Thursday, June 12, 2014

Cars of 2000: Re-evaluating the Internal Combustion Engine


Cars of 2000: Re-evaluating the Internal Combustion Engine

The new millenia was similar to the 1960's with protests, rumors of war, peace and revolution all mixed together. The auto-industry was going through another Golden Age that was plunged into crisis, darker than the Baby Boomer generation could fathom. Dark days loomed with stringent CAFE standards and fear-mongering lawmakers fueling people's anxiety about the future of the auto industry.                                                                                                                                                                                
tesla_roadster_on_the_road_2The Tesla Roadster was an alternate to boring electric cars. It was an awesome looking car which didn't guzzle any gasoline whatsoever. It inspired many unique or retro-fitted sports cars build for speed as well as efficiency.

Another addition to the plug-in car types was the Chevrolet volt. It came with a pretty large ticket price of $40K which made it difficult for the average working person to afford to be "green".
2007 Toyota Prius Touring EditionIn 2001, the Toyta Prius hit the U.S. as the world's first mass-production hybrid car. It was remodeled in 2004 with the hump-back style that is very recognizable. It's popularity saved Toyota's domestic manufacturers and moved global auto manufacturing to the Far East. People got behind the hybrid, despite its lack of redeeming design qualities.



Resources:

http://www.ridelust.com/goodbye-2000s-the-ten-cars-that-defined-the-decade/

Cars of Generation X

Cars of Generation X

The 1990's witnessed some of the best cars from a time when the auto-industry finally figured it out. The Mazda Miata is just one example of a new reliable fun. Its manual transmission was precise enough to control the little four-cylinder engine. It was the best-selling sports car of its time.                                                                                                                
Mazda Miata

The 1990's began with the Gulf War in August 1990 when Iraqi forces occupied Kuwait, the gateway of Saudi oil  fields. President Bush led Desert Storm which left Saddam Hussein to fight another day.

By the middle of the decade the country was into a record run of prosperity in a service economy spun off by a new technology and investment in the stock market. The auto industry grew steadily except for dips in 1991 and 1998 and high end luxury cars lead the way.

Mercedes brought performance back to the market. Two-seaters were less sports-car like and by the late 1990's the SL600 was a 4500 pound luxo-crusier with a 389-hp 6.0 liter V-12 engine. It could do 0 to sixth in 5.9 seconds and reach speeds in excess of 150 mph.

1990 Mercedes 300SL















The BMW Z3 went on sale in spring of 1996 amid hype from a cameo in the James Bond movie "Golden Eye." Demand became greater for the Z3 than the Mercedes or Porsche Boxter in the roadster reemergence market of the middle 1990's. And the Z3 was produced in the newly opened South Carolina factory which was the world headquarters for production of this model.
BMW Z3

















But the public was shifting away from passenger cars and toward light trucks, mini-vans and sport utility vehicles. 

Suv's began to sell like crazy and auto makers rallied all their forces to get them to dealer lots. By 1999 this category was getting almost as many sales as passenger cars: 8.2 to 8.75 million.



Resources:
http://www.hagerty.com/articles-videos/Articles/2011/12/13/The-Generation-X-Top-40-The-1990s

http://auto.howstuffworks.com/sports-cars6.htm

1980: The Age of More and Less



The 1980's: The Age of More and Less


Porche 924S


The 1980 saw a time when driveways were packed with cars. In fact, 87% of American households owned one or more vehicles, 51% owned more than one and 95% of domestic cars were for replacement autos. Americans were dependent on their cars. New technologies were appearing like electronic media, the laser, the computer and the robot, which was to change automotive production drastically.

The start of the 80's saw the economy slumping because of the energy crisis but in '84, car sales rebounded and 11.4 million cars were sold in 1996 which was the best year of the 80's. The flow of imports from Japan was threatening to slow the progress. American factories began producing Honda Accords, Toyota Camrys and other popular brands.

1983 Toyota Camry


The workers who were now making Camrys had been laid off by the Big Three in the cutbacks of the early 1980s. By 1989 Japanese models made up a third of all U.S. car sales and all of the Big Three automakers were selling cars produced by Japanese affiliates.


The Greatest Sports Cars of the Decade

Alfa Romero Spider

The Alfa Romero Spider , the Fiat and the 124 Spider wouldn't last the decade as the age of the roadster had come to a halt. 
The Italian sports cars like the DTomaso and Maserati were frozen out of the market by U.S. regulations. The Ferrari was successful this decade with its Testarossa.








