I’m currently driving around Iceland. I have seen a Renault Megane, a plethora of newer Yaris’, one Yaris Cross (I lost my damned mind) and a crap ton of Suzuki Jimnys. Now, I’ve driven in some awful conditions in the states. Blizzards in Montana, Tornadoes in Texas, hail storms in the South and ridiculous wind in Arizona. I have driven in all of that in this tiny country, all in a short wheel base Kia Sportage. I was also outpaced by a fucking Yaris today, absolutely bombing down the mountain in 1c weather. Mind you, it was not a GR so AWD was out of the question.

I am so impressed by this Kia and all of the insanely capable Jimnys I am seeing coming off of F-roads.

If a harsh place like Iceland can coexist with RAM 2500s and modern Yaris’, why can’t we?

Oh, and when I say around I don’t mean poking around Reykjavik, I am literally driving the Ring Road around an entire country. Coolest experience ever.

  • haych@lemmy.one
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    10 months ago

    Can’t go wrong with some hot hatchbacks, Fiesta, Corsa, Clio, Golf, Astra, Focus, Civic, Yaris.

    Some fantastic cars which some of them can be pretty fast, handle well, and being hatchback have a decent amount of room. And cheap as shit to run.

  • nBodyProblem@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    I really think the Duster could be a huge hit over here. I rented a turbodiesel duster in Iceland and that thing is dog slow but they’re around $12k with loads of ground clearance, 4WD, plenty of interior space, and gets around 45 mpg. I went on some pretty gnarly “mountain vehicle only” F-roads and it handled them like a champ with only a little rubbing on the rocks.

    Ironically, though, Iceland competes with the USA in size and number of SUVs and trucks. The country is crawling with “superjeeps” on big lifts and 44”+ tires that dwarf the average American brodozer.

  • XeroxCool@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    We had the Jimny here for a bit, called the Suzuki Samurai. There was also the upsized cousin, the Suzuki Sidekick/Vitara and Geo/Chevy Tracker into the 00s. That’s what I have and love it. I wanted some 4wd capability but not the fuel consumption or parking space for a normal suv/pickup. It weighs less than a modern Miata and is shorter, too. As a 2 door variant, it suits my primary driving need: solo and single-passenger short trips with less than a seat-full of cargo. The average car-owning household in the US owns something like 2.3 cars and is in the suburbs/semi urban. They don’t all have to be 7-seat or 8ft-bed trucks. And this whole fear of snow… Don’t go out. Stock up food before storms. US suburbs fare just fine with modern communication and snow removal as long as it’s not Texas. Your job won’t miss you if you die in a blizzard

  • Mike D.@lemm.ee
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    10 months ago

    The US laws prefer large vehicles.

    Look into the 25% import tax on small work trucks- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicken_tax

    Also, larger SUVs and trucks get preferential treatment under gas mileage standards. Someone more familiar can explain better.

    FYI - my daily is a 24 year old Subaru.

  • Throwaway@lemm.ee
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    10 months ago

    But why would we want smaller cars? We have room for bigger cars, and they feel better to drive.