In a decade or two all countries (maybe except USA) will be using chinese vehicles mostly. Our computers, smartphones, headsets and almost everything we use come from China, so cars are going to be the next step. If USA don't take over Tawain before
In fact what I heard was that some of the European manufacturers of cars were already partnering with the Chinese to build and share research... so I dont disagree with you there.
All these haters who have no access to premium Chinese cars don't understand how good the quality is. As I have 28 cars in my business fleet now including 8 Chinese made cars of medium quality brands and have been amazing not given me one problem, yet the Toyotas have been a basket case, anything after 2020 with Toyota is a bucket of crap and a problem. My personal daily driver has been a MG HS since 2019 SAIC Chinese car that has never had a problem and I have 3 more cars from Germany and Italy that have been a money pit but i don't mind as their rare and special models which will go up in value over time.
Nice accolade for the China one, I have a Kia Sorento which has been rock solid. What is your take on Korean cars? I feel they have been constantly getting better as well.
@@TheGShockWatcher Compared to what they made in the 90s it's a big improvement and are actually trying to innovate but the only issue with Korean cars is the consistency in quality control. I have had some Hyundai's in my fleet in the past same model and basically from the same batch, some cars did close to 300,000kms with no issue and 3 of them needed new engines and/or gearboxes under 10,000kms so hit and miss from a personal experience. I would say they need to lower their prices to compete in the future Hyundai actually gave me an iconic 5 N for 24hours great car the issue is its overpriced in Australia at $120k AUD if it was priced around the $80k AUD price I would personally buy it (keep in mind a Tesla Model Y starts from $60k AUD driveway the performance is $88k AUD which is a direct competitor to the iconic5 N)
@@amjedali5164 LOL try buying one at Singapore prices... you could probably buy an apartment or small house in Australia for what we pay for cars here, and mine was a Kia.
@@TheGShockWatcher korean manufactured hyundai and kias are very reliable in my experience, not honda/toyota reliable under abuse but if you take care of them per the usual routine maintenance stuff I've found them to be pretty dependable cars.
I love NIO, Seen them in Guangzhou and Shanghai and San Jose, CA. Met with leadership. it's such an impressive company and the other are equally as impressive.
I saw that too, got the tip from my colleague in China www.chinadaily.com.cn/a/202405/30/WS6657e2d6a31082fc043c9fd9.html Its amazing what they are able to do.
The QC on the Chinese EV's is the main issue as a lot of them are catching fire. If it's the battery or if it's the cars electronics idono. But i wont buy one until it has matured a bit as sitting in lithium fire coffin is not how i want to go out.
China is about to have flying cars 😂😂Mexico is going to get flooded with this cars, I wonder how long is going to take Americans to drive them to the US😅
They do lool good, but the fileds of bought and abandoned EVs are scary so id the suppression of EV car fire stoires. . . The old saying, 'if u can cheat, then cheat' still exists in too much of Chinese commerce. .
@@TheGShockWatcher Actually that story has already been debunked. Those EVs are actually retired (5-6 years old) rideshare vehicles because the business has since gone bust. Also in the junkyard are other wrecked and/or retired vehicles, as well as un-sellable EVs of foreign brands. You can look for the channel "Inside China Auto" who went onsite to investigate. The "graveyard" and "car fire" narrative were perpetuated by a famed China-hater TH-camr. To put things in perspective, China sells millions of EVs every year.
Don't know about China. But over here in Asean, Chinese evs are dominating the market. They have been around for almost 2 years and I have yet to see or hear of any going up in flames. On the other hand, gasoline vehicles catching fire are a common occurrence. People here like BYD evs because they are affordable and reliable.
In a decade or two all countries (maybe except USA) will be using chinese vehicles mostly. Our computers, smartphones, headsets and almost everything we use come from China, so cars are going to be the next step. If USA don't take over Tawain before
In fact what I heard was that some of the European manufacturers of cars were already partnering with the Chinese to build and share research... so I dont disagree with you there.
They don’t look like pieces of crap at all. It’s like walking into an alternate universe.
Totally, it was very next generation!
All these haters who have no access to premium Chinese cars don't understand how good the quality is. As I have 28 cars in my business fleet now including 8 Chinese made cars of medium quality brands and have been amazing not given me one problem, yet the Toyotas have been a basket case, anything after 2020 with Toyota is a bucket of crap and a problem. My personal daily driver has been a MG HS since 2019 SAIC Chinese car that has never had a problem and I have 3 more cars from Germany and Italy that have been a money pit but i don't mind as their rare and special models which will go up in value over time.
Nice accolade for the China one, I have a Kia Sorento which has been rock solid. What is your take on Korean cars? I feel they have been constantly getting better as well.
