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Old Mar 21, 2004 | 09:49 PM
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Steve in SoCal's Avatar
Steve in SoCal
Joined: Feb 2004
Posts: 27
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From: Sourthern California
Default The Crossfire Experience

Well, now that I've owned this car for a full month and after reading some of the posts under the "Any regrets" and "Headlight Condensation" threads, I thought it would be a good time to wax philosophically about the Crossfire experience from my own point of view. First of all, I never believed the vehicle was worth $35k (let alone anything over sticker) and that's why I waited to purchase until I could get one for under $30k. At $30k I believe this vehicle represents a good balance of performance to value for what it is>> a 7 year old Mercedes chassis/drivetrain with a very sharp and beautifully styled body welded on.

That said, I have never had as much trouble with any of the other 13 vehicles I have owned as I've had with this car over the first month of ownership:

1) Defective steering gear ......... replaced
2) Cracked/broken splash guards in the front wheel wells .... replaced
3) Trip odometer inoperative .... instrument cluster replaced
4) FSS service indicator incorrectly reads service at 10,000 miles after instrument cluster replaced ..... dealer diagnosed as software error to be upgraded/corrected by DC at a future date.
5) Windows fog without A/C compressor running ..... dealer diagnosed (after consulting with DC) as normal for design of this vehicle.
6) Condensation in hedalight and fog light enclosures ... dealer diagnosed as normal due to vented design of the enclosures.

Like many others on this forum, I knew about the bizarre cupholder, the limited rear visibility, and the somewhat clunky 1-2 shift on the manual trans before I signed on the dotted line. The funny thing is that once you start having all these new and unexpected problems, the problems you thought you already knew about and were willing to overlook, become less tolerable and dramatically more irritating (similar to personal relationships, huh?)

I don't find myself too perturbed about the new Crossfire "light". My opinion is that two seaters have very limited appeal unless they achieve the icon status of the Z or the 'vette. (The T-bird failed twice as a two seater, and let's not forget the Buick Reatta or the Cadillac Allante.) I believe DC should have put more effort into sweating some of these details and then charged a fair price for the thing and let sales dictate production. In other words, the price isn't why this vehicle hasn't been more succesful, rather the fact that the car is perceived as slightly underpowered, with somewhat numb steering, limited rear visiblity, limited headroom for anyone 6 feet or over. combined with a silly cupholder, stereo with no CD changer, clunky manual trans, no spare tire and/or run flat tires. Do you get the picture? None of these things as a single entity would be enough to hurt this car, it's the combination of so many different issues.

After saying all of this, I still believe the Crossfire coupe is the most beautiful car on the road today. I love the way my *** feels like it's bolted to the highway when I ride in this thing. It's turning out to be a love/hate relationship and I'm only hoping that ultimately it will be more love than hate.
 
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