Posted on 05/18/2009 6:26:41 PM PDT by Eddie01
[snip]
Chryslers TC by Maserati (198991)
Arrogance, thy name is Lee Iacocca. In the late 1980s, the Chrysler chairman and perpetual huckster turned a friendship with Alejandro de Tomaso, then president of Maserati, into the most shudder-worthy example of corporate avarice ever to roll off an assembly line. Chryslers TC by Maserati was little more than a Milan-built K-car with a few pricey underhood components and some styling hackery, a wrinkly grandmother dressed up in custom running shoes and ill-fitting hot pants. The Maserati trident plastered on the grille just added insult to injury.
[snip]
(Excerpt) Read more at caranddriver.com ...
.
Thanks potlatch
Barrett-Jackson gets huge bucks for many restored then-oddball cars
Car & Driver magazine has a very poor collective memory. They’ve picked on the Chrysler TC Maserati, which is truthfully just badge engineering. Sans the stupid retro porthole a la the 57 T-Bird, it actually was a clean, well-proportioned car, for an American manufacturer at that time. C&D forgets that Cadillac did much the same with the unlamented Allanté, even more grossly overpriced and not as well proportioned. The Buick derivative, with a fixed hardtop, strange bar-of-soap proportions and oddly tall, narrow tires lending a somewhat agricultural stance to the car ... well, it didn’t sell. I forget the name of the thing, and I’m something of a car nut. What does that tell you?
The Subaru SVX sold in low numbers because it was expensive. I don’t know about “flop,” though. It’s a great car. Rock solid, reliable like a Subie always is, and they’re very popular as ski cars. The segmented windows weren’t a Subaru/Giugaro exclusive. There were many exotics and concepts with a variation on this theme. I actually like the styling. It reminds me of what a modern Citroen should’ve looked like (and yes, I’m fond of the old DS21).
As far as AMC is concerned, I too have a soft spot for old Ramblers, my dad bought my mom one, a Rambler American wagon, antique white with a red interior. It was a great car for her, small enough to be easily parked and negotiated, a nearly bulletproof straight six, and room enough for us, the neighborhood kids and a few dogs for picnics, trips to the swim club or the local state park ... no bad memories here.
As far as the Pacer, it was plagued with the budget problems that all seventies AMC products experienced. Dick Teague was a genius, as far as design, but practical reality dictated the use of existing platforms, engines, suspensions, etcetera. This resulted in cars that were 1/3 again too large to “work” visually. If the Pacer had been produced at the scale it was originally designed for, with a rotary engine or a four-banger base engine as intended, it would not have seemed quite so peculiar, that ambulatory fishbowl thing. Another Teague design that was ruined by bad proportions due to budget constraints was the last AMC Matador coupe. Had it been yet again not 1/3 too large, it would have been a beautiful car, and it actually still is in photos. In person, it’s out of scale.
If you’re going to crap on the old AMC, the four door Matador, with it’s weird Jimmy Durante proboscis, would be the one to crap on. But, that again was driven by lack of budget, and the need to meet crash testing. They just put a snoot on there for a crumple zone.
During this time, GM ruined the Riviera, the Coupe de Ville, really every evocative, beautiful, iconic American coupe they had in their roster. They killed them with ugly, with proportions that reeked of four door sedan but with just two doors (like some hastily thrown together postwar “coupes), and they pawned it all off on “changing tastes.” People don’t buy ugly when they’re buying a coupe. Ugly killed them, and that was a massive, stupid flop.
I can’t really think of anything noteworthy from Ford during this timeframe; the worst you could say is that they could be fairly dull and often had lackluster performance.
Outside of these examples, the biggest flop of all in this era belonged to Fiat. From the strange Strada, to the lovely but temperamental and breakdown prone X1/9, they were forced to pull out of the US. Engines that needed to have the timing belt changed out every 35K miles, and if you didn’t and the belt broke, you’d throw a rod, rust, flimsy interiors. Pieces of junk. I have no idea how they could ever dominate any market.
I've always thought the Pacer was the "Most butt ugly car of all time." HOWEVER...
Nissan has come out with a car that may just take this title away from the Pacer.
My nomination for "Most butt ugly car of all time - The Nissan Cube". Down right UGLY!
Sorry, LOVED my Fiesta. It may have been a flop because it was only sold here for 3 years or so, but it is still sold worldwide, 30 years later. It was a bit ...minimalist (i.e., I had to buy the glovebox kit with a door), but it had personality and got me where I wanted.
I owned a ‘79 for seven years, and had a variety of bizarre mechanical and electrical problems with it.
I still have one souvenir from that time — a stick shift that decided to simply shear off one day, leaving a half-inch metal stub.
I am not exaggerating when I say that a lot of mechanics simply refused to do engine work on that car, because of the way the thing was packed.
One thing I will grant — it was solid. Back then, cars had real bumpers, and car bodies weren’t made of foil.
“Ill nominate the AMC Pacer for worst car of all time.”
I disagree. Worst car? ANYTHING made by British Leyland.
Hey looks like we do agree on Fred Thompson though! I love Fred. He was my #1 choice for presidential nominee. I was so disappointed he was out of the race.
I have been shocked (shocked I say!)at the unattractive clown cars the libs are driving these days. Some are very boxy and cannot be aerodynamic. Others are just too aerodynamic and have no style at all. I have taken to pointing and laughing at them, especially when they are plastered with Obama Fuhrer stickers.
What?!
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.