate easier parkings honestly but I can atleast reverse park which isn't bad at all lol.

  • @AndreyMusicVideos
    @AndreyMusicVideos Před 2 lety +7

    I own SUV because of bad roads in the neighborhood: big clearance & 4x4 drive rules, but I hate it for the big expenses for maintenance.

  • @caiocc12
    @caiocc12 Před 2 lety +7

    I am one of the few that actually need and frequently use the offroad capabilities of my SUV, and it hurts my soul to see people with SUVs or even pickup trucks that never saw more action than a parking lot ramp

  • @jessekhorasanee5459
    @jessekhorasanee5459 Před 2 lety +5

    I've got a turbo Subaru Forester 2002 and it's absolutely awesome.
    It's heaps of fun on the windy roads and is incredible for driving in soft sand. I use it for access to surf spots in my region (New Zealand)
    I can't stand the feeling of having to park and walk or not being able to go somewhere because it's 4wd access only.
    I think a lot of people do over do it though, AWD cars with a bit of clearance can get you 98% of the places you'd ever want to go.
    I think other less populated countries a 4wd might be a bit more essential when you are looking for access to rural undeveloped spots

    • @SpadajSpadaj
      @SpadajSpadaj Před 2 lety

      Sure, if you really have the need for a 4wd car, go get it. Most people don't. They buy their suvs and drive them exclusively on highways and in cities. Btw, Subaru's XV is a very nice idea (or at least it was those few years ago when I considered it as my next car) - a bit higher suspension, but with a normal hatchback body - not that pumped upwards.

    • @tramlink8544
      @tramlink8544 Před rokem

      older FWD hatchbacks do the job too, i remember in car throttle during their scotland trip they went up a dirt track. the Ford Focus and VW Jetta got stuck, while the old Peugout 206 which sits a tad higher and had skinnier wheels went up the track with no issues

  • @kooooons
    @kooooons Před 2 lety +14

    To be fair: The range of SUVs is a bit too big too make just one category from it. It reaches from compact cars on stilts all the way up to 8 seaters with a boot the size of an original fiat 500. If separated each size might have their own justification. The Huge SUVs are, in my opinion, a replacement for minivans just with a lot more prestige, power and intimidating aestetics. Small and mid size SUVs replace compact or mid size cars with higher entry, better visibility and allegedly more safety.
    Also for the beginning of Electrification SUVs were the best choice. Obviously because those are the cars that sell the most but also because in the early stages they had to use ICE platforms, and it's easier to implement the battery pack in the floor, when the Car looks like an SUV. Point in case: The EQC has a ground clearance of 142mm vs the GLC having 245 mm.

    • @johnhunter7244
      @johnhunter7244 Před 2 lety +2

      I agree with the first part. Guess what the first EV that had enough range to be somewhat viable? a small 2 seater (tesla roadster). The second? sedan (model s).

    • @xyz-je2wx
      @xyz-je2wx Před 2 lety

      i guess avoiding a crash is easier in a sedan or a hatch but after getting into one,
      SUVs are better, they do have high safety ratings

    • @kooooons
      @kooooons Před 2 lety

      @@johnhunter7244 Well, my first draft had a different phrasing in which I said that in the early years everything but an SUV was either a marketing stunt (roadster), or a halo car (Model S). Also i specifically referred to established manufactureres having to use ICE platforms, which obviously doesnt apply to Tesla. There were many more electric cars that weren't SUVs: Renault Zoe, Nissan Leaf, Hyundai ioniq, VW e-Golf, Ford Focus Electric, BMW i3. Most of them were Released prior to the SUV Boom. Some of them have either painfully small batteries or a very high seating position 🤔
      But with most cars of that generation it seemed like the manufacturers didn't take electrification seriously - they feel like a 'marketing stunt'. The first electric cars seemingly developed to actually sell good for fleet emmissions were almost exclusively SUVs: Kia e-Niro, Hyundai Kona, Mercedes EQC and EQA, Audi E-Tron, Jaguar I-Pace, Opel/Vauxhall Mokka, DS 3, Ford Mustang Mach-e, Volvo xc40.
      And it makes sense: Lift your platform, slap a battery underneath put an SUV styling on top. It's a win-win.

    • @kooooons
      @kooooons Před 2 lety +1

      @@xyz-je2wx In a 2,5 ton EQS you will probably feel less of the impact when ramming a 1,5 ton Compact SUV off the road. So I'd say the safety argument is relative ;)

    • @farnarkleboy
      @farnarkleboy Před 2 lety

      @@xyz-je2wx Really ? I see a lot rolled over with stoved in roofs and injuries aplenty . I wouldn't risk my kids in one

  • @donCALLAN
    @donCALLAN Před 2 lety +5

    I think a lot of people who aren't interested in cars just want something as a utility. A lot of space, big boot, can drive up a path or down a dirt track if needed and I think possibly the biggest appeal is the appearance of safety. The average person does not give a second thought about driving dynamics so they won't care what they're missing out on. Plus it's a cycle in fashion, estates might even be all the rage in 10 years, sure aren't they really popular in Germany?

