The 50 worst cars of all time

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They got it right listing the 1971 Ford Pinto. That was the first car I ever owned. I bought it a few months after I was discharged from the Army. By the time I had 20,000 miles on it over a span of 2 years I had replaced the water pump, radiator, fuel pump, had the valves ground and it was behaving like the head gasket was close to blowing. There were other issues with the car, like driving on a windy day. First time I drove it in 25+ mph winds I thought one or more of the wheels was coming loose. Let's just say Ford lost me as a repeat customer for life on that car.

Cheers,
Phil
 
i liked the pinto . it got great gas milage and i drove the s#@t out of it for a couple years (150 miles one way each day to see my girl freind ;D , count less dougnuts at the golf corse ;Dhigh speed E-brake spinning down the free ways(thats a lot of fun) :big:finaly killed it by crashing into my buddys chevy 4X4 (E-brake spin i got carried away :big: it was a great car took a lot of abuse cant remember how many beer cans it took to fill up the rear area though :big:
 
There is a lot of Time Mag in that artical

The Model T — whose mass production technique was the work of engineer William C. Klann, who had visited a slaughterhouse's "disassembly line" — conferred to Americans the notion of automobility as something akin to natural law, a right endowed by our Creator. A century later, the consequences of putting every living soul on gas-powered wheels are piling up, from the air over our cities to the sand under our soldiers' boots. And by the way, with its blacksmithed body panels and crude instruments, the Model T was a piece of junk,

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One struggles to think of a worse vehicle at a worse time. Introduced shortly after 9/11 — an event whose causes were tangled in America's unquenchable thirst for oil — the Hummer H2 sent all the wrong signals. It was/is arrogantly huge, overtly militaristic, openly scornful of the common good. As a vehicle choice, the H2 was a spiteful reactionary riposte to notions that, you know, maybe we all shouldn't be driving tanks that get 10 miles per gallon. Not surprisingly, the green-niks struck back. A Hummer dealership was torched in Southern California. The H2 was also a PR catastrophe for GM, who happened to be repossessing and crushing the few EV1 electric cars at the time. It all contributed to GM's emerging image as the Dick Cheney of car companies.

Thanks for the reminder of why I don't read Time. The New York Times of weeklys

Frank
 
Granted,many of the cars listed WERE bad cars.But quite a few,the Edsel being a case in point,weren't any worse than other cars of the time.And the Renault Dauphine was quite a popular car in Europe.As for ferocious rusting,this befell most cars of the period.I'm amazed there was no mention of the Lancia Beta,as they came pre-rusted before sale :big:
It's easy looking back and panning this or that car,but at the time they were made,some were genuine innovations,which benefitted all cars at some time or another.
 
It's easy looking back and panning this or that car,but at the time they were made,some were genuine innovations,which benefitted all cars at some time or another.

One doesn't need to go very far down the list before the realization sets in that the author zeroed in on innovative models. He might have a way of putting words together in an amusing, sarcastic fashion, but I sure the hell am glad he wasn't in the car designing business.

After all, without innovation we'd still be driving those 1909 Model T Fords that he loved to crap on.

I surely do wish he could see my single digit salute.

Orrin
 
Phew! - Glad to see my all time favourite Citroen Deux Chevaux was missing fro the list. Wonderful model engine in that.

I was reduced to tears reading some of those descriptions, seldom laughed so much.

You could compile a British only list. I've had a few of 'em. Austin/Morris/MG 1100, Metro, MkIII Cortina and the fearsome Bond 875 (Hillman Imp engined 3-wheeler) in which wheelies were possible.

Ray
 
Besides reliability (which several of them were legendary for the lack thereof), the author pans a lot based on

"did it get more people driving?" and
"does it use a lot of gas?"

both of which may be bad for the planet as a whole, but doesn't make them particularly bad cars.

 
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