My only FORD experience was more like F.O.R.M... typically a $400-ish repair bill about once a month or maybe 6 weeks if we were lucky on the 8 year old first model year 200c.i. I6 powered '78 Fairmont that I was allowed to drive to and from college 'till after 3 years of pain in the ass with only 55k actual original 1-owner miles on the odometer (my grandmother bought it new) and not being allowed to leave the town limits in it or drive it the 250 miles home for holidays, I said enough of this crap, sought out and spent my $2 grand life savings on my '81 Celica GT Liftback with twice the mileage and as it turns out sooooo much less of a p.i.t.a. factor than the ford... 28,028 on the Celica's 5-DIGIT odometer when I bought it! Probably a 1 in front but could just as easily have been a 2 considering the car was originally from California and I bought it in Louisiana 9 years later.
Celica repair list... Timing chain replacement, front brake pads, and basic tune-up at time of car purchase, front tires, accessory belt tensioner pulley, fuel filter within first year, new battery second year, that's it...
Fairmont repair list includes single-barrel Holley carburetor, cracked heater core, BAD HEAD GASKET (dumped coolant down the OUTSIDE of the block!), a/c failure every year, water pump, alternator, radiator, "Die HARD" battery (which it did), steering column safety ring failure in mid-turn, randomly slipping from park to reverse at idle, you name it... Good thing it only had the driver's side mirror, factory AM radio, no dash clock, and didn't have power anything or that stuff probably would've broken too.
The Fairmont was much quicker than the Celica but the Celica was so much more fun to drive, handled much better, got 20mpg city and 32-34mpg hwy@80mph with the a/c on, and NEVER left me stranded!
The Fairmont was definitely better than walking the 7 miles to campus most of the time and my aunt usually paid the mechanic's bills since I was a broke college student but I'm still so glad I can hoestly say that car wasn't actually mine... And what idiotic FORD engineer thought it'd be a good idea to move the horn to the turn signal stalk and make you have to shove it towards the steering column to honk the horn??? I can't tell you how many times I almost broke it off trying to find then honk the horn in a panic in my first few months of driving! WORST automotive engineering decision ever... oh wait, no it wasn't... The Pinto, another brilliant FORD design, especially in rear end collisions... or the Comet/Maverick that would just randomly burst into flames sitting in the parking lot.
My mom't best friend's Maverick burst into flames in the parking lot of the local Chevy dealer a few minutes after the dealer inspected it and took it as a trade-in on a new Caprice, lucky for her, and my grandmother's Comet did it right in front of the house, so she bought the "all new 1978 Ford Fairmont" to replace it...
Now the criuse control brake cancel switch in FORD trucks and some of their minivans melts, catches fire, and burns the vehicle to the ground...
That same switch in my mom's windstar minivan went bad, began leaking brake fluid, and almost caused her brakes to fail because unlike Toyota who put it on the BRAKE bedal assembly AND as a button on the driver's cruise system controls, FORD still chooses not to give the driver a cancel button at all and puts their brake cancel switch in the master cylinder to be pressed by the fluid pressure, wtf???
If you survived FORD ownership this long then owning a Supra, even a trashed one, should be a piece of cake...
I find Supras to be closer to domestics compared to other Toyota models as far as repair intervals go but then again they've got more horsepower than other Toyota models and they're still far better and lots more reliable than the only domestic experience I've ever personally had...