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The Worst American Cars - POLL
Forbes ^ | 10.21.02 | Michael Frank

Posted on 10/21/2002 10:34:06 AM PDT by wallcrawlr

In the Vehicles section we have had the privilege to glory in many amazing new and vintage automobiles.

But what about the duds?

What about the cars that never should have been made? The ones that, no matter how prescient their creators thought they were when they conceived these cars, were clearly either aesthetically ghastly, deeply mechanically flawed, or both?

That list could be quite long. Don't forget, there were thousands of car companies in the first half of the last century, many of which died because they cranked out substandard machines; the rest croaked either from the dire economic times in the Depression or shortly after the war, when the likes of General Motors made it impossible to compete.

But we prefer to focus on the duds we know and love to hate. That'd be the classic bombs of the post-war years, cars that had no business rolling down the highway--ever--and yet some of which became big sellers despite having hideous designs, awful engineering, wretched build quality, and sometimes all three.

By the way, we are aware that some of the cars on this list weren't the last of their kind, but they are here to remind us of just how bad it got, how wrong car design and production could be.

And we also know that this list is far from complete. So you should vote in the adjacent pole to add your two cents to our dud car list.

Finally, we are well aware that some readers will be terribly put off because they drove their high school sweetheart to prom in one of these dread creations (or they've got the same car up on blocks in the garage right now, just waiting for another paycheck to afford more fiberglass bodywork and another set of chrome wheels). But where's the fun if we don't offend? Remember, one man's trash is another man's treasure (hence the wonder of capitalism).


The Edsel was the ultimate DOA car, but contrary to common opinion, this was more a function of market segmenting and changing tastes than of purely bad styling. And of course it doesn't help that it was ugly. The vertical front grille of the Edsel looked like a big nose that divided the otherwise relatively conventional front of the car, and the front and back styling made even the 350hp V-8 version look slow. By the time Ford decided to restyle the Edsel in 1959, the car's sales had slid off a cliff and that was the end of Edsel.


There were a whopping 52 service bulletins (many requiring recalls) for this bastard-child car born of an unfortunate need by Maserati for ready cash and Chrysler's willingness to turn a LeBaron into a Maserati. Not only was a 3.0-liter V-6 a criminal concept for a supposed Italian exotic (putting out a pathetic 141 horsepower), but so was the American sheetmetal. Then there were the many mechanical nightmares from blown clutches and engines to leaking roofs. This car cost double the sticker on the LeBaron and broke twice as often. After all, it was Italian, right?


Sure, the nifty-looking Corvair had some good points. Like a Porsche 911, its engine was air-cooled, and resided in the back, to provide extra rear-wheel traction. Too bad its flat-six engine biased the weight of the early cars so far aftward that the steering became very light at highway speeds; and it sure didn't help that the gas tank was mounted up front, so if you did wreck--Ka Boom! If only the design had been better executed. Bummer. (Watch out, here come the nasty letters from all those Corvair fans!)


There were four-door Mavericks and two-doors. There was a Mercury version called the Comet. There were vinyl-topped models, too. What they had in common was that they were built on platform designs heavily prone to rust (this was the early days of unit-body cars) and weak-kneed in-line six engines. But the cars were cheap and therefore, popular, especially in the gas-crisis years. Not that we think the Maverick is necessarily as bad as what came afterward--the abysmal Fox-platform Futura/Fairmont, and the Grenada, which was still based on the Maverick platform, and so carried forward all the bad-handling traits and massive rustability to boot.


With a 2.8-liter V-6 and front-wheel drive, this was GM's attempt to take on the likes of Honda and Toyota. GM also shared this so-called X-body setup (of the Citation) with Olds (Omega) Buick (Skylark) and Pontiac (Phoenix). The differences were basically in body style, not fundamental mechanics. Naturally, because the cars looked futuristic and because they got decent mileage, the Citation and its brethren were a huge hit (800,000 Citations sold in 1980). But to meet demand GM let quality slip, so problems like faulty brakes and steering plagued Citations and led to a steep drop in quality--and sales.


