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What car does the world need?
If you could invent a completely new class of car, what would it be?
I quite often think "I wish such and such a manufacturer would produce a car with this body type, this engine, at this price" and so on, ad nauseum. When I do so, it's usually from looking at a classic car and wondering why there's no modern version of it, or looking at a car from one marque and wishing that a competitor made something, well, to compete.
With the varied user base this forum enjoys, it's a great resource of ideas that the motor industry would do well to consider. Below is a list of the most in-depth ideas so far, linking straight to that user's post.
homeforsummer's "economy coupes" - you're reading it!
Jim's "modern Nova"
YSSMAN's "small crossover"
Leonidae's "modular vehicle" idea
Joey's "cheap, fun sedan"
Pupik's "various ideas"
neanderthal's "light hybrid" idea
niky's "programmable electronics"
EA11R's "small all-rounder"
Jim's "modern Nova"
YSSMAN's "small crossover"
Leonidae's "modular vehicle" idea
Joey's "cheap, fun sedan"
Pupik's "various ideas"
neanderthal's "light hybrid" idea
niky's "programmable electronics"
EA11R's "small all-rounder"
***
The "economy coupe"
The type of class that keeps popping up again and again in my thoughts though is that of the cheap, small coupe. Now you might think, I wouldn't strictly be inventing that. We've had them for years.
Well, you'd be right and wrong. My latest thinking on the subject was inspired by this video on youtube, which is a Motor Week comparison from 1992 of five "economy coupes". Cars with particularly humble platforms but a dash more style and fun, available at very low prices thanks to economies of scale of the humble models they're based on. In the video, you'll see the Toyota Paseo, Hyundai Scoupe, Geo Storm, Saturn SC2 and Nissan NX1600. In the UK we briefly got the Paseo and the NX, and also cars like the Ford Puma (based on the Fiesta), the Renault Megane Coupe based on the normal hatchback Megane, and then of course the Mazda MX-3 which was available in the USA too. All were available with fairly small, economical engines, and at fairly reasonable prices. So again, you may think there's nothing new in all that.






Left to right, top to bottom: Geo Storm, MX-3, Megane Coupe, Ford Puma, Toyota Paseo, Nissan NX1600 - all extinct
Well, I have two problems. Firstly, where are all the "economy coupes" today? I can't think of a single one along the lines of the cars above that's been released all year. For a good few years, in fact. Even when they were around, cars like the basic 1.4 Puma and 1.4 Megane Coupe were approaching £15k in the UK - when the most basic cars retail for £6k, that's a big jump before you can own something with a bit of style, a car to be proud of.
The class of car I'd invent then, would be an "economy coupe" based on the bottom rung of the ladder - the city car class. These are cars that, in the UK, are available for much less than £10k. In an ideal world then, manufacturers would make small coupes on the platforms of these cars - the smallest of the small, cars like the current Fiat Panda/500, Toyota Aygo and it's French cousins, the Kia Picanto, Volkswagen Fox, and others.
Fiat in particular used to be no stranger to the concept of tiny, economical yet fun coupes. Not only did Carlo Abarth have a field day popping tiny Fiat engines into gorgeous small coupe bodies, but Fiat themselves had cars like the pretty 850 Sport Coupe based on the rather ungainly standard 850. This is exactly the sort of car I'd like to see a return to, in this age of expensive petrol, downsizing and hybrids and city cars becoming a hot topic.


Left: Regular Fiat 850. Right: 850 Sport Coupe
Allow me to give an example of my vision - and let's take the Aygo. Now obviously, practicality will suffer. A Paseo is less practical than the Tercel on which it was based. With the Aygo, sticking to Toyotas, the rear seats (we'd still want to keep them) would need to lose a bit of leg room, and become more "occasional". We'd also lose some headroom as the roof would slope down. Ideally, though it would be called a coupe, we'd have a hatchback to retain important practicality and a modicum of boot space. Up front, the car would be little different from a normal Aygo, which includes keeping the same engines, even a diesel, as this is the 21st century and people like diesels that can do 70mpg. And why not? If diesel is good enough for an Audi TT then it's good enough for a humble Aygo coupe.

Toyota Aygo - the perfect small coupe platform?
The car would be light, fairly cheap to build still, cheap to run and insure, as it would keep the small engines of the hatchback. So it'd be good for young drivers, for whom it'd be so much cooler than a bargain-basement supermini. Girls would like it, because it'd be cute. Guys would like it, because girls would like it. Tuning companies would like it, because they could have pint-sized cars that look great with a few well-chosen modifications. Anyone with an environmental conscience would like it, because they could have fun in a car without feeling guilty about driving a gas-guzzling sports car.
Imagine how much cooler that Aygo would be. Now, imagine competitors from Fiat, who'd fit theirs with a revvy little 1.2 that sounded like a small Italian coupe should yet does 50mpg. Imagine it from Peugeot, who'd make a stripped-out Rallye version, in white, with white steel wheels and a bright red carpet inside. Imagine it based on a VW Fox, which would be high quality, and be a small coupe that feels like it would take huge distances in it's stride, and would look fabulous with some BBS alloys, and (whisper it quietly) stretched tyres and slammed suspension, for all the Euro buffs.



Left to right: Panda coupe? 107 coupe? Fox coupe?
And most of all, they'd all be great, cheap fun. Which I really, really want from a car. And I suspect I'm not the only one.
Anyway, I've rambled on long enough.
What kind of car do you think the world needs? What car would bring us out of this spiral of car companies quitting projects, laying off workers, and borrowing huge amounts of money off the government? Feel free to add your thoughts on my idea too!
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