  • @dimitargenchev
    @dimitargenchev Před 2 lety +5

    Hey, i am waiting for mine to arrive (11 months, thanks chip shortage) and i can tell you why.
    1. It is a leased car and it is actually cheaper for me than buying the estate variant (significantly cheaper) because of the residual value.
    2. I always drove estates. I do need a car with some room in it (family guy and all) and an SUV is simply more practical.
    3. I do go of the beaten track from time to time and while i do not need 4x4 (and i didn't get one. I got a compact front wheel drive) i do want the additional ride height.
    4. Everyone else are driving one and i am just sick of getting blinded on the road from taller vehicles headlamps......

    • @danielbociarski6633
      @danielbociarski6633 Před 2 lety +2

      SUVs are less practical than estates, unless your comparing a Land Rover to the Skoda Fabia Wagon. You can get estates with AWD - top one is Subaru Outback. Also the lights are from Manufacturers putting miniature suns in headlights. I found that the lights are just as bright when driving my Dads 4x4 and my Mums sedan.

    • @dimitargenchev
      @dimitargenchev Před 2 lety +1

      @@danielbociarski6633 100% true, but again leasing. i got GLA, if i was getting the CLA estate, i could only get the base model. The GLA i got had almost all extras. This is because of residual value which is higher of the SUV so it is cheaper for me to get. The only other one with same value was CLA cupe.

  • @cyrilio
    @cyrilio Před rokem +2

    This channel is still criminally underrated

  • @happyfaceindustries
    @happyfaceindustries Před 2 lety +15

    Right so I live in Sri Lanka and the roads here well, they aren't the best so many people prefer buying something like a Toyota Land Cruiser because they are Big, high off the ground and last a reaaaaaly long time and honestly I don't see a clear reason other than that. That being said I am a MASSIVE fan of SUVs. Pls don't hate me

    • @unripetomato4312
      @unripetomato4312 Před 2 lety +4

      Visit North America to gain a true understanding of how it is here. You can't compare an OG land cruiser to a rav 4 or range rover.

    • @happyfaceindustries
      @happyfaceindustries Před 2 lety

      @@unripetomato4312 yessssssss tru

    • @liamm-c1287
      @liamm-c1287 Před 2 lety +5

      Yeah this is totally justified bc of the place u live. However most crossovers cant cover rough terrain any better than a car/hatchback. You're talking about proper SUVs with 4x4 and rugged construction, which i think we can all appreciate.

    • @Offensivebeast
      @Offensivebeast Před 2 lety +1

      @@unripetomato4312 the only thing a land cruiser has on a Range Rover is reliability that’s literally it, compare a L405 Range Rover to a LC200 and the Range Rover dominates in almost everything. The only difference is majority of people who buy a Range Rover don’t use it for what it was made to do even tho it’s in a similar price bracket.

    • @Wahba.
      @Wahba. Před 2 lety

      @@Offensivebeast aren't Range rover notoriously unreliable?

  • @gabon4000
    @gabon4000 Před 2 lety +7

    We considered swapping our mpv for a suv, but didn't because of the premium. My parents prefer them because of "you don't sit on the ground", most of the time you have 3 full size seats in the second row and we also almost bottomed out on some montain roads with our S-Max since we like going to places. We couldn't really afford both, so that's why we considered a "more versatile" platform. Idk i'm still an estate guy myself (and the S-Max is nice for an mpv too)..

  • @LaVidayElTristeFinal
    @LaVidayElTristeFinal Před 2 lety +14

    I have kids and drive a Nissan Rogue SUV. I sat on the back seat of many, many, many sedans, station wagons and SUVs before buying the Rogue. And I bought the Rogue because the back seat is a million times more comfortable in terms of head room and leg room than any sedan or lower car I tried. That works great for kids in car seats of for elderly parents, and I have both.

    • @washingtoncavalcante4650
      @washingtoncavalcante4650 Před 2 lety +3

      Exactly. I have a sedan, my wife has a SUV. Whenever we got to take the kids out, the SUV it way better in all aspects.

    • @ericl.9913
      @ericl.9913 Před 2 lety +1

      @@washingtoncavalcante4650 Except for the higher repair and fuel costs... And a lot of times simply just the pricetag itself.

