Chevy, Toyota, and Honda are considered reliable. While they all break down occasionally They are common enough that they can be fixed.
Recently their durability has increased to the point where it approaches a JaguarV12?
Yes Really!! In my lifetime I’ve worked on probably 50 different Jaguar V12’s of those only Two had engine damage. One from a loose oil filter the owner drove for several days without oil in it and eventually threw a rod out the side of the block. The other from leaves and other trash blocking off the radiator because trash collected between the A/C and the radiator. That engine dropped a valve seat because it finally overheated one too many times.
I pull the heads off the early V12’s because they are prized for power output. I’ve never seen a cylinder ridge. Including one with 244,000 miles on it!! But if it did the sleeve slides out and a new one will slide in place.
If you look at the engine it’s built better than any other engine I’ve ever worked on. Bigger bearings. More material, higher grade material. Instead of a timing belt which wears out at 60,000 miles and needs replacement, it has an extremely durable timing chain which as long as oil is full and changed regularly will last. I’ve never seen one worn to the point of needing replacement.
Transmission on most of them is the GMTurbo 400 or the overdrive version which is found behind big block V8’s But the parts inside that transmission are the heavy duty ones found in tow trucks and ambulances because they can handle the prodigious amount of Torque a V12 has.
The differential is a Dana 44 found on 427 Cobra’s and modern Corvettes.
OK the fuel injection on them is a very early one. While Detroit was still playing with carburetors Jaguar was pioneering fuel ⛽️ injection. Electronic ignition came in 1971. Improving with time until distributorless ignition was developed enough for the last series of V12’s
clearly, 12 in a V is the way to be!
Now when you open the hood you’d swear the pollution gods threw up in there. That is a big reason why Jaguar has a bad reputation for reliability. Those rubber hoses develop leaks and few mechanics bother to do the research to understand that the poor performance is caused by a leaking hose or something connected to one of those hoses. Hoses and tubes oh my!! Hoses and tubes oh my! Sorry you guys who drive on the street. Just find the end of one hose. and trace it to the other end. Then replace that one. Go through and replace all the rubber tubes every 5 years. Replace the radiator and heater hoses while you’re at it along with the fuel lines.
But Racers can get rid of almost all that mess and have a very neat and simple engine. They can even retrofit carbs if they don’t mind losing power and mileage.
But the fuel injection itself is pretty simple. The parts for fuel injection are pretty much the same on any V8 6 or 4 cylinder Jaguar even makes it so you have only to count from one to six and remember side A or B