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Yes, this is part of King Livingston's desire to get cars out of central London; but in truth he would rather they stayed and paid. However, he's up for re-election soon so it may be ex-King, or Red Ken as he's affectionately known.
When the original scheme was being discussed the drivers of London Taxi's, (the famous black cabs), said that if it went ahead they would stop collecting/transporting Members of Parliament, Government Ministers or anyone to do with the London local government as a protest. That would have scuppered the plan. "Ah", said Red Ken, "We intend to make Taxi's exempt". At that point the Taxi drivers said they had no objection to a charge scheme. Surprise, surprise. Traitorous barstewards.
Traitors they are.
Sounds somewhat similar to the situation recently in Bogota, where the (suprisingly powerful) private bus faction kept blocking traffic improvement plans that might have lessened their income.
This reminded me of Edmunds' first drive in next generation Honda Fit. An excerpt:
"The new suspension calibration also improves straight-line stability. On Honda's high-speed proving ground, the Fit felt as stable at 110 mph as it did at 50 mph." (link)
Small cars have come a long way indeed. If this car promises to be all that (not that I would plan on taking it beyond 80 mph), this car has the potential to replace my 1998 Accord.
And one you missed. Since Europeans pay a SUBSTANTIALLY higher portion of their income in taxes, there is less money available for purchases of larger, more expensive cars.
But we have entertained sub compacts before, many times. The Accord was a sub compact, didn't stay that way. The Scions hit our shores as 108 hp little things. Not any longer. We have monster highways that stretch hundreds of miles with no stops. I drove from the LA area to Fort Hood and can't remember seeing less than three lanes each way for 1300 miles and at lease two lanes each way for the last 61 miles. I only had to stop for gas not traffic or traffic lights.
Believe me I know we have it good. I also know that human nature takes advantage of having it good. My wife and I sponsored foreign students and had them stay with us for years. The last few years we took in College students and when I would ask "any" of or Asian students what they would drive in their home country is was most often a sub compact if they had a car at all. I asked what they would drive if they lived here and not one of them picked a sub compact. Some of them have since moved here after getting jobs with some big firms and they drive MBs and BMWs. So the need for small wears off rather quickly if the incentives supporting them is lifted.
I went through my phase of saving fuel because I rode a Motorcycle 365 days a year for 8 years. The reward for saving so much fuel was to have cigarettes, coke cans, and other objects bounced off of my helmet. I was pushed off the road twice while the driver of the offending car was looking right at me. So my next vehicle was a Pickup truck and then a full sized SUV. Do you know how many people tried to push me off the road? None, not with over sized tires and a full steel brush guard and the Words "Dodge and Ram" on the SUV.
Sub Compacts are not likely to make it on their own here for many of the reasons I have listed. They will always be here but they have a stigma that simply takes too much effort to overcome. We as a nation would be far better served with a transportation system like the underground, without the strikes like a few weeks ago.
Andre, I know you're a Detroit-iron connoisseur, and I respect you for that, but in 1985 the entire SAAB line-up, albeit very small with only the 900, 900S, 900 Turbo, and the new 9000, A/C was standard equipment. I suspect it was standard on some other European cars as well.
And, as to econoboxes, I bought a new Simca 1204 (aka 1100 everywhere else in the world) in October 1970, and it had a 1204cc 4-cylinder OHV engine with a single-barrel Solex carb putting out an amazing 60HP, and that was before the SAE Net ratings were introduced. No A/C of course, with just a standard 4-speed gearbox, torsion bar suspension at each wheel, front-wheel drive, comfortable seats in the French tradition, and gobs of storage space, and it could cruise all day at 75MPH and return 35MPG on the freeway. It could easily get out of its own way in the city as well. And, the price, oh yes the price, $2,032 delivered - I still have the Moroney sticker!
