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Detroit Auto Show Highlights Find Their Way To Portland

Monday, January 19, 2015

 

Alpha Romeo 4C Spider

While the Rose Bowl is considered the Granddaddy of NCAA Football bowl games, the Detroit International Auto Show is clearly the Granddaddy of Car Shows. Detroit is where the manufacturers show off this next year’s newest offerings but amazing concept vehicles that may quickly turn in to production vehicles. 

The Portland International Auto Show is coming up the first week of February and while not all of these Detroit offerings will be there, a good many of the highlights find their way to Portland.  The biggest winner this year’s Rose Bowl of car shows has to be Detroit’s own, Ford Motor Company. It showed off the amazing new Ford GT as well as the Shelby Mustang GT. Ford also captured the Truck of the Year honors with the 2015 F150.

The aluminum body allowed Ford to reduce the truck's weight by 700 pounds compared with last year's model. This helped generate better fuel economy but still had increased towing and hauling capabilities. What also put it over the top was the nimble ride and quick acceleration. Ford’s truck sales were down in 2014 because of the changeover to the new model.  Trucks still represent nearly 20 percent of its sales in North America. It beat out the Chevrolet Colorado and the Lincoln MKC for the top award. 

Volkswagen won the top car honors. The Golf and Golf GTI were recognized for setting new benchmarks in their segments, including innovation, distinguished design, and available driver assistance features, as well as unmatched value. 

"Volkswagen is thrilled to start 2015 with the Golf and Golf GTI taking home the incredible North American Car of the Year title," said Michael Horn, CEO, Volkswagen Group of America, Inc. "This award highlights our achievements and hard work in the past year, and we are confident that the Golf family will continue to pave the way for the brand in the year ahead." 

The Golf beat out the other finalists, the Hyundai Genesis and the Ford Mustang.

Here are some of the highlights of this year’s Detroit Auto show.

Ford GT

The clear star of the show was Ford’s new GT. The performance car that was showcased 10 years ago with the same name is a far cry from its older brother. While still maintaining some of that heritage, the new GT is a true super car. It will be made of carbon fiber and will be powered by the most powerful EcoBoost production engine ever: a next-gen twin-turbo EcoBoost V-6 that makes more than 600 horsepower.  It will also have a seven-speed dual clutch providing, as Ford states, nearly instantaneous gear changes. 

Acura NSX

It was said at the show that the only thing wrong with the Acura NSX was that it wasn’t the Ford GT. Even with that, the NSX was a stunner. Long gone is the old flat back end from the older version of the 1990’s. The NSX is a great attempt to showcase a brand that has been overshadowed in recent years by other luxury brands and even some other brands moving up in class. In 2012 the first glimpse of the new NSX concept at the Detroit auto show This NSX is now a hybrid with three electric motors and is said to generate more than 550 horsepower. The NSX's development was U.S.-based and global production will also be based at Acura's new Performance Manufacturing Center in Marysville, Ohio. Acura will begin taking orders this summer at an estimated base price of $150,000.

Hyundai Santa Cruz Concept

Hyundai launched its first plug-in hybrid vehicle at the show.  The 2016 Hyundai Sonata Plug-in Hybrid Electric Vehicle (PHEV) is expected to travel up to 22 miles on electric power and can recharge in as little as two and a half hours with a Level 2 charger. Sonata Plug-in Hybrid will be built at the Asan, South Korea plant and will go on sale in select markets later this year. The cool car they showed off, however, was a concept truck/crossover that had the Subaru Baja, Brat or Chevrolet Avalanche come to mind. This vehicle is a lot more than that and it has been reported that it won’t be very long before this becomes a production vehicle with the some minor modifications. The truck is powered by a 2.0-liter turbodiesel producing 190 hp and 300 lb-ft of torque with mpg in the high 30s.

Chevrolet Bolt EV Concept

Alpha Romeo 4C Spider

Alpha Romeo  also showed off a new convertible at this year’s show. The all-new 2015 Alfa Romeo 4C Spider’s open-air performance cockpit and mid-engine proportions draw from more than 100 years of groundbreaking and functional Italian design. Adding to the Alfa Romeo brand’s legendary racing history and the exciting experience of open-air motoring, the all-new 2015 Alfa Romeo 4C Spider debuts with panoramic views complemented with a signature Alfa exhaust note, plus the essential sportiness of the award-winning 4C Coupe: handcrafted in Modena, Italy; groundbreaking and seductive Italian style; state-of-the-art Formula 1 inspired carbon fiber monocoque chassis that enables an incredible power-to-weight ratio; advanced technologies, including the all-aluminum 1750 cc turbocharged engine with direct-injection, dual intercoolers, and variable-valve timing that enable supercar-level performance.

