Cars that Killed Market Segments

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Been thinking about this for a while; honestly going back to when some fanboy was having an argument in the A90 thread about how great the A80 was. This isn't about "the Caravan came out and nobody wanted wagons anymore" or "the RX300 came out and nobody wanted minivans anymore." I mean more cars that were comprehensively such a leap that it made previously more niche options much harder to compete and/or drove them out completely.


The most obvious example of this is when Mazda dropped a bomb on the market in 1989:

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And made the holdovers from the 1970s look pretty hopeless:

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And absolutely pantsed a couple manufacturers who thought they could have this market in the bag:

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The latter is funny because lol yeah the original Elan is what Mazda outright said they were copying, but the former is funny because Ford decided that they wanted Mazda to build them a sporty convertible basically unrelated (and worse) to the one Mazda was already developing and the automotive press got wind of it so we got wires crossed predictions like this:

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The other big example of this is the thing Lotus built in a cave with a box of scraps to keep the lights on while going bankrupt at the same time as their current owner was also going bankrupt:

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And made an awful lot of (more rudimentary) cars that had gone into development before then with a business case to carve a unique niche out of the market a lot more suspect than they had been previously.

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And then there's the historical one:

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Which, because its development as a "sporty Falcon" but not it's appearance was an open secret, the other two manufacturers had competing offerings that they assumed would be considered comparable by the buying public:

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But were annihilated so thoroughly that they had to basically scrap them and start from scratch (even though the much sportier second generation Corvair was literally only a few months away when the Mustang launched) and rush more direct competitors to the market.



There's more anecdotal ones too (the original Lexus LS scaring the hell out of Mercedes in the US market and allegedly being directly connected to Mercedes' tanking quality in the 1990s as they tried to cut costs); but there's some more specific examples that I feel aren't widely held that I was thinking about after I made this status update this morning.



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What is the market position of these cars? 320-ish horsepower roadsters. Handbuilt with performance and quality a step above what you can expect from your normal Corvette, with no expense spared in their construction techniques (bolted and bonded aluminum extrusions in the Esperante like the Elise, welded and bonded aluminum extrusions in the Series 1 with a carbon fiber body, hand built galvanized steel spaceframe built by the same firm that did so for Lamborghini and Ferrari at the time) so you don't have to deal with the famously noodly C4 even in its ZR-1 guise. That thing dates back to the early 80s! Now, for sure, there's probably not room on the market for all three of them even if they didn't have horrible gestation periods (The Series 1 had an entire book written about how badly its production went). The Mangusta had a ton of corporate infighting and was yanked to another brand just before it went on sale. The Esperante is hard to find any information on, but Motorweek looked at one years before it was actually ready to go on sale so it must not have been too great either.


All of them were planned on coming out in 1997/1998, but ultimately were delayed for years after. But a funny thing happened in that time period. This:

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Became this (after it's own extensively protracted development period where it was cancelled and worked on in secret):

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I posit that even if they hadn't had their protracted development periods and had come out when they were intended to, this still would have doomed all three. That isn't to say that one needn't be more aspirational than a Corvette, but these were supposed to be selling something that they couldn't do as well as a car that beat them to the market and cost half as much which I'm sure contributed heavily to their failure. Now, far be it from me to defend this:

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I've said my piece on how awful this was as a $45,000 interior in 1997, most obviously the atrocious center stack which looks lifted directly out of a Silverado of the time. I bought a C4 in no small part because that interior was the nicer of the two (even in its price chopped 1994 refresh) when I drove both. But, consummate with the context of its development (Corvette engineers were tasked with making a car comprehensively better than its predecessor by every objective measure while also being cheaper to produce, before it was cancelled outright by GM management and they had to develop it in secret with a diverted slush fund for several years as GM flirted with bankruptcy) it's whatever. The 996 went through similar issues for similar reasons (instead of being cancelled it needed to share basically everything with a car that cost 40% less or the entire company was going to go bankrupt) and at least it works as a driver's car and everything connected to the act of driving (the engine, the chassis, the transaxle, the suspension design) was top of the line in 1997.

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That's literally a Mustang dashboard. I don't mean "literally" like it's been redefined by Webster to mean "figuratively" because everyone misused it out of hyperbole. That's literally the inner dash (and many parts of the outer dash!) of an SN-95 Mustang down to the vents, steering wheel and the gauge cluster, with different trim on top of it.