I used to tell my friend Marty who had a Geo Metro that I'd offer him $500 if he'd let me "beat his car up" with only my hands and feet and let me videotape it. I figured I could have totaled it in about 20 minutes using no implements whatsoever.
This would be difficult to do to my Scion however. It's really a much better built car in every way possible. I can only imagine what's coming down the pike.
It could be that the value built into these subs will be so great that people can't resist. Like when VW took over the small car market in the late 50s through the 60s.
Here's one of them:
2009 Fit Drive
And with any luck it's only two years until we have the Ford version of the Mazda2 for sale here. And Suzuki MAY bring the next-gen Swift here too. The subcompact market just keeps expanding - it can't be stopped! ;-)
VW UP! anyone?! :-P
2014 Mini Cooper (stick shift of course), 2016 Camry hybrid, 2009 Outback Sport 5-spd (keeping the stick alive)
And the Ford version of the Mazda2, expected here in two years. And Suzuki, possibly bringing the next-gen Swift here. Oh yeah! The wave can't be stopped! ;-)
2014 Mini Cooper (stick shift of course), 2016 Camry hybrid, 2009 Outback Sport 5-spd (keeping the stick alive)
Sorry, I guess I should've clarified that I was only talking from a domestic car standpoint. Yeah, I could see something like a SAAB, BMW, Benz, Audi, or Volvo having a/c standard. I guess I sort of forgot those Europeans, because they were all premium brands in the US anyway, in a price range where a/c would be expected. When it comes to entry level cars, I guess about all the Europeans were offering us Americans by then were the Golf/Jetta, and the Wisconsin-built Renaults.
And to be fair, even in the example that I gave of my grandmother's LeSabre, I'm sure you would've been hard pressed to find one in 1985 that DIDN'T have air conditioning. In fact, that year was the final year that Buick would build big cars (until the 1990's Roadmaster), and a lot of people were upset about that, so Buick capitalized on it. While the LeSabre started at around $10K for a stripper model, something like 80% of them were decked out in Limited "Collector's Edition" guise, loaded to the gills, and going out the door at close to their sticker price...$16-17K.
No A/C of course, with just a standard 4-speed gearbox, torsion bar suspension at each wheel, front-wheel drive, comfortable seats in the French tradition, and gobs of storage space
My experience with French cars is limited to stuff like the Renault Medallion and the Eagle Premier/Dodge Monaco (if you could really call that one "French"). I do remember them both being pretty comfy, though. I remember the Medallion especially having a really funky interior, but still coming off as surprsingly comfortable and roomy, given its comparatively small (by domestic standards) size. As I recall, it had all sorts of little nooks and crannies for storage.
Yeah, but you could probably do that with ANY car. Back in 1996 my '68 Dart got hit twice. First time I got sideswiped by a then-new Dodge Ram. It put a dent in my fender ahead of the front wheel, but crunched through that Ram's sheetmetal like it had "Pabst" written on it. I ended up punching it out, back into more or less its original shape, with my fist. A couple months later a Tacoma hit me in the same spot and bounced off. Caved in his rear quarter panel (or whatever you call that part on a pickup), and I just pounded the fender back out with my fist.
Now if I can pound it OUT with my fist, I'm sure I could pound it IN with my fist. I remember a few years ago, one of my relatives got her Durango stuck in the mud, and we helped push it out. I tried to give it a shove at the tailgate but had to stop because I could tell I was going to cave it in.
And if using only your hands and feet also allows jumping up and down on the car then yeah, it wouldn't be hard to total a new car.
Heck, all you'd need to do is get inside and jerk around on the steering wheel a few times, to make it undriveable.
That said, when I was looking at houses, new homes around here in the 250k range typically don't include AC as standard. It is a few thousand dollar upgrade. Its not included until you get north of 400k.