Ferrari Testarossa

The Porsche 911 Turbo sailed smoothly through the Eighties and kept improving through the decade with the rear-engine that has become a classic.
Chevrolet produced a 1983 Corvette with a small-block V8 that was completely updated. It replaced the shark with more sophisticated lines. Datsun(Nissan) and Mazda began new design plans that spotlighted comfort and convenience without compromising the sports car feel.
First time models arrived on the scene including the Pontiac Fiero and Toyata MR2. They both had only two seats and were fun and affordable. In 1987 Cadillac came up with the Allante convertible and Buick countered with the two-seater Reatta.
Chrysler came up with the TC by Maserati which suffered in the market place along with the DeLorean DMC-12 the first all stainless-steel which became an icon in the movie Back to the Future, with Michael J. Fox. It symbolizes everything that was wrong with the 1980's.

Of course, every era has its contradictions. And for all the ups and downs, the 1980s not only left us some very capable, rewarding sports cars, it paved the way for even better things. Though the Acura/Honda NSX, Dodge Viper, Mazda Miata, and others would await the Nineties, they were conceived in the tough, winner-take-all environment of the 1980s. Considering how good they would be, maybe greed wasn't so bad, after all.


Resources:

http://www.history.com/topics/automobiles
http://eightiesclub.tripod.com/id362.htm

Monday, May 26, 2014

Cars of the 1970's: Is Bigger Better?


Cars of the 1970's: Is Bigger Better?


Ford's newly scaled-down Mustang II

The beginning of the 1970's saw huge changes in how Americans viewed cars. The EPA laws started to make the auto companies struggle on how to meet emissions requirements. Fuel economy dropped and reliability suffered with performance.

To cut costs manufacturers started using a low quality steel. Enter safety laws. In 1974 OPEC or Organization for Oil Exporting Countries who's members were Iraq, Iran, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Venezuela and oil production was cut. 

Gas was hard to come by and expensive. At this time, Ford down-sized its Mustang with the Mustang II. General Motors said they would not because they felt the U.S. consumer would not buy them. Eventually all U.S. car makers started to produce smaller cars.

The 1970 Chevelle had scaled-down
 Other automakers tried innovations that worked but some didn't. Some import companies, like Fiat and MG left the market. This trend continued until 1985 when computer controlled cars with fuel injection became more available.








Fiat 124 Coupe 1800 Baujahr 1972.jpg
Fiat 124 Coupe
The four cylinder twin overhead engine on the Fiat 124 Coupe was designed by ex-Ferrari engineer Aurelio Lampredi. It sported a 5-speed gearbox, disc brakes, and a double wishbone front suspension. The U.S. model received mild carburation because of emissions constraints. It would set the pace for cars to come after it.





Resources:
http://auto.howstuffworks.com/sports-cars4.htm


Cars in the 60's: A Time of Style




Cars in the 60's: A Time of Style
The muscle cars of the 1960's were the love child of World War II and Flower Power. Americans were looking for bigger and better and the muscle cars shone when Detroit was trying to stop the flood of imports led by Volkswagen, Fiat, Renault and Datsun.
It was the Golden Age of the automobile. The Ford Mustang, the Chevy Camaro and the Triumph Fury are all three dimensional examples of the mystique of the 1960s. They were all designed with great attention to detail and with great consideration of the mindset of changing times. 
The year of the stylist started in 1965 with the Ford Mustang. It was called the "pony car" with it's long hood and short deck and made all the other auto manufactures want to copy the look. The "Stang" premiered as a hardtop and convertible and was placed into the compact car category. With every new year, consumers saw an increase in engine power.
The 1964 auto models were designed with women in mind. If fact, one million women a year were buying these beauties. 
Around the middle of the decade front-wheel drive came back into production. There were also improvements made to electric cars at this time and Ford introduced a sodium-sulfur battery that was 15 times lighter than the average battery.
The 1967 Chevy Camaro was based on the Nova. The design had a unibody from the windshield and firewall back and had a separate steel rail subframe for everythin in the front.. It had independent front suspension and the rear axle was suspended by semi-elliptical springs. Typical of the times, the breaks were four drums and the steering was slow but the 140 horsepower shone through. It was $2,466 at the time.
Stylist and designer Giovanni Michelotti came up with the Fury as an intermediate between the Spitfire and the TRs with its steel body and 2-liter, six-cylinder engine. Sadly, it never made it to production.
The two-door convertible was the first monocoque sports car made by Triumph. It's parts included a 6-cylinder engine with a V8 intended. It lost out to the TR5 because of reluctance to invest in new production line and the tooling facilities needed to manufacture the Fury. 