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Certainly a Mangusta is a better performance car than the famously floppy Fox-derived SN-95 Cobra that it lifted it's dashboard, switchgear, entire drivetrain and engine from (even down to needing the same recall the 1999 Cobra received for Ford lying about how much power it had). But so was the C5 Corvette. And that interior doesn't look 40,000 2000 dollars better than a C5 convertible that had a better engine and drivetrain pushing less weight.

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The Panoz, in spite of still obviously being built off of the SN-95 dashboard, has a charming TVR quality to it; and since it's even more Mustang-derived under the skin (the floorpan and parts of the firewall are even carried over and attached to the aluminum chassis) the fact that it looks so different until you really start looking side to side like a Find the Difference book all the more impressive. But, again, is it 35,000 year 2000 dollars better? Especially since the Esperante also lifts the suspension and steering hardware from the Cobra in addition to having the same worse drivetrain and engine and higher weight that the Qvale had.


The market for both of theses suggests no, because these cost about the same or less than if you just bought a used C5 convertible; and barely more than a used New Edge Cobra convertible.

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And then we have the worst of them all. In a vacuum, divorced from the expectations of being the official followup to the classic Cobra, this seems the best. Yeah, the quality looks kinda "contemporary Viper" crap, but it's not obviously another car underneath, right? And it shouldn't be, as it was the most expensive of the lot with the highest boasts and the most development money thrown at it. And then you see the V6 Camaro gauge cluster. The Oldsmobile stereo. The blatant assortment of GM switchgear everywhere. It looks completely different, except everything you touch. Your arm even rests on the same center console lifted straight out of the C5 you could have bought instead. And you look around the car, and you see the C4 parts everywhere. The suspension arms attached to those Multimatic pushrod shocks (someone should have told Shelby that Ford says those cost $300,000)? C4, down to having the slots for the leaf springs. The windshield, and maybe even the windshield frame. The brakes. The handbrake lever. The door glass (albeit chopped down). The ZF 6 speed modified to be a transaxle (possibly). And you realize that Shelby is trying to sell you a car for 100,000 1999 dollars that GM was heavily involved with developing until management changes there led to a falling out with him; filled not only with GM parts bin stuff, but GM parts bin stuff older and worse than the parts bin stuff in the C5. Every time you drive it you're driving an early 1990s GM product. A fast one. One that sounds great. A great looking one. But one that's $65,000 better than a Corvette convertible that it's only marginally faster than? They look like great seats (definitely compared to the awful ones in the C5), but eh...







Now you can argue that these are just bad cars. And, yeah, the Qvale was considered kind of crap even by the auto rags at the time, the Panoz was criticized for driving so much like the Mustang, and (again) there's an entire book about how badly the development and production of the Series 1 went. But let's expand on that theory for cars overseas using the one car mentioned earlier, developed contemporaneously with the C5 and under similar circumstances:

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Is this actually why TVR died, and why that entire cottage industry of midlevel sports cars in that rough "class" in Europe went with it in the 2000s? What about the Esprit, which was dated but Lotus had just spent a ton of money giving it a new bespoke engine, an exterior refresh and new interior right before the 996 came out? I've gotten a lot of pushback here when I suggested this in the past for TVR's cause of death, but I'm unconvinced that you could keep selling badly assembled cars with questionable engineering (when the Rover V8 was the engine people were nostalgic for in your cars regarding reliability...) and performance claims of dubious veracity when Porsche was pumping out twice as many 996s up and down the product stack as they did 993s (and at the time it was considered a huge leap forward over the outgoing car). I think that's far more why those sorts of companies failed than any ownership changes or management fights. Just because it's on your bedroom wall and in a Gran Turismo game doesn't mean it's any good.
And are there any other major examples of such a thing?




(This thread took me several hours to make so I'm not expanding as much on that last talking point like I did with the other ones)
 
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Nice idea for a thread. Two examples which I'll admit I remember from some of Jeremy Clarkson's non-Top Gear television programmes:

The Datsun 120Y debuted in and was exported to the UK at the perfect time - the 1973 oil crisis. At least in the UK, it trounced absolutely everything domestic brand and led the way in economy and reliability in such a way that those domestic brands never recovered from. It was the second-most popular import of its time and although British Leyland had a whole encyclopaedia of problems, a car like the Datsun showed them exactly what they should have been doing. No surprise that so many of their brands died during the same decade.

Although the Golf GTi is one of the most famous 'original' hot hatches, the game changed with the Peugeot 205 GTi. Yes, it might have been made just to abuse motorsport homologations but it was by far and away a huge step up from hot hatches prior to it and set the standard for all those that came after it at a time when the Golf itself was irrelevant.

