Don't forget the Toyota pickups/corollas, Renault powered Cherokees, & VW's early diesels
IIRC the issue is many of those were only offered for a short period of time & repair parts were difficult/expensive to source from the getgo and to top it off many were undersized engines...usually w/o turbo/intercoolers.
I don't agree at all. The Volkswagen diesels for example had a very long run. From the 70s to the 90s with one basic engine design. Diesel Rabbit was a fantasic little car. Parts were and still are cheap and Amish farmers are still using them to power horse-drawn, self-powered farm equipment. My wife and I still drive a pair of 1991 Jetta diesels. Plenty of power, cheap parts and 48-50 MPG. highway, consistently. No turbos. Besides great highway mileage, my wife drives up and down steep dirt mountain roads to work and gets 38 MPG. That is incredible mileage for that kind of driving.
I've also got a 1.6 Volkswagen diesel in a 95 Geo 4WD Tracker. Great little rig that gets great fuel mileage.
I also still have an 81 Chevette diesel and a 85 Isuzu PUP 4WD diesel pickup. Both powered by isuzu diesels and both fine to drive and reliable -and NO turbos. I've heard stories about how powerless the Chevette diesels were and wonder where those BS stories came from. I had two 1.4 gas Chevettes back around 76 or 77. My 1.8 diesel Chevtte has more power and more torque and gets 45 MPG instead of 28 MPG.
Mercedes were never particluarly good on fuel. I had a 300 with a 3 liter turbo 5 banger and it only got around 24 MPG best. Not very impressive.
Also had an older 190D with a 2.2 liter that only got around 30 MPG at best. No Mercedes cars, gas or diesel, ever had great repair records. But I guess the people who have the money to buy them don't care.
And yes, many older diesels had short runs. But many used time-proven industrial diesels like Perkins, that had - and still have - great parts support. Some Jeeps and Checkers used farm-tractor Perkins. Some Internationals use the same Nissan diesels used in forklifts and industrial machines.
The reality is - gas has always been relatively cheap in the USA and the public has always been collectively ignorant with diesels. Thus diesels never sold well to the general public. Now? The emphasis is to make diesels start, sound, and run like gas engines - with fuel that usually cost quite a bit more.
I remember when my friend's father bought a new 1982 Chevy 6.2 diesel K10 4WD pickup when they first came out. This guy had his own heavy equipment business so he wasn't clueless. Well, he traded in his 1979 Chevy truck that had a 350 gasser. Drove his new 82 truck home with the 378 c.i. diesel (6.2) and complained constantly how "dead" it was. Brought it back to the Chevy dealer, over and over. Nobody could convince him that a 378 diesel is supposed to have less power then a 350 c.i. gas engine. Within a few months, he got rid of it and went back to gas. That sort of thing was common with new diesel owners in the USA.