I think if certain companies (one in particular that starts with T) would put sway bars on their inexpensive vehicles so it didn't feel like it would flop over on a corner or get pushed all over by a truck, it would be great. Before we inherited the '93 Civic DX in 2002, we were looking at a new Saturn SL, it was a special $9999 model with AC, ABS and a radio, and it got rejected because of its freeway behavior. The Protoge DX was about $1000 more and my wife thought it a bargain because of its mileage and better road manners (and it was more powerful). My sister went though a similar comparison between the Corolla and the Mazda3 - and went with the 3.
The week before his 80s era Sentra threw a rod and was being hauled off to the junk yard on Monday. They pushed it into the back yard of the house at the base of this mountain and anyone could beat on the car for a dollar per minute.
We had baseball bats, sledge hammers of various sizes, breaker bars, big metal poles, 25 and 50 pound dumbbells etc.
That car got trashed fast there were over a 100 people there and by the end of the night there wasn't much left. The owner, myself and a few others got some big rocks and boulders from higher up the mountain and rolled them into the car then put them on the roof and crushed it. Four or five people and a few hundred lbs of rock crushed the roof almost flat.
Yes, French cars were interesting, but the Simca 1204 series (Simca 1100 elsewhere) was a basis for many FWD designs used throughout Europe. It was really ahead of its time. But, Chrysler who owned Simca, didn't know how to market it in the USA, and it sold poorly, and became an orphan rather quickly. The Simca 1100 had a long production run (1967 to 1982), and sold 2.2 million units worldwide. It was a neat car, kind of like a 1.5X sized BMC Mini.
Wow, I think central air is something that's pretty much standard in all new construction around these parts (Maryland suburbs). Of course, most new construction means $400K townhomes and $600K single family homes. I think the "starter home" has been replaced by the condo. :sick:
I think most of these central a/c systems are just heat pumps, which double as the heat source in the wintertime, and more or less do the job, but never give you that nice, warm toasty feeling in the winter.
I think if certain companies (one in particular that starts with T) would put sway bars on their inexpensive vehicles so it didn't feel like it would flop over on a corner or get pushed all over by a truck, it would be great.
That "T" company does at least use front sway bars, right? I'd guess most cars would at least have THAT today! Heck, my '57 DeSoto even has a front sway bar! My '68 and '69 Darts didn't, though. I remember being impressed that my 2000 Intrepid has a rear sway bar, something that I don't think the base Impala or Taurus had at the time. It annoyed me though, when DCX started cost-cutting, and eliminated it for 2002. I mean c'mon, how much did they really save by getting rid of that sway bar? :mad: They also eliminated other details, like the tint on the upper part of the windshield (replaced with these little black dots), got rid of the nifty pop-out cupholder in the center console (replaced it with a stationary unit), stripped the carpeting and cloth off the door panels, and probably some other details I'm missing.
Maybe that lack of a sway bar in the "T" models is one reason I'm not overly impressed with my uncle's Corolla's handling.
I didn't realize new SAABs could be had that "cheap" back in 1985. Although I guess $12K meant a lot more back then than it does today!
I'm looking through a 1985 Consumer Guide auto book right now, and it has a SAAB 900 in it. They have the base 900 listed at around $12,000, the 900S at around $15,000, and the turbo at around $18,000.
Now this book could be wrong, but it says you had to get the turbo model to get air conditioning, power windows, and power mirrors. The 900S gave you a manual sunroof, cruise, and a fold down armrest in back. And on top of that, there was a package called the Exclusive Appointment Group, available only on the Turbo, which got you leather, foglights, and a power sunroof. It added $1330 to the Turbo's price, pushing you towards $20K. The only other options listed are a 3-speed automatic for $400, and "metallic or special black paint, N/A on base 900" for $385.