I would also make a suggestion for the Bugatti Veyron even though there is a strong case for it actually reviving the decade-long dead supercar market. It's been about 20 years since the Veyron now so just as a reminder for anyone who didn't know at the time, the idea of the Veyron was completely laughed off as a joke just like every other supercar at the time. For whatever reason, the supercar market was dead. There had been lots of doomed concept cars like the Ford GT90, single-digit GT1 homologations like the Porsche 911 GT1, vapourware cars like Vector and a few genuine production models like the Lamborghini Diablo and Bugatti EB110. A load of rubbish that never went anywhere. The Veyron changed everything.

Before the Veyron, you'd laugh or groan at the Cizeta V16T or Jaguar XJR15. After the Veyron, you had to respect the Ferrari Enzo, Audi R8 and McLaren Mercedes-Benz SLR. It killed off the joke efforts and redefined the supercar game as a place to be serious.
 
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The Datsun 120Y debuted in and was exported to the UK at the perfect time - the 1973 oil crisis. At least in the UK, it trounced absolutely everything domestic brand and led the way in economy and reliability in such a way that those domestic brands never recovered from. It was the second-most popular import of its time and although British Leyland had a whole encyclopaedia of problems, a car like the Datsun showed them exactly what they should have been doing. No surprise that so many of their brands died during the same decade.
They definitely showed the brits (and all other countries to be honest) what reliability meant. But BL cars were some of the most economical on the market at the time. The Datsun also rusted before your very eyes.

I think it has largely been acknowledges the original Mini (and to a lesser extent the Fiat 500) destroyed the 'bubble car' market segment. The Mini was a proper car, with a 4 cylinder engine, no motorbike technology, just economical and not that much more expensive than many.

The original brief was to remove bubble cars from the roads, so it certainly worked.
 
Do Corollas and Civic fall under this thread. I mean, the Corolla and Civic are still around and many cars that have been around during those cars debut and after, are long gone(Escort, Neon, K-Car, J-car).

NSX is gone, but didn’t little old Honda make manufacturers up their supercar game since 1990?
 
Do Corollas and Civic fall under this thread. I mean, the Corolla and Civic are still around and many cars that have been around during those cars debut and after, are long gone(Escort, Neon, K-Car, J-car).

NSX is gone, but didn’t little old Honda make manufacturers up their supercar game since 1990?
I can't recall about others, but the NSX definitely got Ferrari back in gear because Honda specifically targeted the 328/348 & went all in on its development. I believe build quality was the main change noted by journalists for Ferrari.

And while it was already designed to go above and beyond everyone else, Gordan Murray did cite that the NSX's ride quality & handling became the new benchmark for the F1 after he drove one early one and that he copied the suspension & throttle from it.
 
If anything, the NSX got Ferrari to understand they couldn't sell the badge on a tractor anymore and actually had to put in work to make their cars fast, somewhat reliable and actually well built. Hence why the F355 is so widely regarded as one of the best cars they've ever produced. The only real problem with the NSX is that Honda barely bothered evolving it over the next 15 years.

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I think the 991/992 range are segment killers. They can do everything. Want a fun sports car to enjoy on the weekends? Base 911. Want to enjoy the weather? Targa/Cabrio. Want a track toy? GT3. Want a more insane track toy? GT2RS/GT3RS. Want a GT that will comfortably munch miles on an intercontinental trip and be capable of ludicrous speeds? Turbo S. Want a visceral, focused canyon carver that'll make you feel like the second coming of Steve McQueen and be the envy of your local Cars and Coffee? 911R/GT3 Touring/ST. Want a rally car/have too much money? Dakar. Want to go and race professionally? Cup car or GT3R. The only other sports car that polyvalent is the Huracan, and that's out of production. Nothing else comes close to offering that many options in that segment, and of those that came close, they couldn't match the dynamics.
 
If anything, the NSX got Ferrari to understand they couldn't sell the badge on a tractor anymore and actually had to put in work to make their cars fast, somewhat reliable and actually well built. Hence why the F355 is so widely regarded as one of the best cars they've ever produced. The only real problem with the NSX is that Honda barely bothered evolving it over the next 15 years.

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I think the 991/992 range are segment killers. They can do everything. Want a fun sports car to enjoy on the weekends? Base 911. Want to enjoy the weather? Targa/Cabrio. Want a track toy? GT3. Want a more insane track toy? GT2RS/GT3RS. Want a GT that will comfortably munch miles on an intercontinental trip and be capable of ludicrous speeds? Turbo S. Want a visceral, focused canyon carver that'll make you feel like the second coming of Steve McQueen and be the envy of your local Cars and Coffee? 911R/GT3 Touring/ST. Want a rally car/have too much money? Dakar. Want to go and race professionally? Cup car or GT3R. The only other sports car that polyvalent is the Huracan, and that's out of production. Nothing else comes close to offering that many options in that segment, and of those that came close, they couldn't match the dynamics.
Definitely why I was looking more towards supercars than GT cars like Corvette and 911. Really can't beat those two for staying power.

