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[parent] [thread] 9 comments
1. semi-e+(OP)[view] [source] 2025-12-05 09:09:54
If you're in Europe, you can consider Dacia. A lot of their stuff is old Renault parts that they've bought a license to use/manufacture. Get a pre-2023 model with the 1.6 non-turbo non-hybrid petrol engine - it's actually a Nissan HR16DE, which has been in use since 2004. Very reliable and low complexity.
replies(2): >>kristj+pd >>dotanc+z61
2. kristj+pd[view] [source] 2025-12-05 10:30:25
>>semi-e+(OP)
And parts are ridiculously cheap and widely junkyard-available.
3. dotanc+z61[view] [source] 2025-12-05 15:47:36
>>semi-e+(OP)
Is it using that Nissan/Renault CVT? That transmission is notorious junk.

I must say that I've been impressed with Dacia. Even the build quality is excellent - on par or beating VW. I've driven on Romanian roads so I can see why they would prioritize such high build quality.

replies(1): >>semi-e+2q2
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4. semi-e+2q2[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-12-05 21:54:51
>>dotanc+z61
You can get them with a manual transmission, or a dual-clutch automatic, or CVT. AFAIK, the manuals are all decent, although the 6 speed manual on the 4WD models has quite low ratios (no transfer case) so it doesn't have great fuel economy at highway speeds.
replies(1): >>dotanc+Vr2
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5. dotanc+Vr2[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-12-05 22:06:27
>>semi-e+2q2
Makes sense. In their home market, Romania, highway speed hardly ever exceeds 90 kph.
replies(1): >>petre+yp4
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6. petre+yp4[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-12-06 18:41:11
>>dotanc+Vr2
Not true unless you equate a normal road (one or two lanes per direction, rarely separated from the other direction) with a highway, which is something else (comtrolled access, separated lanes, safety lane). Top highway speed is 130 kph, express road speed is 110 kph and normal roads it's 90 kph.
replies(1): >>dotanc+qD4
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7. dotanc+qD4[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-12-06 20:37:31
>>petre+yp4
At least the last time I was there, 2010, all the intercity highways look like they hadn't been maintained since Ceausescu fell. No matter what the legal limit was, there were very few places where one could drive 90 kph safely. Maybe this has changed - I certainly hope so
replies(1): >>petre+4G4
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8. petre+4G4[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-12-06 21:04:31
>>dotanc+qD4
Well, it's quite different now after being in the EU for nearly two decades. What you recall is regular roads, that cannot be called highways, but those got fixed as well. The highway infra is still not countinous, but it exists. And Romanian drivers do >90 kph on normal roads as well. Romania and Bulgaria have the highest road fatalities per capita in the EU.
replies(1): >>dotanc+cS4
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9. dotanc+cS4[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-12-06 22:54:09
>>petre+4G4

  > Romanian drivers do >90 kph on normal roads as well. Romania and Bulgaria have the highest road fatalities per capita in the EU.
It sounds like you are confirming my memories of the country. I did mention that exceeding 90 could not be done safely.
replies(1): >>petre+hs5
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10. petre+hs5[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-12-07 06:15:48
>>dotanc+cS4
It's not an infrastructure issue, but a cultural one that took off because of lacking infra. Those roads were designed for doing a maximum of 90 kph on them. Drivers were out of options, needlessly wasing time on thd road, so they started driving recklessly.
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