David S. Wallens said:
...To make a point: According to the brand, 96% of all Subaru vehicles sold in the last 10 years are still on the road.....
The problem with statistics is that you need to understand statistics to understand statistics(!).
What is this saying? What are the numbers for other brands? Are they all very close to that? Is percentage on the road a good basis for determining reliability?
The data is apparently from a 2021 study, and says it's a higher number than Toyota or Honda. Doesn't mention any other brands (?). More importantly, does not take into account miles driven (e.g. say one brand sells a lot of commercial vehicles with get a LOT of miles, while another primarily sells to retired people and very low miles).
This article talks about makes with the most cars to make 200,000 miles, which is likely a better measure of reliability (determining an appropriate measure is very important in "proper" statistics). In that case, Subaru only ranks 7th. Toyota has a rather significant lead in this case! It doesn't show Subaru, but it looks like Toyota might be twice as likely to reach 200,000 miles.
Yes, when marketing and statistics meet, be very cautious!
....The iSeeCars study looks further at the car brands that have the percentage of a car brand's vehicles that have over 200,000 miles. In this report, Subaru is seventh on the list and has 0.8 percent of its vehicle lineup with over 200,00 miles on the odometer, which is below the average of all car brands at 1.2 percent...
....The report reveals the car brands with the most significant percentage of cars with over 200,000 miles are Toyota (2.3%), Honda (1.9%), GMC (1.8%), Chevrolet (1.6%), and Ford (1.5%), above the average of all vehicles....
https://www.torquenews.com/1084/subaru-touts-new-vehicle-longevity-now-only-ranks-7th-reliability
(yes, I know the links in the story to studies link right back to the same story they are in!)