Resources:
http://www.retrowaste.com/1960s/cars-in-the-1960s/

Saturday, May 10, 2014

Cars of the 1950's Burned Rubber!!

Cars of the 1950s Burned Rubber!!


"Burn Rubber" is a 50's slang term that was used to talk about hitting the acelerator on a car hard and fast and was directed at "hot rodders" who used to like to race their dream cars." Let's burn rubber and show them what we can do!" 


Picture this: a typical Saturday night in the 1950's. It is Anytown, U.S.A. and teenagers are working on the final tune-ups to their hot rods which will tip the scales and lead their cars to victory over the finish line at the heads-up racing match that begins at sunrise. 

Imagine a row of headlights lined-up on a dirt road waiting for the a sock-hopper's neck scarf to drop, signaling the start of the adrenaline rush and a break-speed race down the dusty road that leads to glory.


In another part of town, the older kids are "drive-in hopping." They are checking out the burger joints that you would drive up to, place your order into the speaker and then a car hop on roller skates glides over to your car,  pops the tray on your window and "bon appetite!" 




In the early 1950's the auto industry came up with a novel idea: the sports car. By the end of the decade, Americans were completely hooked on cars like the Chevrolet Corvette. The auto industry in the U.S. broke the all-time production record with 7,987,000 cars rolling off the assembly line.  The government, however, re-imposed Regulation W which limited car purchases during and after World War II. 
1957 Chevy Belair
New "small" cars were introduced during 1950 to meet the demand of a second car for middle-class families and also to appeal to the used car market. 
1958 Bianchina Supermini
The hard top convertible was the star of the 1951 model year, which was an extension of the previous year's design. 
In 1952, the Steelworkers strike in June and July halted car production.  Defense production continued and a profits from civilian car production continued to grow. Many of the top automotive corporations placed 60% of their output on defense, making aircraft and parts, tanks, cannons, shells and other military goods. The copper and steel shortage was the worst problem the industry dealt with.
By 1953, air conditioners and power steering were introduced and research and engineering teams were working on making the following year's cars less expensive and safer.  Prices and taxes on new car production rose and the price for a new auto was about $2,000 with $650 of that going to taxes.
Packard and Buick Motor Division both attempted to mass-produce the sports car and they exhibited their cars to the public to test reaction and extend the market.
Chevy introduced a concept sports car that was successful.  It was called the Corvette.
The All-New 1953 Chevy Corvette
Notwithstanding all the shortages and restrictions, the industry had one of its best fiscal years. The government relaxed controls on steel, copper and aluminum. The only slow down was the fire at GM's Hydramatic plant in Livonia, MI.  The materials shortages inspired companies to come up with a new magnesium and plastic-fiberglass auto body.
Prices changed little in 1954 but new changes were made. Wire racing wheels became popular in larger cars. The wrap-around back window was added to more models and a front windshield of the same style was added on the 1954 Oldsmobile Ninety-Eight Starfire, named after the Lockheed F9413 Starfire Fighter Jet, bringing back the nostalgia for the war.
The  population boom brought about the growing need for the continuing of the station wagon.  It had been available for 30 years but production had never been more that 1% before WWII.  The new models were built with strong steel bodies and a no frills approach. Cars were getting safer and less expensive and most had power steering and automatic shift. GM introduced the "Autotronic-Eye" which dimmed high beams when another car approached and turn them back on after it stopped.
By 1958 many design changes were taking place and at this time, more cars were imported than exported. The auto industry was aiming for the end of the one-car family and was dreaming of different cars for different uses: family trips, commuting to work, etc.  In keeping with this idea, Ford introduced a full line of luxury Continentals and kept up production of the mid-priced Edsel.  The 1958 Oldsmobile sported a new-designed body.



Resources:
http://coolestwords.com/content/top-15-slang-words-50%E2%80%99s#sthash.Pl7gK2mN.dpuf
auto.howstuffworks.com/hot-rod3.htm
http://www.retrowaste.com/1950s/cars-in-the-1950s/