Chevrolet Bolt EV Concept

Chevrolet unveiled the all-new 2016 Volt electric car with extended range, showcasing a sleeker, sportier design that offers 50 miles of EV range, greater efficiency and stronger acceleration. The Volt’s new, efficient propulsion system will offer a General Motors’-estimated total driving range of more than 400 miles and with regular charging, owners are expected to travel more than 1,000 miles on average between gas fill-ups. It also figured it would be a Wheel of Fortune name change to its new EV concept the Chevrolet Bolt. According to Mark Reuss, GM’s global product development VP, the plans and development are well along for this 200-mile range concept, A very interesting comment was too that at a $30,000-$35,000 price range (in line with other EV vehicles getting 65-80 miles on a charge) the Bolt could be profitable. Still TBD then is if the federal tax credits would still be in place for an EV. The production vehicle plan would be a five passenger CUV. 

Ford Shelby GT

In the not too distant past, the automotive industry lost the great Carol Shelby but we still have his heritage and it was on display when Ford launched the new, track ready, Ford Shelby GT350R Mustang. It too has the heritage of its mid ‘60’s ancestor but with all the new capabilities of today. Being powered by 5.2 liter V-8 engine, which is the most powerful naturally aspirated engine, it will roll with 500 hp and 600 lb-ft of torque. This is not going to be the everyday driver unless you drive every day on the racetrack. 

Brad Boyer is owner of Carcierge, a car concierge company providing expert assistance on anything car-related. He also co-hosts Test Miles on 101.1 FM KXL on Sundays, and is a founding member of the Northwest Auto Press Association. You can email him your car-related questions at [email protected]

 

Related Slideshow: The 10 Worst Vehicles in the Last 30 Years

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#10

2002 BMW 7-Series

We have all become used to all the high-tech gadgetry in today’s vehicles and even the computer mouse type designs to control the gauges, BMW was ahead of the curve on its I Drive system it introduced in their flagship 7 series. Maybe even a little over its skis too as it required a two-day training session for the public relations staff that handed out the cars to the media just to understand the complexities.

Owners complained vigorously about how difficult it was to use and eventually just tried to avoid it altogether. The 2002 was also a huge overhaul in the exterior styling as well. When the tarp was taken off the new 7 the front and side view was astonishingly beautiful. The rear view…? Well, let’s just say Kim Kardashian would have been jealous. It wasn’t at all what the BMW buyer wanted. 

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#9

Subaru Baja

This vehicle has been making an ironic sort of comeback in popularity. It’s really so impractical and ugly that it now has a great kitsch following. The Baja really didn’t know what it wanted to be. It wasn’t really a sedan and wasn’t really a pickup. Instead of offering the best of both worlds it offered less of both.

There was no middle seat in the back to make room for the rear section to fold forward. The problem there too was that only a portion of it folded forward. It was a nice little truck to drive but it was really a truck with a tiny bed that couldn’t really haul anything.

Photo via Wikimedia Commons 

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#8

Saturn Ion

This was one sad little car. The quality was terrible -  it was horrible to drive with no road feel, power or handling. The interior was badly laid out and all the plastic pieces made it feel like a hot wheels car (without the cool track).

The Ion was manufactured by General Motors between 2003 and 2007. In February of 2014 it was on the list of GM vehicles recalled because of faulty ignition switches. In 2004 after being saddled with and unexpected long term loan of the 2003 Saturn Ion, Car and Drive Magazine wrote of its experience, “Anxious to drive Saturn's all-new little guy, we were soon anxious to get rid of it. Not one editor could say he or she liked the car, which, according to our road test, had a ‘pigheaded transmission, anxious steering, bar-stool seating, muddled styling, [and a] cyclopean dash.’ The acceleration numbers didn't make it any more popular.”

Photo via Wikimedia Commons 

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#7

Fisker Karma

This may seem an odd choice to be on a worst list as it is stunningly beautiful but as Donald Sutherland’s character uttered in the movie The Dirty Dozen when looking at the troops, "Very pretty, General. Very pretty. But, can they fight?" That’s what it felt like driving the Fisker and the answer was no.

It was the brainchild of the Henrick Fisker who was responsible for designing the BMW Z8 and served as design director for Aston Martin. The first car to be produced by Fisker Automotive was the Fisker Karma, a hybrid luxury car which debuted in January 2008 at the North American International Auto Show with great fanfare. It was supposed to hit the market in 2009 but that date was missed. The Fisker Karma production was launched in November 2011. 

What really gets the Karma on the list is the huge over-promise, under-delivery element. Fisker was given access to $529 million by the Department of Energy as part of the green initiative. It was going to be the Tesla beater but while Tesla has already paid back it’s loan, Fisker declared bankruptcy in 2013 with only 2,450 units built and $193 million of the DOE loan gone. Fisker Automotive was acquired by China's largest auto parts company, and plans to restart production of its Karma. It will also complete the half-finished development of a second model, according to a senior executive. 

Photo via Wikimedia Commons

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#6

Cadillac Allanté

This widely expensive Cadillac roadster was heavy, unwieldy and had a convertible top that required two people to take it off and store in the back. It was GM’s attempt to compete with the European two-seater sports cars like the SL500.  In a word, Fail. GM had the bodies made by Pininfarina in Italy and then finished up the rest of the production in Detroit.