  • @InformatrIIcks
    @InformatrIIcks Před 2 lety +9

    That marketing argument at the end is where the hype from SUV really come from.
    Advertisement made SUV into a status symbol. It's not just a car you are buying. You are showing to everyone that YOU have the biggest one (what i'm referring to here is up to reader's discretion). And it's what drives the sale of SUV rather than more traditional car.
    In the middle of a climate crisis, the fact that marketing was able to convince everyone to get a bigger, heavier car is astonishing.

    • @julius43461
      @julius43461 Před 2 lety

      It's certainly isn't advertising for me. They just look so damn powerful.

  • @mikecoves4313
    @mikecoves4313 Před 2 lety +28

    In Australia, we have station wagons made with alu-min-ium... Just so you know. 😬

    • @TacoInvader69
      @TacoInvader69 Před 2 lety +3

      AND UTES

    • @CathiiScott
      @CathiiScott Před 2 lety +1

      @@TacoInvader69 ***HAD*** Real utes, not SUVs with a tub! With a single cab (not dual cab crap) the option of trays or tubs and V8s or straight 6s to pull a 1 tonne load easily. Sadly the real Aussie ute has disappeared along with car manufacturing.

    • @TacoInvader69
      @TacoInvader69 Před 2 lety +1

      @@CathiiScott all cars are shit everywhere nowadays

  • @RaduB.
    @RaduB. Před 2 lety +18

    People are getting older and older and it's easier to step into a car.
    That's my explanation.
    A convertible SUV has no explanation what so ever, though...

    • @Shadowboost
      @Shadowboost Před 2 lety +2

      It's not just the older people buying SUVs

    • @slurp3194
      @slurp3194 Před rokem

      Suvs are just more relaxed driving then sedan

  • @SB-ed4gz
    @SB-ed4gz Před 2 lety +2

    I had a 2019 Mazda3. Top trim, 2.5 non-turbo (there wasn't one) and front wheel drive. Next year I switched to CX-30 turbo because of more power, not much of price difference against Mazda3 turbo, slightly quieter with the thicker tires, and the higher ground clearance allows me to get in / out of gas station with out scratching the front bumper. Also the cornering wasn't compromised either. I was very happy to make the change.

    • @TacoInvader69
      @TacoInvader69 Před 2 lety +1

      That's a nice car, it's kind of pushing the 'crossover' idea though. It's just slightly lifted.

  • @sansyfresh4200
    @sansyfresh4200 Před rokem +2

    My mom bought an SUV. I warned her it wouldn't be worth it, and she should just get a hatchback. She proceeded to be surprised when a CRV has no more trunk space than a Fit. Huh, weeeird.

  • @abogoni
    @abogoni Před 2 lety +17

    I had a RAV4 for one year and it was very practical, but being a car guy I got bored of it pretty quickly and ended up getting a MX5 and never looked back.
    I should point out that I bought a SUV so I could go off road every so often - mostly on gravel and the beach - but found that the tradeoff in handling wasnt worth it especially when I was spending 99.99% of my time on decent paved roads.
    I will be getting a family car next year for the misses and will most likely get a Mazda 6 Wagon, which handles so much better then a SUV and has most of the same practicalities.

    • @henrytang2203
      @henrytang2203 Před 2 lety +1

      RAV is not a fun SUV to drive and I almost gave up on SUVs after driving one. I'm a sedan / wagon person but I have test driven the X2, X3 and GV70 and they're certainly 'tossable' for SUVs. Still nothing beats a wagon if you can find one.

  • @kagtonblackmoon9425
    @kagtonblackmoon9425 Před 2 lety +4

    I have a 2010 Nissan Rogue, gets almost the same mileage as my Chevy Cruse, doesn't get stuck in 1/2 inch of snow like the cruse, and has more room for my 3 children. I occasionally deliver for the Amazon Flex program, far easier to work out of the Rogue. The cruse is more fun and responsive on dry pavement and good roads but feels cramped and small compared to the rogue and yes they are the same length overall, with more useful space in the rogue.

    • @rushnerd
      @rushnerd Před 10 měsíci

      Good luck with that CVT tranny, it's a grenade.

  • @Jason-Hicks
    @Jason-Hicks Před 3 měsíci +1

    I could not bring myself to purchase a SUV so I bought a Subaru Outback. They call it a SUV here in the states, but it's a station wagon to me, and has more cargo space than most SUV's that was in the same price range.

  • @paulrapp613
    @paulrapp613 Před 2 lety +9

    Just bought a Subaru Legacy. Sedan. Four doors. Works beautifully for my needs. All my grandchildren are over 21 and own their own cars. So I don’t need a ginormous people carrier to drive around by myself. Besides, the Legacy is sporty enough for me in my dotage. I did sports cars in my younger days; Lotus Elan, Jensen Healy, Austin Healy 100-4, even a tricked out Datsun 510 sedan. The Subaru will most likely be the last vehicle I shall ever own, so I want reliability and a modicum of comfort. It gives me both 😎.