In a desperate attempt to reach a younger demographic, Cadillac revamped its classic Eldorado to look less like a classic Caddy road yacht and more like a two-door version of the ill-conceived four-door Cadillac Cimarron. Demand for the new Caddy fell (big surprise), and only a year after introduction production sank to just under 18,000 units. Did it matter that you could get a V-8 in the Caddy and not in the other GM look-alikes? Nope. It took another 16 years of awful versions (2002 will be the last year of the Eldo) but the decline all started back in 1986.


In the early 1980s American Motors Corporation (before it was absorbed by Chrysler) and French-maker Renault teamed up to make some really awful cars but none as bad as the Fuego. Thankfully, the relationship died out--and today AMC no longer exists and Renault hasn't set foot on American shores since. The Fuego's screamed "car of the future" but it was more like a bad omen. It came in a sporty turbo edition and even handled decently. But its odd appearance and legendarily short-prone electrical system (and no-go engine) soon had customers saying "au revoir."


Hands down probably one of the ugliest, if not the ugliest, car car ever made. When the car went into production it was discovered that the rotary motor had serious quality issues, so at the last second AMC had to switch to an in-line six, which also required widening the car and scrapping the front-wheel drive setup. The width helped: Handling was fairly impressive and huge doors made the car practical. The car sold well, but after the first year it became apparent that the car was too heavy, too goofy, and far too unreliable. Did we mention its looks?


Were the designers at AMC blind? How could they consistently turn out so many hideous cars? While the Gremlin enjoyed the distinction of being the first U.S.-made subcompact, its V-8, which was introduced right when the oil-crunch hit, hurt it. People wanted little four-cylinder models, not cars that were funny looking, small and oddly powerful. It also didn't help that initially it came only as a coupe. Later, AMC would later add a four-door but the problem was really with the looks. It didn't matter that the Gremlin was more reliable and sportier (in many guises) than the equally lame Ford Pinto--it was just uglier.


We're not knocking all GTOs by any means. The GTOs from the 1960s were great but by the time pollution and fuel-consumption standards had been put in effect in the early 1970s GM didn't have an answer. Its huge but inefficient V-8s were no match for all the smog-limiting hosiery that had to be attached; power and performance both dropped, but mileage didn't go up. Then in 1972 the GTO became an option--not even a model--of the Pontiac LeMans. By 1974 it was just a badge-job Chevy Nova, a disguise nobody bought (literally or figuratively) and the GTO finally bit the dust that year.


The best thing you could say about this car is that at least they got the scale right. It was meant as an answer to Honda and Toyota's fuel-sippers, and it was a small four-seater. But besides getting good mpg the Chevette was a really badly made, poorly assembled car. Rust, major mechanical failures, leaks--it had it all. It was also no fun to drive (unlike those Japanese cars like the early Accords) and gutless. Some people thought Chevettes were cute, though. Who could resist one with glued-on faux wood panels like this one?


If only. If only the Eagle Wagon weren't such a dog. If only Chrysler had changed the body styling in the late 1980s and made it a Jeep, not an Eagle. See, the Eagle was the original Outback off-road wagon, but came out a decade and a half before Subaru thought of the notion. Sadly, the Eagle had an old, inefficient six-cylinder motor (only capable of 110hp), a body borrowed from old AMC Hornets, and a clunky, three-speed automatic licensed from Chrysler. Talk about missed opportunities.