The Allanté was manufactured from 1986 until 1993, with roughly 21,000 units built over a seven-year production run.  

Photo via Wikimedia Commons

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#5

Chrysler TC by Maserati 

Not to be outdone by GM, Chrysler decided to get in on the European styling by offering either a bad Chrylser or a very bad Masertai. It was hard to determine which manufacturer looked worse. Chrysler's TC by Maserati was based on a modified second generation Chrysler K car and introduced at the 1986 Los Angeles Auto Show.

After two years of development delays, the TC became available in late-1989 and 7,300 units were manufactured by the time production ended in 1990. All cars sold as 1991 models were actually manufactured in 1990.  Lee Iacocca, who did a lot of good things at Chrysler and sold a lot of books, was a proponent of the new model "to change the way the world looked at Chrysler" and to create a new image for the automaker.

The problem was it reminded people more of a Chrysler Lebaron which was much less expensive than a Maserati. 

Photo via Wikimedia Commons 

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#4

Plymoth Prowler

Chrysler, in the mid 90’s thought what every older driver wanted was to remember the 50’s hot rods, so it came out with its super cool, hot-rod-looking Plymoth Prowler. It was a real retro looking roadster with the open wheel front end and the big rounded rear fenders.

The designers were said to have been given free rein to develop whatever hot rod, sports car they could create. The Plymouth Prowler was produced for the 1997 and 1999-2001 model years. After the Plymouth name was discontinued in 2001 the Prowler was sold as a Chrysler Prowler for the 2001 and 2002 model years.

Besides the complete lack of vision out of the car, the worst feature was that it was all hat and no horse…as in horsepower. It looked as if it was like the hot rods of old but was “under” powered with a standard 3.5 liter, V-6 engine producing a paltry 250 horsepower. 

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#3

Yugo

Just the word conjures up the USA pride in the fact that, while maybe we built some crummy cars over the years, at least we weren’t responsible for this little high maintenance proletariat transportation device.

In 1985, Malcom Bricklin began importing the Yugo GV to the United States. Spending any seat time in this vehicle was scary to say the least. Built in Soviet-Bloc Yugoslovia, it made its U.S. debut at the 1984 Los Angeles Auto Show. At time it looked is if the little hatchback offered buyers some value with a 55-hp engine that was capable of 30-mpg fuel ratings and a 110-mph top speed for just $3990.

But the old saying was never truer than with the Yugo, you really do get what you pay for. Most car companies take a less dramatic way to end production than the Yugo that was built at the Zastava's Kragujevac factory.  The factory that was suspected of making weapons and military vehicles was bombed by NATO forces during a Kosovo air-raid. That was mercifully the end of its car-manufacturing days.  

Photo via Wikimedia Commons 

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#2

Pontiac Aztec  

It was a tough call which GM vehicle would get the number one slot but the horror that was this ugly SUV seemed to be generated by multiple layers of incompetence rather than the complete disregard for the consumer as our number one choice.

Like the Baja, the Aztec has taken on a new cult status with one of television’s greatest characters driving it. But even Walter White from Breaking Bad and his bad ass fedora could not save the Aztec from being a hideous vehicle. It was something of a crossover vehicle but did neither well and its plastic exterior made it the butt of many a joke and conversation.

It’s likely that when Pontiac marketing reps determined giving one away to the first Survivor winner they thought of all the great press they would get. However, following the finale of the show, Howard Stern went on the air the next day and talked about what an ugly vehicle it was and that even if they gave him one, he wouldn’t take it. GM forecast sales of up to 75,000 Azteks per year, and needed to produce 30,000 annually to break even. Just 27,322 were sold in 2001.  The Pontiac Aztek was sold from 2001 to 2005. 

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#1

Cadillac Cimarron

It used to be, General Motors buyers would work their way up the GM family of cars and when they really “made it”, they bought a Cadillac. The emblem on the front of the car meant more than just designating what brand the car was but showed off what the driver had achieved in his or her lifetime.

In the mid 80’s the GM bean counters had such disregard for their customers and the brand significance they put out the Cadillac Cimarron.  The Cimarron was simply a rebranded version of GM’s entry-level product of the time, the Chevrolet Cavalier. The fake Cadillac didn't exhibit any traditional Cadillac styling features and other than Cadillac badges, was virtually identical to the Cavalier. Both the Cimarron and Cavalier were built on the same assembly plant in South Gate, California and Janesville, Wisconsin.

It was first introduced in 1981 for the 1982 model year, and sold through 1988. During its seven-year model run, 132,499 were built and those responsible should make a pilgrimage to each household and apologize. It’s hard to say what the biggest problem was with the car itself.  The meager 2.0 liter 4 cylinder engine with just 88 horsepower (in a Cadillac!) didn’t help. The worst was likely the arrogant price tag of twice that of the Cavalier with the Cadillac version selling for $12,000.

 
 

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