Otherwise, it doesn't sound like you're much of an automobile enthusiast. Cars don't mean the same thing to everyone. To some people, they're everything (the very essence of life). To some people, they're nothing but appliances. To others, they're something somewhere in between.
I'm hearing this appliance slur floating around. That I buy 'toasters'. And I take
tongue in cheek offense.
😉
I grew up in the 70s. Back then almost all adults had American cars. They were typically station wagons or long sedans. Boats. Very few had any style except some
Cadillacs I was lucky enough to occasionally ride in. Most of these cars fell apart within years. In little ways or big ways. Simply junk.
Meanwhile tiny little foreign cars were emerging. Dinghees, if you will. As flimsy, but hey -- they were cheaper. Half a boat maybe means half the cost. So, in a way, you could replace them twice as fast for the same money as a boat.
Somewhere in the 80s I saw the tone change. These little 'bombers' weren't so cheesy anymore. While American cars still were. What this meant was smaller cars could be more reliable and efficient, a trick American cars were failing to pull off.
The reason why America was hesitant to make reliable small cars was margin. And it still is. Why sell a
Chevy Orlando domestically? It would harm sales of the
Chevy Traverse,
GMC Acadia, and Buick Enclave sales. Why sell some $19,000 good enough MPV when GM can sleaze their way towards a similar vehicle in the high 20s? The question answers itself.
I just believe Americans don't have as much money as car makers like to think. And that gas prices make the situation further ridiculous.
On top of that is this notion of buying a ATS-V
Cadillac that goes up to 189 miles an hour. They have to show this beautiful monster on race tracks. Why? It's illegal to drive
half its speed anywhere in America.
So should people like me are be labeled un-enthusiasts who drive toasters? Perhaps. But isn't it fair to label people who are not like me
delightfully delusional drivers?
If you can buy an $80,000 car... I bet you complain about your taxes being too high. Or perhaps you love that you can go to zero to sixty in 4 seconds... something you almost never need... since in almost all cases you're driving to endanger. What -- you delight in passing people on highway onramps?
And you show me a car enthusiast... and I'll show you someone who cares more about performance than mileage... while... simultaneously complaining about gas prices and screaming 'drill baby drill'! America's cake and eat it too mentality.
And so really I feel I don't feel I should have to explain why I like a smaller car that is reasonably priced that has style and gets decent mileage. To me that is a luxury enough car. If I could suddenly afford a $60,000 car... the first thing I'd do is look around and find a friend who could really use an Encore. (Base model, of course. That's what I drive.)
😛
So if I were to answer your simple (and innocent) question about which cars grab my eye, it's small but smart cars. I usually prefer concepts to delivered versions. I adored the 'cute' Trax Concept car --
-- and it's why I bought the Encore. To me American car buyers have been conned into 'bigger is better' and 'prowess'. Sometimes you need a
GMC truck, but most people don't. But they've been tricked into thinking small is woosy.
I don't care. Every time I don't fall for that trick saves me around $10000 or more dollars. Here are two GM cars I drool over --
Yum. And --
And the killer VW they refuse to release --
I know some taller heavier Americans simply can't fit inside these cars. (And they certainly can't fit inside a Honda Fit, lol.) But most can, because they are designed with wider seats and higher headroom.
But I live in a condo complex. And my neighbors buy cars that barely fit in their garages. Some have to park outside in front of their garage door... making it difficult for others to drive by.
I'm like... why? You're smaller than I am. If you're all driving a Lexus for status then... you don't have status... since all of you drive Lexus like cars. Plus you're either taking out a crazy loan to drive that thing... or will lose a fortune at trade in time.
Maybe it's just me. I think a car that can deliver impressive horsepower while offering decent mileage is REAL performance. That requires hard work and engineering. Making a car that goes 189 miles per hour is sweet... but irrelevant.