The Chevrolet Caprice got a new, fuel-efficient 250-cubic-inch engine and earned an EPA rating of 22 mpg on the highway. That was pretty impressive, but the beasts wallowed in corners and required great attention to go straight at speed. Later Caprices got V-8 engines and were restyled to become Caprice Classics in the later '80s. But even these faster cars understeered in the extreme and sent every road dent and pothole reverberating from the suspension straight to your clenched-in-anticipation jaw. The fact that they were also one of the most boring-looking cars ever designed didn't help either.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Free Republic; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: autoshop
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To: wallcrawlr
DODGE - The supreme POS.
181 posted on 10/22/2002 10:42:28 AM PDT by rickmichaels
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To: ladtx
This thread has absolutely no credibility because it left out that wonderful marriage between austinrover and honda that created the Sterling. It was quite possibly the worst car I ever owned.

As an aside, when the Ford Explorers first came out, we were talking with a friend of ours, telling them we were thinking about buying one. She replied that her husband didn't like fords b/c he had a ford one time and had bad experiences with it. Which one, I asked. "It was a Pinto."
182 posted on 10/22/2002 10:45:45 AM PDT by job
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To: Non-Sequitur
I had the misfortune of owning a Chevy Citation. What a total piece of %*%#!. ......But I had a friend who owned a Vega....Even WORSE!
183 posted on 10/22/2002 10:52:06 AM PDT by FlaFreedom
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To: wallcrawlr
"...the nifty-looking Corvair...."

Ever see what happens to a fiberglass body in a collision?

184 posted on 10/22/2002 10:59:04 AM PDT by Bonaparte
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To: Corporate Law
I have one, and did not know that. Should I be expecting a call from Rosie?

I've been pretty happy with it...the L.L. Bean Outback.
185 posted on 10/22/2002 10:59:19 AM PDT by GnuHere
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To: fabriclady
What went wrong with your 2002 Accord? I've got a '96 with nearly 120,000 miles on it. Nothing's ever been defective, except for an SRS light on the dash that failed to turn off. That was our only repair. I'm considering another Honda.
186 posted on 10/22/2002 10:59:53 AM PDT by Dusty Rose
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To: Tall_Texan
I still remember the company car my father was plagued with when I was little. It was, of course, a Ford. And it needed a major repair every other week or so. By major repair they meant over 500 dollars. This does not take into account the several thousand lesser repairs that were needed every day just to keep the car from imploding on the road.

And the kicker was: The car was brand new to the company fleet. (Fairmont? I seem to remember it being a Fairmont..)

So my wife wanted to buy a Ford... I told her I'd divorce her.
187 posted on 10/22/2002 11:00:58 AM PDT by Darksheare
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To: wallcrawlr; All
It IS interesting to note that the majority of these vehicles were designed or built ("designed" is, I think, giving too much credit) during that period from about 1972-1986, when American cars had a justifiably bad reputation for styling and quality.

Part of it was the onerous and useless federal regulations on everything from safety to emissions, which took some years for the notoriously slow-to-adapt U.S. car manufacturers to deal with. Another part was the Japanese competition, which, along with higher-end stuff from Europe, set the quality/economy/service bar ever higher.

I guess, bottom line is, the American companies, having been so stodgy and slow-adapting, couldn't cope with the realities of the market in those years. Fortunately, the worm seems to have turned.

I just bought a new car, well, actually one a year old (let the OTHER guy eat the depreciation cost for that "new car smell", says I), a Chevy, and I must say that I was treated with great politeness and service at the dealership whence I bought it. My EVERY concern was adressed, the price was in line with the book, they shaved a few bucks off to boot, and it was an overall pleasant buying experience. Best yet, the car has all the indications of being the best I've ever owned. It's WAYYYYY fun to drive, handles like a dream, EVERY system works flawlessly, and it's got an easy-to-care-for motor. And since this thread has indeed shown some UGLY rides, in the tradition of those threads where ugly or homely people are discussed, and FFeepers post pics of beautiful ones for relief, allow me to post this one of MY "beauty" (or at least one just like her):

The boys in Detroit are figuring things out. My PREVIOUS ride was a '91 Mustang LX 302-powered coupe that I bought brand new and put 130,000 miles on. It is, in fact, STILL in my driveway, awaiting a new owner.