However, I am a bit "hmm" about Aston Martin DB cars. Up and down they've been, they're still around. Can't think of another luxury sporting GT car that's outlasted the Aston Martin DB coupe.

AMG SLS->AMG GT(I guess the AMG GT is more the 911 competitor) seem to be holding on, but for how long?
 
Can't think of another luxury sporting GT car that's outlasted the Aston Martin DB coupe.
Mercedes SL? They've got to be close in terms of longevity, but sadly nowadays they're mostly the same car drivetrain wise.
 
Ok here's a stretch. I don't like it, but the Tesla Model 3 and Model S have effectively finished off the business case for premium sedans in the US Market. But to see where it started, I think we have to go all the way back to this:

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The XJ successfully demonstrated that a utility vehicle can be an everyday vehicle, and surprisingly fun to drive. The BMW X5 and X3 and Mercedes ML would probably not exist if it wasn't for the XJ.
 
I dunno if that's really the same thing. It was undoubtedly better realized than the S10 and the Bronco II and was arguably the best in the segment all the way to its death, but the Exploder was the one that dominated that segment in the 90s.
 
I dunno if that's really the same thing. It was undoubtedly better realized than the S10 and the Bronco II and was arguably the best in the segment all the way to its death, but the Exploder was the one that dominated that segment in the 90s.
The Explorer was a BOF design though and wasn't really the template that the premium German SUVs followed. The Cherokee and subsequent Grand Cherokee, in my opinion, more greatly influenced the CUV dominated American car market more than the explorer did.
 
Would definitely agree with the Miata being the segment killer. I don't think anything else has done such a good job of dominating so hard that it's snuffed out competition. Best runner up is possibly the Tacoma, possibly the Dodge Grand Caravan. The Tacoma's competition dwindled pretty much down to the Ranger. Nothing else was as good. However, the Caravan pretty much eliminated full size vans in passenger configurations from all roadways, and nobody else had a minivan that could compete. Even airport shuttles migrated from B-series vans to 3-row grand caravans.

I would put Tesla Model Y in as the next thing, maybe Robotaxi, as cars that drive themselves are gonna eliminate appliance A-->B vehicles.
 
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They won't & the company can thank Elon for that.
You can think that all you want, but consider what's coming in the future:



If this holds, then owning a car no longer makes sense. Its utility as an appliance is obsolesced and it becomes purely a luxury or recreational item.
 
"Short ridges"


The Explorer was a BOF design though and wasn't really the template that the premium German SUVs followed. The Cherokee and subsequent Grand Cherokee, in my opinion, more greatly influenced the CUV dominated American car market more than the explorer did.
I disagree. I think the Harrier/RX300 and Rav4 (and the X5) are entirely responsible for that change. The XJ undoubtedly was better designed than the compact SUVs Ford and GM put out at the same time, but advances in the segment beyond being more specifically adapted to car usage were basically just ignored by everyone else and everyone who did so were rewarded handsomely for doing so. All Ford had to do to make an equally compelling (and in terms of sales volume, superior) product to the buying public was add 18 inches of wheelbase to the Bronco II and flip the rear suspension. All GM had to do was do a minor face-lift and add rear doors. The public didn't care that the Cherokee was a lighter and significantly smaller SUV that still had a similar amount of utility to the Explorer or S10 Blazer. They didn't seem to care when GM and Ford continued building the Explorer and Blazer/Trailblazer as body on frame throughout the entirety of the first three generations of the Grand Cherokee's life, at which point they just switched to making straight crossovers for CAFE considerations. I don't think that makes the XJ in the spirit of the thread (where a new entry in the segment is so dominate that either kills everything else or the market immediately adapts around it).

In comparison, when Toyota stuck a wagon body on a jacked up Corolla and immediately followed it up with a hatchback body on a jacked up Camry, that was a flashpoint; and that also quickly dried up a different market (minivans) it wasn't even competing in that the Cherokee hadn't affected at all.
Put another way, the XJ is a bit of an evolutionary dead end like the Ford Fairmont (vs the contemporary body on frame Malibu/Century/Cutlass) to the Rav4's Ford Taurus; or (ironically) perhaps the Ford Aerostar to the Rav4's Caravan. I also think the through line from the XJ/ZJ/WJ to the modern premium unibody RWD SUV is much muddier than it would be if the line instead started with BMW's development of the E53 X5 and L322 Range Rover. Of particular note:
that the premium German SUVs followed.
Mercedes ML
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That isn't unibody. The ones after it are, but only after the X5/L322 came out.
 