This car guide tested a turbo 900, and it was the highest-rated car in that book. They rated 20 categories from 1-5, so theoretically a car could score between 20 and 100. They didn't give out zeroes. The 900 Turbo scored 79. The Camry and Cressida scored 78. These categories ranged from handling, ergonomics, acceleration, fuel economy, interior room, comfort to instrumentation, build quality, and value. So it's really hard for one car to score consistently high in every category. For instance a compact, no matter how good it is, would ever get a 5 for interior room, and no car that scores a 5 for acceleration would also get a 5 for fuel economy. And premium cars rarely score high for value. So for the 900 turbo to score so well across the board, it must have been a great little car.
Nope around here (Chicago area) most developers offer it as an option and many people don't take it. We decided not to get one and had one installed right after the house was built. There are advantages to that as the builder usually only offers two or three models (a base and one or two upgrades) by installing one yourself you have a far wider choice available. Plus its usually cheaper to have one installed afterwards.
Of course, most new construction means $400K townhomes and $600K single family homes.
Wow $400K town homes? You can still buy a lot of home around here for that.
2011 Hyundai Sonata, 2014 BMW 428i convertible, 2015 Honda CTX700D
having SAID that, the AC on my Scion is nothing to write home about but if you hit RECIRC and drive 90 mph for a while, it's pretty good.
The few times I've driven my uncle's '03 Corolla this year, I thought the ac was pretty weak, but I was thinking it was more the fan than the actual cooling ability. It seems like the highest fan setting got you about the same amount of airflow as putting the setting on the next-to-highest on the domestics I've had experience with. I've never had a chance to drive it in gruelling hot weather, though.
Have air conditioners gotten to the point yet where they can cool as well as the old R12 units could? I do remember that when I got my 2000 Intrepid, while it was more than adequate, it was nowhere in the league of my '89 Gran Fury or Grandma's '85 LeSabre. My buddy's 2006 Xterra seems strong enough, but the LeSabre and Gran Fury are long gone, so I can't use them as a reference point anymore, and none of the a/c units in the old mastodons I still own work anymore. :sick:
Yeah, and unfortunately with SUVs, at least truck-based ones, you often run into a problem where the big, burly V-8's really don't suck up any more fuel than the smaller 6-cyl models. My buddy's '06 Xterra 4wd is rated at something like 16/21. We took it on a trip out to Cedar Point in Ohio back in August, and averaged maybe 20 mpg on that trip. I'd imagine that one of GM's full-sized V-8 SUVs would get about that kind of economy these days, if not better, and be better at towing, roomier, etc.
I remember even back in the late 90's, it seemed like something like a full-sized Tahoe, Yukon, or Expedition really wasn't much thirstier than an Explorer or S-10 Blazer.
I have never been in a European car during hot weather that had working AC.
Our Legacy is rated at 2700 lbs, the Element at 1500. Neither of those are going to get a 20' travel trailer to move though. The Legacy did okay with a small pop-up or a cargo trailer, but not dragging a house behind it.
I thought the Jeep diesel was really cool until I started reading about some of the issues they were having with it. I would imagine all of those have been rectified by now though. You might want to check out the Dodge Sprinter or something also, and that might weight enough to get around the CA diesel issue. Hardly a sub-compact.
If I did that with my Elantra it would soon snow. The funny thing is that the air seems cooler if I have the fan at the speed 1 less than high.
2011 Hyundai Sonata, 2014 BMW 428i convertible, 2015 Honda CTX700D
Maybe if you have the fan set too high it dilutes the cold air, or something like that?
Nowadays, don't they tend to size the a/c compressors accordingly to the size of the car they go into? I dunno if they did that back in the day or not, but the V-2 air compressor in my '69 Dart slant six looked every bit as massive as the one that was in my '67 Newport 383. In a case like that, I'd think that the a/c would actually work better in the Dart, seeing how it has a smaller interior.
I remember the a/c in my buddy's 1998 Tracker convertible was just strong enough to get it a few degrees cooler than the outside temp on really hot days, so it would sort of fake you out into believing that it was working. I guess something like a Tracker, with all that canvas and no insulation, and the large windows, would be hard to keep cool. And with its tiny 1.6L 4-cyl, I'm sure it didn't have a very big compressor.
