- 26,911
- Houston, Texas, USA
- JMarine25
Build a car. It becomes a classic. Go in new directions with the car's legacy. Then sometime in the future, hark back to glory days. You take a look at the trendy and fun Mini Cooper of today. I think it was a successful rebirth of the cute, little, and mean Mini Cooper. But many people here in America seen some bad calls. For example, the Mercury Cougar of then compared to the Coog (as us University of Houston faithfuls would call them) of 1998, the GTO of the muscle car days compared to now, even the Celica GT-Four of the early-mid 1990s compared to now. If you are a car company and you're trying to either give your car new life or try some new styling, how do you get it right?
You all know how much I thought the new Cavalier had ass-a-licious looks? I remember the Cavalier of the late 1990s. It was a fun little car. Like a baby Camaro, only with front-drive. When the latest Cavalier came in the wake of Chevy's "American Revolution," a fun car was slaughtered and left for dead. There's probably a tombstone with an open coffin for the Corvette C6 if GM doesn't reconsider its styling for the Corvette. An example of a GOOD generation change is the latest Dodge Ram. The last Ram was good-looking and mean. This new Ram is a beast, but in a good way. I love the Ram pickup. It's about the only American truck I see myself in. That and maybe the SS-R. The GTO deal is a crime spree to others, but if you ask me, at least it looks better than most of the crap GM is putting out nowadays. So how do you get resurrections and generation changes done right?
As hints, think about the ressurection of the Ford GT, and the design changes for the Subaru Impreza/WRX from their previous models.
You all know how much I thought the new Cavalier had ass-a-licious looks? I remember the Cavalier of the late 1990s. It was a fun little car. Like a baby Camaro, only with front-drive. When the latest Cavalier came in the wake of Chevy's "American Revolution," a fun car was slaughtered and left for dead. There's probably a tombstone with an open coffin for the Corvette C6 if GM doesn't reconsider its styling for the Corvette. An example of a GOOD generation change is the latest Dodge Ram. The last Ram was good-looking and mean. This new Ram is a beast, but in a good way. I love the Ram pickup. It's about the only American truck I see myself in. That and maybe the SS-R. The GTO deal is a crime spree to others, but if you ask me, at least it looks better than most of the crap GM is putting out nowadays. So how do you get resurrections and generation changes done right?
As hints, think about the ressurection of the Ford GT, and the design changes for the Subaru Impreza/WRX from their previous models.