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You can think that all you want, but consider what's coming in the future:
I don't need to consider anything. Musk's political presence has alienated the people who would support this & the people he backed are not going to support electric/autonomous vehicles in favor of the traditional gas vehicle they want to drive themselves.
 
If this holds, then owning a car no longer makes sense. Its utility as an appliance is obsolesced and it becomes purely a luxury or recreational item.
Someone needs to explain to me how a dollar a mile is going to replace having my own car... I also regularly travel several hundred miles recreationally; my girlfriend lives over 300 miles away, and I make regular trips within a hundred-mile radius of home. How am I going to "taxi" those trips.

The cost of purchasing and operating my '99 Miata, including fuel, oil, tires, parts (alternator, two batteries, brake pads and calipers, re-upholstered seats, coilovers, etc.,) insurance, registration, and the actual price of the car, works out to 33 cents per mile. Even the Jaguar, which cost me 4 times as much to buy, a little more than twice as much to insure, twice as much to fuel (premium, at less than 3/4 the fuel efficiency of the Miata,) and has undergone expen$ive repairs (complete cooling system overhaul, and replacing the failed air suspension with coilovers,) is $1.14 per mile.
 
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I'm going to make a case for the Nissan Qashqai here. Launched in 2006, the Qashqai can be credited with ending the people carrier/MPV segment. By giving people a more SUV derived look with elevated driving position, but with the cost and efficiency more expected from a hatchback. The Qashqai is widely regarded as the first of the Crossover/Compact Crossover class of car. The people carrier/MPV never really returned from this and the crossover/compact crossover segment grew exponentially off the success of this car, which is still sold in huge numbers today. Arguably also harming the sales of estates and larger hatchback vehicles over time as well.
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"Short ridges"



I disagree. I think the Harrier/RX300 and Rav4 (and the X5) are entirely responsible for that change. The XJ undoubtedly was better designed than the compact SUVs Ford and GM put out at the same time, but advances in the segment beyond being more specifically adapted to car usage were basically just ignored by everyone else and everyone who did so were rewarded handsomely for doing so. All Ford had to do to make an equally compelling (and in terms of sales volume, superior) product to the buying public was add 18 inches of wheelbase to the Bronco II and flip the rear suspension. All GM had to do was do a minor face-lift and add rear doors. The public didn't care that the Cherokee was a lighter and significantly smaller SUV that still had a similar amount of utility to the Explorer or S10 Blazer. They didn't seem to care when GM and Ford continued building the Explorer and Blazer/Trailblazer as body on frame throughout the entirety of the first three generations of the Grand Cherokee's life, at which point they just switched to making straight crossovers for CAFE considerations. I don't think that makes the XJ in the spirit of the thread (where a new entry in the segment is so dominate that either kills everything else or the market immediately adapts around it).

In comparison, when Toyota stuck a wagon body on a jacked up Corolla and immediately followed it up with a hatchback body on a jacked up Camry, that was a flashpoint; and that also quickly dried up a different market (minivans) it wasn't even competing in that the Cherokee hadn't affected at all.
Put another way, the XJ is a bit of an evolutionary dead end like the Ford Fairmont (vs the contemporary body on frame Malibu/Century/Cutlass) to the Rav4's Ford Taurus; or (ironically) perhaps the Ford Aerostar to the Rav4's Caravan. I also think the through line from the XJ/ZJ/WJ to the modern premium unibody RWD SUV is much muddier than it would be if the line instead started with BMW's development of the E53 X5 and L322 Range Rover. Of particular note:


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That isn't unibody. The ones after it are, but only after the X5/L322 came out.
I'm not sure you're getting my argument.

The XJ and ZJ basically created a class of vehicle that would go on to crowd-out premium sedans (and the Grand Cherokee is still out there, outselling the 5 series by 11x in 2023). The Range Rovers were also there, but were never popular enough in the US (I'm having a hard time finding sales info, but it appears that annual sales were typically in the low 4 figures) to have made that kind of impact - they were always still kind of niche - not to mention BOF until the L322 I believe. I think there's a plausible argument that people may have replaced, for example, an E34 5 series with a ZJ in a way that cannot be said about an Explorer or Blazer, especially the ones being made in the early 1990s. I stand corrected about the ML being B-O-F, but even still I think the XJ/ZJ set the general template.