Those old Darts were actually pretty sturdy cars for their time, although naturally, they're not going to compare with modern cars and their airbags, improved crumple zones, better crash padding, etc. I got cut off back in 1992, while in my '69 Dart GT, and wiped out and hit a traffic light pole sideways. Probably punched in the passenger side about a foot, but those doors were so thick that it only penetrated the passenger cabin maybe 4-5 inches. The impact knocked the traffic light off its base. And those bolts didn't just snap like they're supposedly designed to...they pulled right out of the concrete!
Probably the biggest detriment to this car was the fact that it was a hardtop, with no B-pillar. If I had been in a 4- or 2-door sedan, it would have held up much better. Still, had I been in a lighter, "softer" car, chances are it would have simply wrapped around that pole, with me inside it, instead of knocking it off its base and giving me another 20 feet or so to decelerate.
I've seen enough Darts wrecked in the junkyard (local junkyard specializes in old Mopars, so they tend to hang onto them longer) to realize that they actually did design crumple zones into them. Now again, a modern car will crumple better, but the Dart/Valiant, when whacked from up front, tends to do most of its crumpling ahead of the firewall, unlike many body-on-frame cars where the shock of the impact would often pass right through the front clip, leaving it relatively intact, but then the passenger compartment itself would buckle.
As for rear-end collisions, I don't know who's better off these days. It used to be that the car in back would usually nosedive under the car in front, and as a result the car in back would take most of the damage. But with rear-ends designed to fold up these days, often the car in front will take more damage these days.
However, last year when I got rear-ended in my pickup, I'd say I took the worse injury. I was rear-ended by a 2000 Infiniti I30. Her car was a wreck compared to mine. It took about $350 to repair my truck, whereas her car was easily $4-5,000. However, she saw the impact coming, and was ready to brace for it. In contrast, it happened so fast for me that I didn't realize I'd been hit until suddenly my head whacked against the rear window and my truck was pitching forward, heading towards the wrong side of the road!
Years ago, I rear-ended a '55 DeSoto, with a '57. Yeah, I guess only I could claim something like that! I had a friend in the car with me. Of the three people involved, I was the only one who didnt' get hurt. The driver of the '55 was achy for a few days, as was my friend. He saw we were going to hit and panicked and froze up, whereas I saw what was about to happen and was too busy trying to make it NOT happen, so maybe in not freezing up, that helped me?
I'll say this much though...I'd rather get rear-ended in an xA than a Pinto!
Oh, and I would NOT want to get t-boned in a 1984 Camaro! There was a lady at work who had a 1994 and she got t-boned by an Explorer. Totaled the Camaro and messed her up pretty good. I think it got bloodstains on the Explorer's bumper, and that was about it. What's at play here is more height mis-match than anything else. However, just about any car these days is going to be screwed if it gets t-boned by a decent-sized SUV...unless you have side curtain airbags.
If you're in the modern subcompact and the one doing the hitting, I don't think it really much matters what you hit. Except for the fact that an F350 will sit up higher and you might go up under it. But still, if you're in a 2000 lb car and rear-end another 2000 lb car, I don't think the result would be much different than if you rear-ended a 4000 pound car. The key here is that the force is the same...your 2000 pound car multiplied by however fast you're going.
However, if the situation is reversed, a 4000 pound car will do MUCH more damage to you than a 2000 pound car at any given speed, because you're getting hit with a greater force.
Yes, the base 900 has no sunroof, no cruise, and no power windows or power mirrors - everything is manual, including the 5-speed gearbox on my car. The optional 3-speed automatic was the venerable Type 35 Borg-Warner. The warranty was 12 months/unlimited mileage.