  • @normang3668
    @normang3668 Před 2 lety +6

    Always hated the auto manufacturer rhetoric that SUVs are simply what people want, as if carmakers have zero influence on the market or the minds of car buyers.
    Toyota and Subaru came out with a nice cheap sports car, and it's sold like hotcakes. But I doubt the profit margin was as impressive as it could have been, if they'd teamed up to make an SUV instead.

    • @thedalillama
      @thedalillama Před 2 lety

      Yes, it's a grand conspiracy. 10s of millions of humans were duped into buying their SUVs. No one actually likes them because they are pointless. Got it!

    • @normang3668
      @normang3668 Před 2 lety +1

      @@thedalillama the average car buyer doesn't know shit about cars. They only know what they've heard.
      So yeah, actually you can dupe millions of people into liking a thing. Companies wouldn't dump so much money into advertisement, if it didn't have the power to convince people to buy what is being advertised.
      No conspiracy necessary. People are just easily influenced.

  • @W78thIS
    @W78thIS Před 2 lety +13

    SUV owner and lover here! Reasons - I live in New Orleans, land of floods and potholes. If that little street flooding I am driving through turns out to be much deeper than I thought, an SUV will drive right through. A sedan will be flooded out. Also, the bottom of my car doesn't scrape when I hit a hidden pothole.
    I also find it easier to load and unload the kids from carseats in an SUV. Bending over to buckle them in all the time can grow old fast. It might not seem like a big deal, but when you are talking about years of daily buckling (and remember, Americans tend to drive a LOT more in a day than Europeans, and we have a lot of stops), it adds up. Comfort matters in a car, and ease of loading kids is a big part of that comfort.
    Americans also have bigger families, and often need that third row seating (and don't want the shame of a minivan to get it). Even with two kids, I carpool with other kids. When I'm not, I can lay the third row down and fit two kids bikes in the back plus weekend sports equipment. I just can't do that with a sedan.

    • @user-fo9lw3pq8l
      @user-fo9lw3pq8l Před 2 lety +1

      I live in a developing country, and I agree with all of your points!
      Also, living in a developing country, there are many regions where the road conditions are horrendous! It is way more sensible to buy an SUV over the others.

    • @GraveUypo
      @GraveUypo Před 2 lety +6

      it's good to show these points because of how much bias there is in these kinds of videos and channels. they treat cars as toys, when most people use them as appliances, so comfort, practicality and versatility comes before "fun".

    • @tramlink8544
      @tramlink8544 Před rokem

      in all honesty, ive seen SUVs in the UK crossing fords and killing their engines (because some have the air intakes facing down) where 2000s sedans and hatchbacks crossed with no issue

    • @danieldelaney1377
      @danieldelaney1377 Před rokem +1

      Why not just have a proper 4x4 like a hilux or Ford ranger?

    • @W78thIS
      @W78thIS Před rokem

      @@danieldelaney1377 Because the space in a the second row of a pickup means installing a rear facing carseat leaves the front row passengers pushed up til their knees hit the dash. And in a rainy city, tossing a stroller in the back of an exposed pickup bed isn't exactly ideal. Again, the reason why SUVs rule to road in America is because people are not focused on power or having a "proper" 4x4 that can take on a mountain. People are focused on convenience.

  • @lupus775
    @lupus775 Před 2 lety

    Im so thankful for you saying publically what has been my Opinion for years!

  • @rickbowker4179
    @rickbowker4179 Před 2 lety +1

    In Canada, SUVs are popular for because...
    1. They're comfortable for long distance driving and on unfinished or damaged road surfaces.
    2. The rapidly aging population have an easier time getting into a compact SUV then an equivalent compact car.
    3. For the average Canadian driver an SUV can handle the snow and other winter driving conditions better than a car. Mostly due to ride height over 1-2feet of snow.
    However, as a millennial, the reason I bought a Nissan Pathfinder was for two reasons:
    1. It has seven seats (i have three kids all in booster seats)
    2. Minivans are too expensive and not as nice.

  • @Malc664
    @Malc664 Před 2 lety +4

    You said it! "stepping into the car rather than stepping down". This is the bggest issue I have with cars and small hatchbacks, you can damage yourself especially for older people. I get blinded by headlights from front and rear with small cars because you sit so low. Because in Australia there's a lot of SUV's this happens all the time. My daughters car is a small hatchback, mine is a 4wd ute.

  • @KaviKadecha
    @KaviKadecha Před 2 lety +4

    I am from India. I am trading my saloon for a mini suv. But our mini suvs are just frugal saloons on suv form factor. My last car got major issues with suspension , and suffered ride quality due to poor quality of roads in my area. It seems logical in india to buy a frugal suv rather that buying a hatchback or a saloon.

