Stop in for a cup of coffee

complete apples and oranges .....your logic would be like saying a computer from 1990 will connect and keep up with today's internet.

Electronics change and need to keep up.....thankfully the road hasn't changed much so an old car will still run but some would argue traffic has changed making old brakes and suspensions obsolete. ....the part about the traffic is really debatable.

but as far as electronics go .....kinda hard to to sync devices and keep up with the latest with an old scratched CD. New cars don't even have CD players anymore.

I guess some live in the past and play records too but that doesn't mean they are not obsolete.......cool yes, but current....no way.

BTW: mr. David .....I was waiting to hear the rest of the review from when you drove the new Chrysler 200 rental .....did I miss that??

I never said cd's were current. I merely said they work fine for me for listening to music. I have no desire to synch devices or own devices for that matter. We got along just fine without them. Whether new cars have CD players or not, means nothing to me.

Some people are into the latest electronics, that's great. But some of us aren't.

The Chrysler 200 was ok. It gripped turns nicely, rode well, felt safe, and I liked the tire pressure monitor because it alerted me to a fast leak so I could get to a place to change the tire before it went completely flat. The jack worked well and the instructions were laminated.

The interior was handsome and the seat and the steering wheel had a lot of adjustment. I did not like the way the A-pillar was so thick. The gear selector rotary knob was easy to get used to. I can't comment on the info-tainment system because again I don't care about that stuff.

The 2.4 pulled strong but the transmission was a little jerky. Also the convex shape of the sides of the car would pick up dings really easily.