I admit that this case isn't maybe applicable to the strict intent of this thread (The Tesla Model S & 3 are, as I mentioned first, but that's a boring subject), but I think its a tangent worth discussing.
 
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I'm not sure you're getting my argument.

The XJ and ZJ basically created a class of vehicle that would go on to crowd-out premium sedans (and the Grand Cherokee is still out there, outselling the 5 series by 11x in 2023). The Range Rovers were also there, but were never popular enough in the US (I'm having a hard time finding sales info, but it appears that annual sales were typically in the low 4 figures) to have made that kind of impact - they were always still kind of niche - not to mention BOF until the L322 I believe. I think there's a plausible argument that people may have replaced, for example, an E34 5 series with a ZJ in a way that cannot be said about an Explorer or Blazer, especially the ones being made in the early 1990s. I stand corrected about the ML being B-O-F, but even still I think the XJ/ZJ set the general template.

I admit that this case isn't maybe applicable to the strict intent of this thread (The Tesla Model S & 3 are, as I mentioned first, but that's a boring subject), but I think its a tangent worth discussing.
The XJ Cherokee also made it out of North America to European markets, which the Explorer or Blazer never really did. Off the top of my head, at that time there was only really the Land Rover Discovery that covered the same ground aside from a few Japanese models which despite having cult followings, didn't really fire the imaginations of the general pop, until the RAV4 came about. But even then, the XJ needed the VM Motori diesel before it made any real headway.
 
Someone needs to explain to me how a dollar a mile is going to replace having my own car... I also regularly travel several hundred miles recreationally; my girlfriend lives over 300 miles away, and i make regular trips within a hundred-mile radius of home. How am I going to "taxi" those trips.

The cost of purchasing and operating my '99 Miata, including fuel, oil, tires, parts (alternator, two batteries, brake pads and calipers, re-upholstered seats, coilovers, etc.,) insurance, registration, and the actual price of the car, works out to 33 cents per mile. Even the Jaguar, which cost me 4 times as much to buy, a little more than twice as much to insure, twice as much to fuel (premium, at less than 3/4 the fuel efficiency of the Miata,) and has undergone expen$ive repairs (complete cooling system overhaul, and replacing the failed air suspension with coilovers,) is $1.14 per mile.
I never said it would replace your own car for recreational use, long trips, etc., though you could just rent a car or van for a road trip. Our car cost us roughly $1.87 per mile over the past 8 years of ownership with insurance service and fuel. If I could pay under $2/mile and not have to worry about liability, fuel, or maintenance, with a robotaxi summoned wherever I needed it, I would totally take that over owning a car. Wouldn't have to worry about picking up my grandparents, etc. This is segment-altering and life changing in areas that don't have a decent mass transit network or walkable urban space. The ****-box commuter car is dead unless you're commuting like a hundred miles or in places where the only infrastructure is the paved road.
 
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I'm not sure you're getting my argument.

The XJ and ZJ basically created a class of vehicle that would go on to crowd-out premium sedans (and the Grand Cherokee is still out there, outselling the 5 series by 11x in 2023). The Range Rovers were also there, but were never popular enough in the US (I'm having a hard time finding sales info, but it appears that annual sales were typically in the low 4 figures) to have made that kind of impact - they were always still kind of niche - not to mention BOF until the L322 I believe. I think there's a plausible argument that people may have replaced, for example, an E34 5 series with a ZJ in a way that cannot be said about an Explorer or Blazer, especially the ones being made in the early 1990s. I stand corrected about the ML being B-O-F, but even still I think the XJ/ZJ set the general template.
I think if you're speaking broadly about the progenitor of SUVs being considered a legitimate alternative to a luxury car I don't think there's any question that Jeep is the one to "blame" for it, but at that point I don't think construction method is relevant because you're talking about the wrong Jeep. When AMC started loading the XJ's much older brother with every piece of equipment and trim they could find is what you're describing.
 
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I think if you're speaking broadly about the progenitor of SUVs being considered a legitimate alternative to a luxury car I don't think there's any question that Jeep is the one to "blame" for it, but at that point I don't think construction method is relevant because you're talking about the wrong Jeep. When AMC started loading the XJ's much older brother with every piece of equipment and trim they could find is what you're describing.
The GW was a plausible Cadillac (/ insert-here domestic luxo barge*) replacement in the years it wasn't ancient, but I don't think the E34 and W124 would have been troubled by it, even if people were still buying them in the late 1980s. The GW was a progenitor of luxury utility undoubtedly, but the XJ/ZJ did something more.**

*The GW and its spiritual descendants (Escalade, Navigator, etc) blowing up that segment (which outside of just a handful of exceptions is basically completely dead) is definitely appropriate for this thread though.

edit: On the subject - The Lexus ES and Toyota Avalon destroyed the "comfortable, luxury-lite basic transportation" segment so thoroughly that only the ES even exists in it still. Entire manufacturers like Buick, Oldsmobile, Lincoln, Mercury, Chrysler, etc basically either died or had to pivot away from this class of vehicles.