  • @aidenp5768
    @aidenp5768 Před 2 lety +1

    Thankfully I use my 04 x5 only for what it made for, proud to say I don't daily drive it, I don't have it lowered either, I use it for road trims, camp, heavy north east NYC / Jersey snow days, off-road upstate, haul serious weight, towing, beach days as well. And it has been reliable for 18 years! M54B30TU ftw

  • @dudeinadoughboy4327
    @dudeinadoughboy4327 Před 15 dny

    I love feeling lower to the ground in my Legacy. It's nice going into turns and not feeling like I'm a wind gust away from rolling over. And it just feels "sportier" being lower

  • @FTFSupremacyROBLOX
    @FTFSupremacyROBLOX Před 2 lety +3

    The new all-wheel-drive sienna is more useful than any SUV change my mind

  • @oiausdlkasuldhflaksjdhoiausydo

    Love this video. More videos on things Callum hates please.

  • @alkiou3613
    @alkiou3613 Před rokem +2

    All these FWD "SUVs" should be named "bulky useless hatchbacks".

  • @galacticcat209
    @galacticcat209 Před rokem +1

    I've asked a lot of people the same question, and the answers I got fell into 2 categories:
    1) Prestige
    2) Saftey, apparently, they feel like when they're higher up they don't get harmed as much

  • @GautamKumar-cr7tw
    @GautamKumar-cr7tw Před 2 lety +13

    Honestly I hate SUV’s. I took my bmw to the dealership and they gave me an x5 as a loner car. I hated it with every cell in my body, I returned it and asked them to give me something small. They gave me a 2 series grand coupe and I hated it as well. Honestly I hate all new cars, their steering sucks and the ones with good steering, they’re out of my price range.

    • @Stolen320d
      @Stolen320d Před 2 lety +1

      When you go to a dealer tell them : i know more than you and buy something which you think is cool . So that you can only blame yourself

    • @AQ-101
      @AQ-101 Před 2 lety +2

      I mean cars like the Toyota gr86 and gr yaris exist, or the mazda mx5, but maybe you're not looking for tiny underpowered low storage cars 😕

    • @clarksonoceallachain8536
      @clarksonoceallachain8536 Před 2 lety

      A daihatsu tocot

  • @boydberends5974
    @boydberends5974 Před 2 lety +10

    After 6 times having driven estates (Ford Focus Wagon, last 2 ones a 1.6 automatic) I switched to a Lexus RX 450 hybrid. Excellent seats and for someone with back problems very easy to get in and out. It's a pimped Toyota, which means in my case about he same maintenance costs, same fuel consumption and same road tax (due to the hybrid drive train) as my Ford Focus 1.6 wagon automatic I drove before. As a bonus I have now a Mark Levinson stereo system and the ability to look further up the road to see what is happening, which is very handy in busy Dutch traffic. Lastly, the silence of this car and the hybrid system have turned me into a very relaxed and easy going driver wich leads to stres free drives and no fatigue whatsoever after a very long journey.

  • @manfredhaupt8674
    @manfredhaupt8674 Před 2 lety +1

    We had a Subaru Outback and changed to a Toyota Kluger. 3 kids, all under 15. Ability to 7 seat if needed. Large space for summer holidays. It’s the family car, and having that helps keep me in a sports/performance car (WRX).

  • @sirhcmi3
    @sirhcmi3 Před 2 lety +1

    I’m in the US and we do have an SUV for camping, exploration (back country dirt roads+++) and as a work truck (home projects mostly), but we don’t drive it that much. My wife drives a mid-size estate and I have a 3 door hatch. We drive these most of the time, locally and for on-road trips.

  • @OM-bs7of
    @OM-bs7of Před 2 lety +3

    The same people that are advocates for climate change are the same ones driving SUVs

  • @doibotheru
    @doibotheru Před 2 lety +7

    I think a big part of it your missing is people will buy a big suv even if they have only two kids knowing they will not need the extra space. They do it because they know they will be safer in a crash in a big suv vs a small sedan or hatchback. This becomes more true the more big cars are on the road. It’s like a self fulfilling prophecy.

    • @unteren_text5425
      @unteren_text5425 Před 2 lety

      An SUV is magnitudes more likely to cause roll over which are for more dangerous accidents. Statistics show SUV are NOT safer.

  • @oldjeeper9174
    @oldjeeper9174 Před 6 měsíci +1

    I really love full/mid size frame based SUVs (actual off-roaders), because it's fun to drive them even on road.
    What about crossovers- it's easier to get into them, you have extra mm of ground clearance (it's really cool in snowy regions), also you has way better road visibility because you seat is placed higher than in common car (and, of course, your position is more straight). On the other hand- aerodynamics and mass disadvantages, which were described in the video.

