Frederick Reid is an automotive editor at Car and Truck, focused on passenger cars, electric vehicles, and the day-to-day accessories that drivers actually live with. His writing leans toward the practical end of the spectrum: not what a car feels like on a half-day media drive in perfect weather, but what it feels like in the third year of ownership, on a Tuesday morning, in the rain, with a dead key fob battery and a check-engine light on the dash.
Frederick came to automotive journalism the long way around. He spent his twenties as an electronics hobbyist building amplifiers and head-unit installs for friends, and his thirties commuting roughly 30,000 miles a year through a region that punishes both cars and the people inside them — salt, heat, potholes, and traffic in equal measure. That commute is where most of his opinions come from. He completed coursework in automotive electronics through a community-college program in his late twenties and has maintained an active interest in EV battery chemistry and BMS design since the first generation of mass-market EVs arrived.
Frederick has owned more than twenty vehicles in twenty-five years of driving. The two he likes to talk about most are an early-'90s Honda Civic hatchback that he kept until it crossed 240,000 miles (still running when he sold it, still cold air conditioning), and a current-generation BEV that he uses as a daily driver and has road-tripped across multiple states. He has also lived with a plug-in hybrid for three years, two compact crossovers, a base-model sedan he bought specifically to write about base-model sedans, and a manual-transmission hot hatch that he insists was the most fun-per-dollar he has ever spent on a car.
For each product Frederick recommends, he verifies the manufacturer's spec sheet against at least one independent measurement (where one is available), reads the warranty in full and notes the exclusions in the review body, scans the most recent two years of verified owner reviews for patterns of failure, and gives extra weight to products with five-plus years of market presence and broad parts availability. Newer products with limited track records get qualified language — "promising on paper, too new to confirm" — not blanket recommendations.
Frederick does not accept paid placements, sponsored reviews, or free product in exchange for coverage. The editorial team's recommendation logic is fully independent of affiliate revenue: a product's commission rate does not affect its ranking. When owner reports of a previously recommended product start trending in a concerning direction, Frederick prefers to update the guide quickly rather than wait for the issue to become impossible to ignore.
Frederick wants to hear from drivers who have lived with their cars for years rather than weeks — the people whose third-year ownership reports never make it into press coverage. Reader stories about long-term reliability, dealer service experiences, and gear that genuinely held up (or didn't) regularly shape the next round of guide revisions.



















