Turbo Lag
Premium
- 6,525
- Melbourne
This is my vote:
Buick Park Avenue:
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Ah well, it's the only decent car. And it's not even properly Chinese. I vote for that.
This is my vote:
Buick Park Avenue:
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See this is just opening the floodgates for stuff that isn't actually Chinese.
I didn't pick the TF because the Chinese have done absolutely zilch of the development and testing of the car, so to call it a Chinese car is a bit insulting to the hundreds of Brits who worked on it for years. That Buick is the same. It just happens to be built and badged there. And if you include concept cars then you can include virtually anything.
The British car thread is stated that it's only cars you can actually buy. Since you can't buy concept cars, then they should be disallowed.
And if you allow stuff that's built in China, then I choose the BMW 5-series because BMW build small runs of them there to avoid import tax...
See my point?
I'm still pretty sure all cars sold in China must be built in China per the government. I took a class on Chinese studies and that is the way it used to be but I could be wrong now.
The Buick has been specifically designed for the Chinese market, like all GM cars sold there. Sure they might be bases on X vehicle but the engines have to meet a certain criteria and so does the interior space since the back seats are typically larger then the front.
For example, based on the reasoning for the Buick being allowed, there is nothing preventing me from nominating the Honda Accord (or, hell, the Saturn Astra) in the Best American car thread. We could end up with essentially the same car being in every single poll, in the case of some GM vehicles (Best American car: Pontiac G8. Best Australian car: Holden Commodore. Best Chinese car: Buick Park Avenue. Best third world car: Chevrolet Lumina. Best British car: Vauxhall VXR8. Best Korean car: Daewoo L4X.).
The Buick has been specifically designed for the Chinese market, like all GM cars sold there. Sure they might be bases on X vehicle but the engines have to meet a certain criteria and so does the interior space since the back seats are typically larger then the front.
The Park Avenue, like the GM Daewoo L4X introduced last week in Seoul, is a rebadged Holden WM Caprice/Statesman
Link:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buick_Park_AvenueWikipediaIt is assembled by GM Shanghai from CKD kits
GM vehicles sold in China have to go though a significant redesign process, most of the engineering is done here in America though. I know this because I live in south east Michigan and everyone here knows engineers for one of the "Big" Three.
They are based on an existing car, I said that, but there are design difference for the Chinese market.
Based on your logic though any Vauxhall or Opel is American.
Ironically, it is your logic that says that to be the case. A car rebadged for a different country does not make it a car of that country (for example, the Astra was designed by Opel, built by Opel and sold by Opel. The they started selling these completely German cars as Holdens and Saturns and whatnot). The Park Avenue is designed for (and built in) Australia, then it is given a new badge and shipped over to China in pieces to circumvent laws.Based on your logic though any Vauxhall or Opel is American.
See this is just opening the floodgates for stuff that isn't actually Chinese.
I didn't pick the TF because the Chinese have done absolutely zilch of the development and testing of the car, so to call it a Chinese car is a bit insulting to the hundreds of Brits who worked on it for years.
Nope, Romanian. or some other Eastern European country.
They're Romanian.
I second this, and state that is the only Chinese car I would probably buy with my own money.![]()
Jiangling Landwind, because it's cheap enough to buy one for someone you don't like.
If the Buick is a similar situation to Ford US and Ford Europe and Ford Asia all being run seperately from each other offering seperate production lines and not being answerable to each other then fair enough. However MG is in no way shape or form in the same boat as these.I believe it was decided early that we would honor the home of the badge in this case, making the MG British and the Buick American. The problem is that there is a very clear difference between the Buick of China and the Buick of North America in the same way that we see a very clear difference between the Ford of Europe and the Ford of North America... As such, we let Euro Fords qualify for the British thread.
On a technicality, I'll let both the MG and the Buick slip into the Chinese thread. The Buick is China-only, and that counts for something. The MG is just as "British" as Hong Kong these days, so I'll count that too. Hell, Roewe is Chinese too.
On a technicality, I'll let both the MG and the Buick slip into the Chinese thread. The Buick is China-only, and that counts for something. The MG is just as "British" as Hong Kong these days, so I'll count that too. Hell, Roewe is Chinese too.
People worked on the MGF? Blimey, that comes as news.
When the MG TF was killed back in 2005, it was a British car. It was built by Brits at a British factory owned by a British consortium - and propped up by the British taxpayer. Now it's a Chinese car, built by Chinese at a Chinese factory owned by a Chinese consortium. Some cars are built in Oklahoma and Longbridge, after arriving in flatpack form from Nanjing.
I expect to see its 2 star EuroNCAP performance (the original TF managed 4 stars) shortly, to demonstrate how the new TF has been worked upon by NAG.
Of course not. Labor strikes would force the company to go bankrupt before they made a single car.If a British consortium bought all the pieces for the Ford Crown Vic (if they ever stop producing it) and said "hmm, we'll make that again", it wouldn't make it a British car regardless of who owns the rights to make it.
Of course not. Labor strikes would force the company to go bankrupt before they made a single car.
I'm still pretty sure all cars sold in China must be built in China per the government. I took a class on Chinese studies and that is the way it used to be but I could be wrong now.
The Buick has been specifically designed for the Chinese market, like all GM cars sold there. Sure they might be bases on X vehicle but the engines have to meet a certain criteria and so does the interior space since the back seats are typically larger then the front.
Yes. The complete essence of redesigning a car for a new target market: Making sure the steering wheel is on the correct side. Get that right and you have the next Model T on your hands no matter what.One of the biggest thing I can see right away is the steering wheel and which side it's on.
If we were to go by the logic that a rebadged vehicle belongs to the country it originated from the Pontiac G8 is Australian despite being reworked for the American market, mainly the steering wheel.
You seem blissfully unaware of the irony of that statement, but nevermind.Also if the vehicle isn't redesigned with Chinese market in mind, tell me, where else in the world can you buy a Buick Park Avenue that looks like that? Yes you can buy cars that look very similar such as the Commodore and Lumina, but they aren't Buicks.
Yes, one need simply look at the car to feel the changes from when it went from this:As I've said, I am not disagreeing that it isn't based off a car made in Australia but it's been made for the Chinese market, thus a Chinese car.
Suit yourself. The fact that you seem to view where a car is built as the sole descriptor of what country it hails from isn't my problem.The Buick Park Avenue is a Chinese car whether you care to admit it or not, it's made by Shanghai GM, thus putting it under the Chinese car category.
You could go right ahead, and I will be right there helping you.But if we are solely going on 100% Chinese cars then so be it, I'll be sure to remember that when the American thread comes up and someone mentions anything remotely rebadged or even slightly reworked.