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Quoted: 1987-1992: Sports/muscle cars- Ford Mustang, Ford Thunderbird Super Coupe, Nissan 300ZX, Buick Grand National/GNX, Chevy Camaro Small trucks- Nissan Hardbody, Toyota Tacoma Full Size trucks- Ford View Quote The Tacoma wasn't released until 1995. In 1992 it was the Toyota Pickup. Much better truck than any Tacoma. Dammed good little truck and I say that as a Nissan fan. I am also biased that the first year, 1986.5, was the best (half) year of the Hardbody which remained mostly unchanged until 1997. Early D21s got all sorts of things never available in 87 and later like 2 tone paint, V6 in a single cab short box, 4wd, 4.11 gears in a 4wd, etc. I do love the 300ZX and the GNX. Somewhere around there Nissan was putting the SR20 in family cars too. Mom had a tiny Infiniti in the early 90s with a 145HP, 7500RPM NA SR20. |
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Quoted: 1971-1973 Riviera.... PURE Sex.... https://assets.whichcar.com.au/image/upload/s--pn3BI8j---/ar_1.9047619047619047,c_fill,f_auto,q_auto:good/c_scale,w_1200/v1/archive/whichcar/2020/04/14/-1/buick-riviera-side.jpg https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcQ37E1xDGAEA0B20keFYErQwz5QYrDhq-8j1g&usqp=CAU View Quote Oddly the same guy designed the Nissan Hardbody. From what I understand they set him with engineers to keep him in line. Ha! |
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Quoted: The Tacoma wasn't released until 1995. In 1992 it was the Toyota Pickup. Much better truck than any Tacoma. Dammed good little truck and I say that as a Nissan fan. I am also biased that the first year, 1986.5, was the best (half) year of the Hardbody which remained mostly unchanged until 1997. Early D21s got all sorts of things never available in 87 and later like 2 tone paint, V6 in a single cab short box, 4wd, 4.11 gears in a 4wd, etc. I do love the 300ZX and the GNX. Somewhere around there Nissan was putting the SR20 in family cars too. Mom had a tiny Infiniti in the early 90s with a 145HP, 7500RPM NA SR20. View Quote |
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Quoted: I feel this was the pinnacle of car design. View Quote If you don't care about: Braking Reliability All-weather performance Handling Safety Fuel Economy Comfort Lead poisoning |
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Quoted: If you don't care about: Braking Reliability All-weather performance Handling Safety Fuel Economy Comfort Lead poisoning View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: I feel this was the pinnacle of car design. If you don't care about: Braking Reliability All-weather performance Handling Safety Fuel Economy Comfort Lead poisoning |
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Quoted: All of those can be upgraded except safety and lead poisoning. Unless of course you cage it and don't lick the paint. View Quote Lol, best cars ever designed once you modernize everything about them. I like classic cars. I even own some, but new cars are objectively better in basically every way except possibly the way they look which of course isn’t objective at all. |
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Quoted: Lol, best cars ever designed once you modernize everything about them. I like classic cars. I even own some, but new cars are objectively better in basically every way except possibly the way they look which of course isn't objective at all. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: All of those can be upgraded except safety and lead poisoning. Unless of course you cage it and don't lick the paint. Lol, best cars ever designed once you modernize everything about them. I like classic cars. I even own some, but new cars are objectively better in basically every way except possibly the way they look which of course isn't objective at all. Edit because I may have been a bit harsh hell yeah the turbo cars now a days accelerate faster and will do a slalom course and have better crash safety crash than any old 70's car. They wont make the girls wetter though. |
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Quoted: In summary, all of these cars may be great on Gran Turismo, and they may have been the wet dream for teens of the era, but none will be really memorable or collector cars. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: 968 - Unmemorable, unreliable Corrado - Jellybean generic design trash compared to the Guigario-styled (IIRC) Scirocco that preceded it SC 400 - Girl's car, weak performer Eclipse GSX - Trash. Seen one on the road lately? Hardly any survived their 2nd/3rd owner, and styling was generic 3000 GT vr4 - Too heavy and complex, both mechanically and design. Ahead of its time in some ways, but won't endure as a classic. GTiR - Meh, the ones that came after exceeded it by so much that it will be forgotten R32 Skyline - the only potentially enduring classic on the list, and not sold here Supra - A70 car was a boulevardier, and not much of a performance car. A case can be made for the '93-up car for sure Mazda rotary garbage - GTU was a better purist sports car than anything on this list, as was the Turbo II, but neither was really the pace setter that the 1st gen was and the next gen would be WRX - Didn't come here until 2002, first overseas-only ones weren't much to look at Etc In summary, all of these cars may be great on Gran Turismo, and they may have been the wet dream for teens of the era, but none will be really memorable or collector cars. Demonstratable false. Look up what prices MKIV Supras and FD RX-7s go for. I'd say mid-90s, too. Computerized fuel injection was figured out and they got the power up to match the EPA\CARB emissions restrictions. But it was also before so much bullshit was added. F355 was a pure sports car with a simple mechanical transmission and no driving aids. Cars were powerful and light, handled well, were reliable and comfortable. Even for domestics like the SN95 Mustang and the F-body, C5 Vette near the end. |
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My favorite two 65-70 cars are the 69 boss 429 mustang, and the 69 Dodge Charger.