188 posted on 10/22/2002 11:01:18 AM PDT by Long Cut
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To: Revolting cat!
We had to do a marketing case study on that one in business school (a "what were they thinking?" study).
189 posted on 10/22/2002 11:02:47 AM PDT by Corporate Law
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To: Tall_Texan
I forgot the new Mercury Cougar!
My God, that thing is a design nightmare! They finally figured out that the tranny was overheating because of it's design, so they finally made a revision to it... but it's still a Ford with a 'sexy cool' 'kitty-kitty' badge on it...
190 posted on 10/22/2002 11:07:36 AM PDT by Darksheare
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To: boris
You're thinking of the late fifties Lincolns. That back sloping rear window rolled down, by the way, making for some neat seating with your feet in the back seat, your butt on the trunk lid, and your arms leaning on the roof.
191 posted on 10/22/2002 11:14:49 AM PDT by jimt
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To: Woodman
I had a friend in high school that had a '78 Mustang II. Admittedly it wasn't the prettiest thing but somehow Ford had jammed a 302 block in that compartment. HP to lbs that had to be one of the most powerful cars (at that time) I had ever ridden in. Probably came the closest (at that time) to giving me the experience of what it was like to ride in an AC Cobra. 0-60 in under 5.5 and geared for a top end of 130 or so
192 posted on 10/22/2002 11:19:10 AM PDT by billbears
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To: billbears
Yes it was fast and fun, but it was a poorly built 70's rust bucket. Most of them (not sure what engine) required a new camshaft at 50,000 miles which was about a $500 repair at the time.
193 posted on 10/22/2002 11:27:09 AM PDT by Woodman
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To: Long Cut
That is a very slick Camoo.
194 posted on 10/22/2002 11:32:27 AM PDT by Bonaparte
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To: Cobra64
Can you say 1983 Peugeot 505s. Worst damned thing I've ever owned...Paid way too much for it (two year's worth of mowing my Dad's lawn...with his mower, even).

Electrics were out so windows wouldn't open. Seat back broke with no humanly possible way to fix it other than a stick welder...

Brakes were the worst...master cylinder leaked like a sieve in cold weather, bled the brakes three times and put new pads on once, still wouldn't stop. It was slightly faster than a elephant seal out of water and just as hard to stop.

Peugeot...French for "I can't believe those stupid Americans bought these pieces of merde from us."

195 posted on 10/22/2002 11:40:09 AM PDT by IYAS9YAS
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To: Long Cut
I had an '89 302 myself. Ran it to about 145,000 miles. Totaled it back in '94 and bought a '95 convertible. Don't get me wrong, I love my '95(just had the engine rebuilt) but for some reason I miss that 'late 80s body style
196 posted on 10/22/2002 11:42:32 AM PDT by billbears
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To: narby
I will NEVER buy a Ford again for the rest of my life.

I second that, and my problem wasn't even with the vehicle, it is was with the company. They refused to cover the parts they freely stated in the warranty were covered. It took me several dozen leaps to go through the hoops they created to get them to stand up for it and in the end, the dealer paid for the repairs, not the company.

NEVER BUY A FORD.

197 posted on 10/22/2002 11:49:16 AM PDT by IdeashaveConsequences
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To: RightOnTheLeftCoast
I got the model wrong: it's the 200SX.

That was nothing...I thought the B-210 was uglier...my father had one of these:

198 posted on 10/22/2002 12:04:43 PM PDT by BureaucratusMaximus
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To: wallcrawlr
Edsel, oh yeah! I always remember a joke my dad brought home just after the Kennedy/Nixon election. "Three time loser = pregnant prostitute, driving an Elsel, with a Nixon bumper sticker".

Dad was a hard-core democrat. He passed away in '87. Were he still here to see what his beloved party has become, he would be enraged!

199 posted on 10/22/2002 12:12:20 PM PDT by Don Carlos
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Comment #200 Removed by Moderator


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