**edit2: Let me try to word this a different way
What would current day X3/X5/GLC/GLA/Q5/Q3 owners have been driving in 1985? I'd guess probably E30/E28/W124/190E. In 1995? I'd guess many of them were driving Cherokees/Grand Cherokees. (Yuppies, ultimately)

What would current day Escalade/Navigator/X7/GLS/G-Class owners have been driving in 1970? Almost assuredly full size Cadillacs and Lincolns and the odd freak driving a W116/600. 1980? I'd guess many were switching to Grand Wagoneers. (Wealthy suburban dwellers, ultimately)
 
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I never said it would replace your own car for recreational use, long trips, etc., though you could just rent a car or van for a road trip. Our car cost us roughly $1.87 per mile over the past 8 years of ownership with insurance service and fuel. If I could pay under $2/mile and not have to worry about liability, fuel, or maintenance, with a robotaxi summoned wherever I needed it, I would totally take that over owning a car. Wouldn't have to worry about picking up my grandparents, etc. This is segment-altering and life changing in areas that don't have a decent mass transit network or walkable urban space. The ****-box commuter car is dead unless you're commuting like a hundred miles or in places where the only infrastructure is the paved road.
You did say "...owning a car no longer makes sense," with no stipulation, which I interpreted literally, with no stipulation. Rent a car when I need to travel? How does several hundred dollars for a week's use make sense in any way? By mileage for those trips, that by itself is many times what my car ownership is costing me.

Now, if your car spends most of its time parked while your get to you destinations by other means, or don't even have any destinations, then in that case, money is burning up out in the driveway. For myself, including my motorcycle, I have three motor vehicles and I live alone, and I still do not come close to your 2 dollars a mile usage cost threshold. That's one of the reasons my Jaguar is over the 1 dollar per mile... it sits parked most of the time, as I only use it once a week or so to keep it "exercised," and it's my highway car for out-of-town travel. Still, it's just slightly more than your robotaxi per mile.

We're a bit off-topic for this thread with this, though... Don't ban me, please! :lol:
 
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You did say "...owning a car no longer makes sense," with no stipulation, which I interpreted literally, with no stipulation. Rent a car when I need to travel? How does several hundred dollars for a week's use make sense in any way? By mileage for those trips, that by itself is many times what my car ownership is costing me.

Now, if your car spends most of its time parked while your get to you destinations by other means, or don't even have any destinations, then in that case, money is burning up out in the driveway. For myself, including my motorcycle, I have three motor vehicles and I live alone, and I still do not come close to your 2 dollars a mile usage cost threshold. That's one of the reasons my Jaguar is over the 1 dollar per mile... it sits parked most of the time, as I only use it once a week or so to keep it "exercised," and it's my highway car for out-of-town travel. Still, it's just slightly more than your robotaxi per mile.

We're a bit off-topic for this thread with this, though... Don't ban me, please! :lol:
Sorry, I thought I already established that I was talking about "appliance" vehicles, which are what I consider the car that Joe Blow needs just to get from point A to point B so he can get back and forth to work or get groceries, etc. My view is a little biased because I live in a place where getting behind the wheel is like being in Mad Max, insurance rates are absolutely insane, being a cyclist or pedestrian is asking for manslaughter, and the public transit options are either abhorrent or non-existent. People in poor quality low-income areas tend to be stuck there or drive around vehicles that are literally hazards to themselves or other motorists. Any autonomous car is safer than a Floridian hooptie Altima :lol:
 
The GW was a plausible Cadillac (/ insert-here domestic luxo barge*) replacement in the years it wasn't ancient, but I don't think the E34 and W124 would have been troubled by it, even if people were still buying them in the late 1980s. The GW was a progenitor of luxury utility undoubtedly, but the XJ/ZJ did something more.**
**edit2: Let me try to word this a different way
What would current day X3/X5/GLC/GLA/Q5/Q3 owners have been driving in 1985? I'd guess probably E30/E28/W124/190E. In 1995? I'd guess many of them were driving Cherokees/Grand Cherokees. (Yuppies, ultimately)

What would current day Escalade/Navigator/X7/GLS/G-Class owners have been driving in 1970? Almost assuredly full size Cadillacs and Lincolns and the odd freak driving a W116/600. 1980? I'd guess many were switching to Grand Wagoneers. (Wealthy suburban dwellers, ultimately)
This doesn't reflect the reality of what people were actually buying Wagoneers in the 1980s. The people were buying Wagoneers were the same yuppies who were buying Audi 5000s and BMW 525es and W124s.