  • @UrbanBackflip
    @UrbanBackflip Před rokem +1

    Last year my mum told me she had bought a Mitsubishi Eclipse and me getting dead excited I went and waited for her to come to my house so I could have a look only to realise that what came round the corner was a Mitsubishi Eclipse Cross

  • @stevengao9568
    @stevengao9568 Před 2 lety +7

    Well an SUV usually have a third row which is handy sometimes and SUVs are viewed as safer than hatchbacks

    • @VrumsAdventures
      @VrumsAdventures Před 2 lety +4

      I don't really know why SUVs are viewed as safer... crash tests don't really show much of a difference and SUVs are more probed to tip-over.
      Around 12 years ago a BMW X5 side-swiped my hatchback and tipped over. I really didn't have significant damage... even though the BMW almost climbed with the front wheel on my fender.
      A few years after that at a lower speed a Porsche Macan did something similar and bounced all around the road.
      Other similar accidents with other sedans and hatchbacks that I had only had the hit and the cars stopped.
      As much as people like to downplay the risk, the SUV is more likely to do this.

    • @99Lezard99
      @99Lezard99 Před 2 lety

      3rd row is a thing in like really big SUVs. but there are still mini vans that can provide that while beeing more economical and having even more space then a 3 row suv.

    • @stevengao9568
      @stevengao9568 Před 2 lety +1

      @@VrumsAdventures It's more like people who doesn't look at the crash test ratings, which, let's face it, is the general public. SUVs are usually a lot bigger than hatchbacks, sedans, etc, and people think that being in a bigger vehicle is safer because they have a size and weight advantage over the smaller cars. I know that is completely false but that's what my parents think so.

    • @MrAdopado
      @MrAdopado Před 2 lety

      Very few SUV style vehicles sold in the UK have a third row ... that's one of the complaints: they are huge yet still only carry the same number of people and the same amount of "stuff".

  • @profemeritus534
    @profemeritus534 Před 2 lety +3

    Another reason of rational buyers could be resale value. Because of the high demand some SUVs have incredible value retention, while station wagons and hatchbacks are no longer sought after on the second hand market. That will has to come to an end eventually though as the older the vehicles get the more buyers desire low running costs - a field where SUVs are not competitive at all. And of course there's an adverse effect after a while - if everybody will drive an SUV nobody will want them anymore. Same happened to sports cars - especially roadsters: they had awful resale value, people stopped buying them and since so few of them were sold cars like the Abarth 124 or Alpine A110 are keeping their value suprsingly well.

  • @MePeterNicholls
    @MePeterNicholls Před 2 lety +1

    People like the feeling of space and height in the cabin. Can’t tell people they’re wrong just coz it differs with one’s own tastes.

  • @fesouzasan
    @fesouzasan Před rokem +1

    A Crossover SUV makes a lot of sense on developing countries, where even high traffic roads are poorly maintained, full of holes and speedbumps. That's the main reason they are so popular in Brazil right now. In Western Europe and Eastern Asia, where the roads are usually much better, i agree it makes a lot less sense

  • @Interceptor810
    @Interceptor810 Před 2 lety +6

    I loathe SUVs too..Theres only a small handful that are actually nice

  • @liamm-c1287
    @liamm-c1287 Před 2 lety +17

    SUV visibility debunked:
    -Being larger, suvs often have thicker pillars and thus larger blindspots.
    -being higher, suvs often provide worse depth perception, vehicle placement, and speed perception (srsly there are studies look it up)
    -visibility is determined by the line drawn from the eyes to the edges of each window. The regions swept out by these lines are the visibility zones. Thus, the vehicle being higher raises that line higher from the ground and by pythagorean theorem extends the region which cannot be seen. Thus, raising a car reduces visibility. The increase in visibility is actually from raising the seating position relative to the beltline of the car, which would point the line from the eyes to the window further downward, thus expanding the field of view.

    • @vavra222
      @vavra222 Před 2 lety +2

      Youre right, which is even worse considering most SUV owners ive seen recently are short people. Worse yet is that those people cant park a normal car and yet they still insist on trying to fit into all the crammed spots with a fuckign SUV.
      I dont really hate any type of car, if the owner can drive it, its like with those few cars that are notoriously "old people cars", "safe", very slow and great mileage - 99% of the time im right about the driver being an old person and driving city speeds on a highway is fucking bonkers.
      Again, i dont hate the cars, i just hate being right about the stereotypes of each one of them.