@@TheGShockWatcher Compared to what they made in the 90s it's a big improvement and are actually trying to innovate but the only issue with Korean cars is the consistency in quality control. I have had some Hyundai's in my fleet in the past same model and basically from the same batch, some cars did close to 300,000kms with no issue and 3 of them needed new engines and/or gearboxes under 10,000kms so hit and miss from a personal experience. I would say they need to lower their prices to compete in the future Hyundai actually gave me an iconic 5 N for 24hours great car the issue is its overpriced in Australia at $120k AUD if it was priced around the $80k AUD price I would personally buy it (keep in mind a Tesla Model Y starts from $60k AUD driveway the performance is $88k AUD which is a direct competitor to the iconic5 N)
@@amjedali5164 LOL try buying one at Singapore prices... you could probably buy an apartment or small house in Australia for what we pay for cars here, and mine was a Kia.
@@TheGShockWatcher korean manufactured hyundai and kias are very reliable in my experience, not honda/toyota reliable under abuse but if you take care of them per the usual routine maintenance stuff I've found them to be pretty dependable cars.
I have had a Kia Sorento for the last seven years, and it still runs well, its a great car!
I love NIO, Seen them in Guangzhou and Shanghai and San Jose, CA. Met with leadership. it's such an impressive company and the other are equally as impressive.
The Nio vehicles are very cool, and their implementation to have a physical presence for the in car assistant that moves is unique.
@@TheGShockWatcher it's like R2D2!
@@billz6010 It totally is!
Wonderful quality cars in china
Incredible quality! Certainly feels like they are outpacing the likes of Tesla.
byd new gen of dm system can go over 2100km per tank
Hope it will come to Australia soon🎉
I saw that too, got the tip from my colleague in China
www.chinadaily.com.cn/a/202405/30/WS6657e2d6a31082fc043c9fd9.html
Its amazing what they are able to do.
Hopefully Australia won't be as silly as Biden.
@@vincentdesun They both take orders from same a holes, will be 100% tax in Ozz for sure.
That's a bummer, count yourself lucky you aren't buying here in Singapore. You would die looking at the prices
Good day mate❤
Hello to you as well...
There is a Large Language Model behind these cars
It would certainly appear so
These are AMAZING.....
Absolutely mate... really are incredible
Wow, bilingual "assistant".
It was amazing, very intuitive, although some parts will need some work in the international markets, but can't imagine much would be needed.
EV is short for electric vehicle, not electronic vehicle
My bad... thanks for pointing out the mistake.
Fixed it up now, hope that works. Thanks again
The QC on the Chinese EV's is the main issue as a lot of them are catching fire. If it's the battery or if it's the cars electronics idono. But i wont buy one until it has matured a bit as sitting in lithium fire coffin is not how i want to go out.
DMCS
What does DMCS mean?
No way The G-shock . Made in China ? No thanks
Probably surprise you how much is made in China, or not surprise you...
China is about to have flying cars 😂😂Mexico is going to get flooded with this cars, I wonder how long is going to take Americans to drive them to the US😅
You know, I was sharing with some people here in Australia this video, and they were amazed at the vehicles that China has… really incredible.
More car videos please
I hope too, if I can get back to China soon…
MADE IN TEMU.
Dont think its really their segment.
They do lool good, but the fileds of bought and abandoned EVs are scary so id the suppression of EV car fire stoires. . . The old saying, 'if u can cheat, then cheat' still exists in too much of Chinese commerce. .
I saw a story on Bloomberg on the EV graveyard, and its unfortunate. I hope they can find a way to gracefully dispose of them.
@@TheGShockWatcher Actually that story has already been debunked. Those EVs are actually retired (5-6 years old) rideshare vehicles because the business has since gone bust. Also in the junkyard are other wrecked and/or retired vehicles, as well as un-sellable EVs of foreign brands. You can look for the channel "Inside China Auto" who went onsite to investigate. The "graveyard" and "car fire" narrative were perpetuated by a famed China-hater TH-camr. To put things in perspective, China sells millions of EVs every year.
@@TheGShockWatcher
From memory, I saw an alternative view that those vehicles were from a major Chinese taxi company which failed.
Don't know about China. But over here in Asean, Chinese evs are dominating the market. They have been around for almost 2 years and I have yet to see or hear of any going up in flames. On the other hand, gasoline vehicles catching fire are a common occurrence. People here like BYD evs because they are affordable and reliable.
Sorry I missed your comment, but its a great one, thanks so much for clarifying!
Made by cockroachs
Really not that appropriate friend... this is a country that thrives on innovation, what they are achieving is incredible.
@@TheGShockWatcher
Cockroaches live in the dark.... Sounds more like another country, not China?