The Grand Wagoneer would sail through its twilight years firmly entrenched as the favorite daily driver among the Martha's Vineyard and Texas oil patch set. By the time the truck was discontinued after 1991 (a victim of encroaching safety standards and its own ineluctable single-digit fuel economy), the Jeep was pulling in buyers whose median income hovered around $200,000 in today's dollars.

To that end:

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This is not advertising targeting suburbanites or retired factory workers who saved their whole life to splurge on a base model DeVille. The demographic Venn Diagram of "modern Range Rover (real, not Sport) owner" and "1980s Grand Wagoneer owner" is likely one circle. They were even direct competitors when Rover decided they were going to finally sell them in the US in 1987 (and since the Range Rover wasn't a modern car itself by that point it's not like it held any real advantage), ultimately winning the battle when Chrysler decided they would rather just ride the money train out until it couldn't pass regulations than doing anything to update it (like replacing the engine with the 4.0L) and making a miscalculation that a new top spec Wagoneer Grand Cherokee trim wouldn't be just as slaughtered by the J80 Land Cruiser/LX 450 as the woeful P38 Range Rover was.
 
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In 1987, Dodge came out with the first mid-sized pickup truck in the US market, with the Dodge Dakota.


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They came in 4 cylinder, 6 cylinder, and 8 cylinder options - but they were Dodge’s alternate take on a vehicle class that was dominated by either full-sized Trucks made by Ford, Chevy and Crystler; or the equally popular pickup truck market, that was dominated by Ford, Toyota and Nisssn/Datsun. I wouldn’t call the Dakota a flop, since they consistently sold enough units a year to span 3 generations and remain in production till 2011, but they weren’t incredibly popular either (for reference, where I grew up, young men typically drove full sized trucks, or had a Ford Ranger, or Toyota Tacoma. I had a Ranger). Although the mid-sized pickup market was pioneered by Dodge, it didn’t really take off until late 2004, when……






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Toyota came out with their 2nd/3rd generation Tacoma (depending where you read), that featured a larger chassis that allowed the Tacoma to have configurations up to a 4 door double cab that could “comfortably” sit 5 adults, while having a 6’ bed - without the footprint and lower gas mileage of full sized trucks at that time. Eventually Tacoma sales would surpass the class leading Ford Ranger, and forced the entire market to manufacture comparable offerings with the bigger Nissan Frontier, Chevy Colorado (GMC Canyon), Ford Explorer Sport Track…and later revamped Ranger, Hummer H2, and something from Isuzu and Mitsubishi that no one ever bought (in reality, the Mitsu and Isuzu’s were Just rebadged Dodge’s and GMC’s).

Since Toyota’s second generation Tacoma, they’ve pretty much owned that market segment, with most manufacturers struggling to gain market footing, while other’s just straight up disappearing.
It’s only recent that Ford has made an attempt at revitalizing the more traditional compact truck market with the Maverick. While I’m not exactly convinced that they are small enough to fit the old-school definition of a pickup truck, they are definitely smaller than the mid-sized market. And judging by their growing popularity, it’s a size that has definitely been missed by the consumer. As soon as my pos commuter Mazda 6 finishes kicking the bucket, I’ll be picking up as basic-optioned’ Maverick as I can order. If I can get it with roll up windows, an AM/FM/Cassete stereo and a 5 speed manual like my first truck, I will!!!





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Here’s the first new thing I ever purchased for myself - a 2007 Toyota Tacoma double cab-long bed-4x4, in December of 2006 when I was 23 years old. As you can see, the exterior now has a lot to be desired (as evident of the most recent handwritten note that I found on it this morning, asking to buy it), but I’ve religiously changed the oil every 5-7000k miles with whatever on the shelf was cheapest. It splits time with my other 2 vehicles for driving duties these days, but after 410,000 ticks on the odometer, it’s still going relatively strong! If I ever need to drive in extremely inclement weather up to work, do a lumber run or drive up to my parents house in the mountains, best believe I’ll be driving this thing! God willing I live to 100, and I hope to be driven to my funeral in the back of this truck 😎
 
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