    • @mikosoft
      @mikosoft Před 2 lety +1

      @@vavra222 there's more to it still. These short people can't operate:
      1. seat controls, to adjust their seating position and they're actually sitting so low they can barely see in front of them
      2. infotainment system, to pair their phone to have hands free phone operation
      3. parking assistants, or at least parking sensors and cameras and for some reason insist on parking a 5,5m long 2m wide mastodon of a car all by themselves with limited visibility and thus completely failing at it. And no joke, I've seen a woman trying to turn around a Mercedes GLS AMG, fully packet with all the sensors and cameras in a tight parking lot, she didn't once use any of the technology and instead of getting as tight as she could and turning the car in one go she had to reverse-forward a bazillion times because she has left a meter long gap at each end every time she moved the car because of her lack of depth perception.
      In short, stupid people buy stupid cars to do stupid things with them on public roads.

    • @vavra222
      @vavra222 Před 2 lety

      @@mikosoft Nailed it, glad that i live in a small town in Czechia, most people here just go for normal cars, luckily.
      Even if they want to have a status car of some sort, they usually pick a very nice car of normal dimensions.
      There is an odd big american pickup truck here and there, but thats more like an eyecandy lol, those people at least dont drive like idiots because those trucks are pretty expensive and pretty rare here.

    • @mikosoft
      @mikosoft Před 2 lety +1

      @@vavra222 here in Bratislava (hello neighbor) people go for SUVs more and more. You see them park in tight spots, not fitting into the space, leaving the car in various diagonal positions although that kind of parking is not just SUV drivers but SUVs are the worst offenders since they are so large. And yes, people drive the cars like crazy, thinking they're the only ones that matter.

  • @michaelmao6180
    @michaelmao6180 Před 2 lety

    I live near Seattle where it's pretty wet for a good 60% of the year and places are quite hilly. 4wd is a welcome in such driving conditions. Washington state also has a lot of skiing destinations and hiking trails, and by law you will need a snow chain to drive to some places during the winter unless you get a 4wd, and some trailheads are at the end of gravel roads. So for a young professional who enjoys going outdoors like me, a small 4wd crossover gets me to everywhere I need to go all year round, is easy enough to parallel park downtown, and gives me the peace of mind when I'm driving uphill in the snow or in other less ideal conditions, with the only sacrifice being a few mpg. It's a good jack of all trades type of car if you do occasionally go off road or in the snow, but if you don't do that, then by all means get a hatchback!

  • @c6r1
    @c6r1 Před 2 lety

    X5 E53 3.0i owner here it was originally a gift for my brother who decided he didn't want it and now I'm using it not as a daily but for getting engines/transmissions and other stuff to and from work 289,000 miles on the clock and all it's really needed aside from regular servicing is a mass airflow meter and a crank position sensor but basically the split tail gate you get from an x5 that you wouldn't get on a e39 estate means that there isn't any risk of the forklift fucking up the hatch when loading anything on and the height is useful in traffic and avoiding most obstacles on the road since there's too many lifted pavement queens in florida that just sit uselessly in the left most lanes. It's never put a foot wrong perfect size for 4 Rottweilers particularly on vet visits and it's been one half of my two car solution with a 07 350z which I may or may not have taken the passenger seat out of.

  • @jeremyadams1742
    @jeremyadams1742 Před 2 lety +6

    Most people that I know view SUVs as being safer than any other vehicle in an accident (I realize that this ignores that you're more likely to have an accident in an SUV due to poor handling). Personally, I don't own an SUV but I will probably purchase one in the next few years because I need something with a third row seat for my family. If a manufacturer were to come out with an estate car with a third row seat I'll consider it, but I just don't see that happening in the current U.S. market anytime soon.

    • @xelaxander
      @xelaxander Před 2 lety +3

      Why SUV and not Minivan?

    • @jeremyadams1742
      @jeremyadams1742 Před 2 lety +2

      @@xelaxander because there are more options for SUVs than minivans. Most SUVs have good ground clearance and options for 4wd or awd. Also there is more aftermarket support for modifying and maintaining SUVs than minivans.

  • @Roberto.Gouveia
    @Roberto.Gouveia Před 2 lety +3

    SUV in city is like SMART off-road

    • @CathiiScott
      @CathiiScott Před 2 lety

      I'd rather drive a SMART off-road thanks, far less chance of a roll over than an SUV in the city.