I've been a SAAB owner since 1968, starting with a 96, then a 99E, 900 (the one I still have), a 900S, and a 16-valve 900 Turbo. The 1985 900 Turbo that you read about in Consumer Guide was the 8-valve engine with the Turbo with APC (Automatic Performance Control). The APC system automatically adjusted the turbo boost based upon the octane of the fuel.
The 900 Turbo was a nice car, and fast.
I think 99% of all Americans could fulfill all their needs with a car of this type and configuration. It's that huge hatch + the four doors. So much room inside that car and yet it isn't very large.
But it's no subcompact, so hey, I'm off topic!!!
The Malibu Maxx I think tried to follow that tradition but seemed to be a nitch vehicle.
The Malibu Maxx I think tried to follow that tradition but seemed to be a nitch vehicle.
I looked up the specs for the Saab 900 at www.fueleconomy.gov, and its interior volume is rated at 87 interior/14 cargo. Of course, that cargo is with the back seat up. Fold it down and you have about 56 cubic feet, which is probably in the league with some small wagons of the era.
The Citation's actually bigger inside and more space efficient than the Saab. IIRC, the Citation was around 176" long, about 10" shorter than the Saab. The EPA lists interior volume at 94 cubic feet interior/13 cubic feet cargo. The Citation got most of its added interior volume with shoulder room.
Of course, back in those days, the most space-efficient designs also tended to have the most paper-thin doors, so I guess that's not always something to brag about!
As I recall, the '75-79 Nova was down to 13 cubic feet of cargo space, probably because of the way the trunk sloped off so sharply. The coupe versions of these cars were practically a fastback anyway, so offering a hatchback option was a really good idea, as it freed up all that otherwise wasted space under the rear window. So they were probably a lot more versatile than that 13 cubic feet would suggest.
If you own a dirt bike most often a sub compact won’t do unless you can get some friend to haul your bike for you. With a Jet Ski or snow mobile you might get by with a sub compact but it isn’t something you see very often. In boating the smallest thing I have ever seen is an Outback with a Canoe on top.
When I first downsized from a SUV I didn’t do much else but go to work and spend the weekends at home. We dropped down to a Saturn SL-2 and for about six months it seemed fine. But we started doing things on the weekends and with two dogs and the stuff we wanted to take with us a Saturn was simply too small. We got the PT because it held lots more of our things when we went anywhere. We got the F-250 to haul our rock crawlers and we got the Focus so my wife and her friends could go places together. When I stopped commuting I decide to cut back once more. But now we have more free time and the Focus simply will not fit our needs. I belong to a world percussion music group and you can not get my hand drums and my kit drums in a Focus. You sure couldn’t get them in a sub compact if you planned on taking another human with you.
So the sub compact seems to be for people starting out or people that live a very simple life style that doesn’t sound much like the average Southern Californian. Unless those same people have two cars and the sub compact is the second car.
My lifestyle has moved me away from the target group the sub compacts are aimed at and I may even be moving away from cars all together. After much research into AWD vehicles that can tow anything I believe a Crew Cab or Quad cab Tacoma or Ranger may be the best bang for my buck I can buy. The Pacifica and the T&C AWD seem nice but they are a lot more expensive than a small truck. A crossover is not out of the question but my hobbies will and pastimes will have more effect on what I get than maximum fuel mileage or size. I have to wonder if most people aren’t effected the same way? Where I live the smart car would have no advantage over a Motorcycle for commuting. For that kind of money I would get a Harley or a Gold wing.
So I'm guessing that gas prices are finally getting to him, or he's realizing that he just doesn't need that much bulk. FWIW, he's only like 5'7", so he can't even use the excuse that I do, at 6'3", that I just feel more comfortable in a roomier car. Although I guess no matter how tall you are, if you're comfortable with a certain thing, it's hard to change your ways. Still, I can't imagine him trying to pilot roughly 230 inches of Newport around! I can just picture him, barely being able to peek over the top of the dashboard! :P
The car I like driving to San Francisco from LA is nothing like the one I would like driving by myself to Big Bear from Lake Arrowhead. My friend Nippon can make the trip from the Bay area to San Diego in his Echo and he says he enjoys it. In his car I would need a nap as soon as I got there. In a Buick or even an Accord or Lexus I might be able to spend the day at Sea World before the nap.
