American cars have far less in the way of quality and reliability requirements compared to the good Japanese vendors (Toyota, Honda, Mazda, Nissan).
My brother works for various auto-part engineering firms (he's a mechanical engineer). These firms have both people like GM and Toyota as customers. For simple things like the air vents on the new Pontiac G6 (which he worked on last year), GM only requires a "cycle" of 5,000 times to work without change in resistence or failure, while Toyota's cycle requirement for the '06 Camry was 60,000 (no exaggeration).
A "cycle" in this case was the opening/closing of the air vents.
My brother works for various auto-part engineering firms (he's a mechanical engineer). These firms have both people like GM and Toyota as customers. For simple things like the air vents on the new Pontiac G6 (which he worked on last year), GM only requires a "cycle" of 5,000 times to work without change in resistence or failure, while Toyota's cycle requirement for the '06 Camry was 60,000 (no exaggeration).
A "cycle" in this case was the opening/closing of the air vents.
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