Will ai slop be obsolete before the Scout is available to buy is the real question.
Today one can go spend $75k on a vehicle with technology that is objectively terrible. The brakes can barely stop the vehicle. The subframe barely holds it together. The fuel evaporates as it’s being pumped into the combustion chamber. The visibility is terrible. The body panels barely line up. The steering is a manageable mess, at best. The seats are uncomfortable. The seat belts, if they even exist are arguably more dangerous than not having them. There are exactly zero safety features other than the previously-mentioned incapable brakes. It rattles; it coughs; it smokes. It’s loud. It’s smelly. Its NVH (noise, vibration, and harshness) is off the charts.
And yet, oh, what a feeling when you smash that accelerator to the floor and pop the clutch and the rear-end torque steer threatens to take the car away from you before you’ve even had a chance to hit full speed.
Today one can go spend $75k on a vehicle with technology that is objectively terrible. The brakes can barely stop the vehicle. The subframe barely holds it together. The fuel evaporates as it’s being pumped into the combustion chamber. The visibility is terrible. The body panels barely line up. The steering is a manageable mess, at best. The seats are uncomfortable. The seat belts, if they even exist are arguably more dangerous than not having them. There are exactly zero safety features other than the previously-mentioned incapable brakes. It rattles; it coughs; it smokes. It’s loud. It’s smelly. Its NVH (noise, vibration, and harshness) is off the charts.
And yet, oh, what a feeling when you smash that accelerator to the floor and pop the clutch and the rear-end torque steer threatens to take the car away from you before you’ve even had a chance to hit full speed.