Everything we do is some form of compromise and for many here it is totally subjective. Burning up a canyon road in a RSX may seem sporty till you are passed while at nine tenths by a Z06 or 911 with one hand draped over the wheel. when that happens you realize you are in a family car not a sports car and the charm slips slightly. It comes back I agree but you know you have made a compromise. If I want the joy of the open twisty road there is nothing like a Motorcycle. But then where I live rain isn't a big issue.
Our public highways aren't designed for fun driving and the protectors of those highways aren't tolerant of us attempting anything other than driving from point A to point B. Admittingly we can push it a bit but short of taking it to the track we are limited by signs and road conditions. It is so much easier to measure comfort than handling feel. Most or our padding where we sit prefers not to be numb during our road trips so cars like the Camry and Accord are designed to meet that expectation. That is one reason I feel things will have to get a lot more like Blade runner before sub compacts make any real inroads in American buying styles.
If we are going to be stuck in traffic commuting 5 days a week we have a choice of cars with a softer suspension and a good sound system and several cup holders or a short wheel based little car that feels every road joint but gets 40 MPG. Sure we would like both but we have to make a choice. With the exception of the Mini Cooper sub compacts seem more sporty than they are so I believe as long as the American economy can afford it mid sized cars will hold the lions share of the market. If the new crop of Sub Compacts hope to last this time rather than fade as the people get used to fuel prices as they have in the past they will have to get bigger or get more power or both. Scion looks to already be adding a bit more power so how long will the rest hold out? Didn't the Mini already give the base engine a bump in power?
That was a long post, guess I don't need more coffee.
For me, this choice isn't hypothetical, as I am currently lumbered with a used Camry because a deal with a friend fell through. It has a soft suspension with a pleasant ride, many many cupholders (and yes I do appreciate cupholders), and a very fancy aftermarket sound system. Give me the choice between this car and my Echo, and I will take the Echo seven days a week, and twice on Sunday. Choose between the two? Puh-leeze! There's no contest, which is why the Camry is currently for sale.
And yes, I do commute to work 5 days a week. It's one of the things the Echo is really good at. And contrary to popular myth, the Echo does not bounce and crash over every road joint, as you so elegantly implied. ;-)
2014 Mini Cooper (stick shift of course), 2016 Camry hybrid, 2009 Outback Sport 5-spd (keeping the stick alive)
If you're used to a bigger car though, or just a different vehicle (not necessarily bigger, but different handling/feeling), then an Echo might feel like it crashes and bounces over every road joint. Just like how small car drivers are usually going to say that a bigger car just feels wallowy and cumbersome...but if you're used to the way that wallowy, cumbersome car handles, you might not notice it.
I have driven an '07 Camry though, and I swear it's about as wallowy and cumbersome as a modern car can get. It actually handled okay, but the feedback from the steering just seemed disconnected, like the way they used to try to isolate you from the road back in the old days.
Hey does putting a 22' Sea Kayak, a Looksha IV (kevlar layup) count?
Talk about overhang tho and I've drive really far with that 2 hours or more. Still it was legal. I had red flags in front and back so people could see it and yes i drove that setup on the highways as well.
Hey I'm 5'7" and I've owned as many big cars as small ones. Think 1968 Buick Electra 225, and quite a few other big (but cheap) cars.
You tall guys think you're superior but you're not. Big deal you're 6'3" I can drive any car as big as you and I've owned the older Big Caddy's and can see over the dash just fine thanks. :mad:
It was nice when none of you tall guys could fit in the small cars like the older MG's, endless whingeling about how you were to tall. Funny to hear!