  • @JJ_Lawson_VFX
    @JJ_Lawson_VFX Před rokem

    I'm in the USA and I just upgraded to a 2022 Rav4 from a 2007 Yaris sedan. I chose this for many reasons, but here are the big ones that promoted the change.
    1 - Passenger capacity (and comfort) is a huge upgrade. The back of the Yaris is cramped. Yes, there are roomier sedans, but most of the ones I was looking at ended up being at similar price points to most Crossover SUVs.
    2 - Power + Semi off-road performance. I live on the coast in the pacific northwest and I really wanted something that I could feel confident taking through adverse road conditions. Having an AWD system and extra ride height allows me to feel a tad more confident making my commute when the weather is unaccommodating. No, the Rav4 is not a heavy-duty 4x4... but I don't need it to be! I just need something that can handle the conditions when I need it to, while also getting decent fuel economy when I don't.
    3 - Safety (at least perceived). This obviously varies depending on the vehicle, but I can certainly say that I FEEL much safer driving in my SUV than when I go 80+mph down a Montana highway in my tiny Yaris... for me, that was an improvement.
    At the end of the day, I don't regret upgrading. I probably would have been happy getting a hatchback, or a new modern sedan, but that wasn't what I wanted. Utility, comfort, and reliability are all important to me. The Rav4 Crossover fits the bill here. I can carry myself and my friends comfortably, I can drive on the beach safely, and I can carry bikes and transport cargo without having to pack everything in tight.
    That being said... I don't live in a big city or somewhere that has very tight roads. Many European cities are like this, and also have much higher gas prices... so if you're used to this kind of driving environment, maybe an SUV is just not for you.

  • @rqlk
    @rqlk Před rokem +2

    My mom has a crossover because she says the extra ride height makes her less motion sick and it has extra luggage space. We just went on a road trip with more luggage than ever in the trunk of my dads Camry, and she was less motion sick than normal.

  • @benedictdaxellsantoso9956

    I'm a fan of SUV, as most rural roads in my home country, Indonesia, are in poor conditions, SUV are also a better choice in hauling stuffs and people during road trip and they tend to be safer in frontal crashes, which are quite common in Indonesia.

  • @shutu6338
    @shutu6338 Před 2 lety +3

    i`d rather drive a Multipla instead of SUV ;D

  • @MashifyLV
    @MashifyLV Před 2 lety +2

    The problem with a hatchback vs. an SUV is the fact that the SUV IS ALWAYS BLASTING ITS HEADLIGHTS IN MY HATCH LOVING EYES!!!

    • @alunesh12345
      @alunesh12345 Před 2 lety +1

      Believe in JESUS today, confess and repent of your sins. No one goes to heaven for doing good but by believing in JESUS who died for our sins. Hell isn't fun. GOD loves you soo much unconditional❤🙌❤😋❤

    • @MashifyLV
      @MashifyLV Před 2 lety

      @@alunesh12345 are there any SUV's in heaven?

  • @SodiumWage
    @SodiumWage Před rokem +2

    I love my Fiesta. Good on gas, quick all around (manual transmission), plenty of room for me and my groceries, and it looks nice.

  • @romiarkan450
    @romiarkan450 Před 2 lety +8

    As a car enthusiast, I've come to realize SUVs are a necessary evil in order for the manufacturers to have the money to keep making the fun cars we love so much, as overpriced as they are thesedays. Even Lotus and Ferrari are doing it now. I'm never buying one, you'd have to shoot me first. I find sports sedans to be good enough for family needs. Plus, when I drive, it's usually alone, so an SUV and even an estate car would be a massive waste of space.

  • @latifaf9744
    @latifaf9744 Před 2 lety +5

    In our country Kuwait.. here is why SUVs are better:
    - Parking lots are so limited so we use to climb up the sidewalks
    - The most two activities you can do here is either camping or going to beach
    - Our speed bumps are everywhere and they are extremely large so Mustangs rear passengers have to get out of the car to avoid hitting the ground
    - In summer it reaches +50°c with ground temperature reaching +75°c under direct sun.. which means we are literally driving over frying pan.. thus.. the higher your vehicle, the cooler AC you got

  • @TrevorDennis100
    @TrevorDennis100 Před 2 lety +1

    I had a 2004 Pajero for 15 years and mostly loved it, but it was horrible on tight twisty roads as it made you travel sick. However I carry a lot of tools and need to move timber, so I swapped it for a 2017 Highlander Ltd. The Highlander drives better, and has as much space in the back as the Pajero, but it is difficult to see and judge the vehicles footprint. In fact I scrapped the nearside last year coming out of a multi-story car park. It's much wide than you think it is. It also has an enormous A pillar coupled with a wing mirror that blocks your view on tight bends and corners. I once had to swerve because I'd cut the corner thinking nothing was coming the other way, when a car suddenly appeared from behind the A-pillar and wing mirror. The all round visibility camera helps at times, but most of the time you can't see the screen because of glare. All in all I wish I'd got another Pajero. That car has been to the top of fairly serious mountains here in NZ, and driven the Molesworth and Rainbow roads multiple times. The Highlander has all the disadvantages of a big SUV, but I can't take it off-road. I should probably have got a station wagon / estate care, and probably will sell the Highlander.

  • @washinours
    @washinours Před 2 lety

    That vid saved my lunch, I was out of salt.
    loved it ahah ♡