Auto trends
Summary: Fads come and go, sometimes on a whim, other times because of outside forces. Here at the halfway point of the new millenniums first decade, car culture has sure taken some interesting turns.
New cars, Used Cars, Car reviews, auto reviews, New cars, Used cars, car
Article Body: Fads come and go, sometimes on a whim, other times because of outside forces. Here at the halfway point of the new millenniums first decade, car culture has sure taken some interesting turns.
Those of you who innocently took a test drive of a plain-Jane Nissan Altima when it was new in , floored it, and nearly sprained your necks upon discovery of horsepower, may have suspected that the standards of speed had risen a tad since the s. Turns out that was only the beginning. Nowadays, the Volkswagen Passat raised that same family car bar to an excessive horsepower. We have little $, Mitsubishis that can leave Camaros for dead. The -horsepower Dodge Viper suddenly seems ordinary, and the once-acclaimed Acura NSX is a joke. Whether or not youre a speed freak, there are two trickle-down benefits: the minimum standard of horsepower has risen from (Geo Metro) to , and very few cars in any segment are truly underpowered anymore. Not a bad development.
Cars just wont stop growing. Every redesign has to be bigger than the last one; the new Toyota RAV is inches longer than the last, and current Civics now dwarf Accords of years past. Its an inevitable force of marketing; no one wants to pay the same money for less car, right? Bigger also means heavier; our cars pack more pounds than ever.
And theres no rule that contradictory trends cant coexist. Apparently Americans expect their cars to compete with the speed of sound while also using less gas than their walking shoes. The Toyota Prius hybrid heads into its third year with unsatisfied demand, a long line, and a price premium. All this despite an ample supply of the perfectly serviceable Corolla at the same dealers. No automaker wants to be caught with their pants down, and all are rushing to market with a hybrid, even if it means using systems developed by competitors (Nissans Altima will use Toyota hardware).
We seem to want our cars with more stuff and more personality. The s banality in our styling is gone, even on the most banal cars like the Accord and Camry. And notice how almost every car has power windows and locks standard, and how even the Kia Rio comes with six airbags and a powerful stereo. Is it any wonder that the average car now costs $,?
Speaking of cars, we may be moving toward the day when that word will again apply as a general term. SUVs are suddenly for the foolish. They always have been, but now everyone seems to know it, too. Fords Explorer and Expedition are going down the drain, and the Excursion has already expired. The bigger the SUV, the bigger the sales drop. Little cars are selling better than ever, even old-timers like the Sentra and Neon.
Lastly, were going foreign, and fast. The Big Threes market share was % at the early part of this decade; that will stand at or below % by the end of it. This is hardly a new trend, but its recent acceleration is alarming. One thing for sure is that in terms of the players, the market has matured. Only two major automakers set up American bases in the s (Kia and Daewoo), and the s have brought none.
Cars cant get bigger or faster forever, yet no one can stand still. Hybrids are hot, but the long-term experiences remain to be seen. What will become of all this automotive craziness? Check back in ten years.
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