But don't rag on guys because they are short, you don' need an excuse to drive a big or small car, you just drive what you like.
I have memories of my dad trying to get his brand new Apple II+, monitor, 2 5 1/4" floppy drives, and 13" monochrome monitor into the trunk. They ended up tying the trunk-lid down. I remember him saying to my mother they should've gotten the hatchback version. I also remember not being able to get the G4/400 tower in the back of the Contour, trunk or back seat.
My memory of the Saab 9000 (not 900) was helping someone move and putting a love-seat back there.
While having cavernous storage areas is nice, a Yakima rack and a trailer hitch go a long way towards equalizing the cargo capabilities of vehicles.
Back in 1989 I bought a Dodge Dart GT, which had low bucket seats. My grandmother, who was 5'2", sat behind the wheel. She could barely see over the dash. It was kinda cute, seeing her behind the wheel, looking out through that gap between the top of the steering wheel and the top of the dash. Kinda scary too, because back in the 70's they had a Dart...a '75 Swinger. I imagine that the Swinger's bench seat was a bit higher than my GT's buckets, though.
That car got wrecked, but I took the bucket seats out and put them in a '68 Dart 270. I remember teaching one of my friends how to drive in that car. He was 5'6". Had to sit on a phone book. At first we tried the suburbs, but he needed more height, so we tried the Metropolitan yellow pages and it fit him to a tee! :P
In all seriousness though, most cars, even big battlecruisers back in the day, were designed to give maximum comfort to an "average" person of around 5'10". Once seats started getting more adjustments, and steering wheels began to tilt and telescope, cars could fit a wider variety of drivers, but I think they're still optimally designed for a person around 5'10".
That seeing over the dash thing was sort of a joke, but back in the day, there were a lot of cars that probably were uncomfortable for shorter drivers. For instance, my '69 Dart fit me fine with regards to legroom and headroom, but the steering wheel was a bit close for my comfort. A person with shorter legs would have to move the seat up, and that would put the driver even closer to the steering wheel. Thankfully they didn't put airbags in Darts back in those days, or they would've been blowing holes in the chests of little old ladies on a regular basis!
Oh, and it ain't easy being tall, either! While I don't consider 6'3" all that tall, I still have to duck when I walk under the a/c unit in a motorhome. And back in high school in the 80's, it wasn't easy finding pants that long. Remember the old ditty... "Highwaters, highwaters can't be beat...twenty fo' inches above Yo' feet!" If you're of more average height, you were probably the one singing it. If you were tall and gangly, you were the one getting it sung to! This was back in the 80's, before it became fashionable to have baggy pants that hang low off your butt. I can actually make a 32 length work these days. But back then I needed a 36, and even 34"s showed too much ankle.
My ex-GF was 4'10" and she had those problems in a late 80's Accord and had a cushion. Me I had lots of big cars and never had a problem with height or seeing over the wheel. I have a tall torso but the idea that the car was too small for me was never there and i drove a LOT of cars from the 1960's. Sure most were cheap crap but hey it was what I could afford. No rich daddy to buy me a car like many kids have today.
I don't know the highwaters song, maybe it was regional???
But I drove and owned a lot of cars and not one was ever a problem and I owned an old Dodge dart probably a 1966 or so, it had a Rat motor in it but it fit just fine.
Guys who are 5'7" are considered short in the US but that's tall in some countries. :P
I've never seen a guy sitting on a book or anything to drive unless they were underage playing with a junk car in the back yard.
You are what you are but still my kids are all taller than I am and it sure seems like the growth hormones they put in food nowadays is a probable reason for that.
Thankfully I can fit in small cars with no drama and enjoy the better economy without the problems you tall guys have fitting into a small car.
I still like to drive big cars when I'm not paying for the Gas but only on the freeways.
36" inseam?! Ok Stretch you might not be tall but you'd sure fool a lot of people into thinking you are.