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I just want to go on record, again, and say that the fox body Mustang is second only to the abortion that is the Mach E as the worst Mustang. Fox bodys are trash, cope.
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Quoted: I for one have always had a special place in my heart for the Brougham era of the late 70s and 80s. https://cdn.motor1.com/images/mgl/EyRBe/s1/bid-on-a-1978-lincoln-continental-mark-v.jpg View Quote They were like driving your living room. The back seat was a good place too. |
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Quoted: All of those can be upgraded except safety and lead poisoning. Unless of course you cage it and don't lick the paint. View Quote I'm talking about leaded gas which killed thousands of people, not the paint. Also, upgrading everything about an old design doesn't make the old design good. |
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Quoted: The golden age was when an average kid could buy his own car, take it apart, learn to build and modify an engine, transmission, change gears, make it faster, understand it, know how it works. How many people these days own a timing light or tools to work on a carb? Hell, you can barely change oil without scan tools and computers. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: All the current muscle cars and SUV’s are outstanding and the current Corvette is breathtaking. Etc, etc, etc…. We are in golden age for car design and performance . The golden age was when an average kid could buy his own car, take it apart, learn to build and modify an engine, transmission, change gears, make it faster, understand it, know how it works. How many people these days own a timing light or tools to work on a carb? Hell, you can barely change oil without scan tools and computers. Had to buy a timing light last summer for a 88 Toyota pickup 22r 69 Bronco sport in the garage |
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Quoted: I'm talking about leaded gas which killed thousands of people, not the paint. Also, upgrading everything about an old design doesn't make the old design good. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: All of those can be upgraded except safety and lead poisoning. Unless of course you cage it and don't lick the paint. I'm talking about leaded gas which killed thousands of people, not the paint. Also, upgrading everything about an old design doesn't make the old design good. |
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Now?
Modern everyday cars beat the supercars and hypercars of years of old. I can see quite a few of todays designs ending up being timeless / sought after by the current crop of car owners for years to come.. Yeah yeah yeah all electronics and plastics, but the materials are the best they've ever been not to mention safer, and last longer to boot. |
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Now? 2018-2023Car And Driver Lightening Lap Results
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That is a hard period of time to beat for cars and it really was not that long. The looks of the cars and the designs were amazing. The quality and performance were mostly dog shit. As I crawl around my 1969 Mustang Mach 1 and 1970 Dodge Charger R/T, you can see where they cut corners and did some cheesy things just to send a car out. The performance is really meh unless you have one of the very few top of the line vehicles. Even then, it was mostly in straight line performance.
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55-70 produced some sexy cars. ~1997-today have some great cars.
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I'm really partial to '67-'71, with '69 probably being the pinnacle year for muscle cars.
But I've got a special place in my heart for '55-'58 as well, with '57 being a tough year to beat. |
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Quoted: I'm really partial to '67-'71, with '69 probably being the pinnacle year for muscle cars. But I've got a special place in my heart for '55-'58 as well, with '57 being a tough year to beat. View Quote I couldn't decide between 68-72 and 67-71. 68 is the first year for the new Chevelle, Dodges 67 is the new Camaro, Mustang |
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Best years in my book for Impalas. Except the 1961. ‘61 is best looking Impala.
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