Sign In Join 



Edmunds turns 40 - guess the most significant car from each year!

349 messages,  Last post on Feb 27, 2007 at 5:26 AM

You are in the Inside Line Article Comments Forum. Your Hosts are steve_ & claires


Edmunds Most Significant Vehicles, 1966-2006


Messages Page 31 of 36
1
...
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
...
36
Prev
Next
Last
Go To Msg #
Search This Discussion

#293 of 349
Re: What about... [bensbenz300se] by fintail
Oct 11, 2006 (6:12 pm)
Reply

Replying to: bensbenz300se (Oct 11, 2006 2:15 pm)

I agree with the W126, which on the worldwide stage was certainly more important than the 1981 Escort (Escort was an existing model everywhere but NA - not really new).
 
Audi design was pretty significant too.
#294 of 349
right on for 94 by skierx420
Oct 12, 2006 (3:29 pm)
Reply
i got the trucks for 94. I have no clue for 1996. in fact i cannot think of much through the late 90's cept for SUV's but they were all chasing the trend. The full size Ford Bronco left us in 1996 (I had an 80 and loved it and an 86 and hated it). I dont know when the H1 went up for sale to the public, that could be in there. The late 90's were full of oversize SUVs but nothing really sticks out. I think the BMW Z3 came out in that era. Got any other ideas?
#295 of 349
Re: right on for 94 [skierx420] by kyfdx HOST
Oct 12, 2006 (5:23 pm)
Reply

Replying to: skierx420 (Oct 12, 2006 3:29 pm)

The only new model I can come up with for '96 was the Audi A4..
 
That might be significant, as it was a big step forward for Audi... and they are still selling the same basic car today.. but, in the big picture, not so much...
 
'96 was also the first year for the uni-body Pathfinder... the first one that wasn't based on the Nissan pickup..
 
Shewww... I'm really reaching...
#296 of 349
. by fintail
Oct 12, 2006 (5:44 pm)
Reply
1996....hmmm ovoid Taurus...bug-eyed Mercedes W210 E class...A4...that's all I can think of.
 
I think that Pathfinder came out in 95.
#297 of 349
Re: right on for 94 [kyfdx] by andre1969
Oct 12, 2006 (6:27 pm)
Reply

Replying to: kyfdx (Oct 12, 2006 5:23 pm)

'96 was also the first year for the uni-body Pathfinder... the first one that wasn't based on the Nissan pickup..
 
I never knew that generation of Pathfinder was unitized. FWIW I guess it didn't work out too well, because they're body-on-frame again these days. Actually, Nissan only builds one basic truck these days, just in different lengths. The Pathfinder, Frontier, and Xterra are all the same basic thing, and are really kinda like Titans and Armadas that don't overhang the frame rails as much.
 
I'm drawing a total blank for 1996, though. Even in 1997 I can't think of a whole lot on the domestic front. Dodge redid the Dakota and introduced the Durango. Chevy gave us the Malibu, the car you knew America could build. Don't laugh...it actually WAS considered pretty competitive at the time, especially since Toyota kinda shot themselves in the foot with the 1997 Camry redesign which seemed decontented and almost rental car-ish compared to the '92-96. GM's reworked Grand Prix and Century/Regal actually seemed kinda promising at the time, but seemed to age fast. IIRC the Intrigue launched as a 1998 model.
 
What year did Ford come out with the SVT version of the Contour?
 
edit: I forgot about the ovoid Taurus for 1996. I guess it was significant in making sure that the Taurus would start a long downward spiral into oblivion.
#298 of 349
Oh yeah... by andre1969
Oct 12, 2006 (6:38 pm)
Reply
someone needs to let the Edmund's folks know that the Ram started offering a 4-speed automatic in 1988, NOT 1994!
#299 of 349
Re: Oh yeah... [andre1969] by editor_karl
Oct 13, 2006 (7:39 am)
Reply

Replying to: andre1969 (Oct 12, 2006 6:38 pm)

1994 was the first year you could get a four-speed auto with the Cummings diesel, and the V10. A big deal since (back then) four-speeds that could handle big HP/Torque numbers in a truck were pretty scarce. Sort of like how you can't get the seven-speed M-B tranny on their more powerful models today (only the five-speed).
#300 of 349
Well... by lemko
Oct 13, 2006 (8:30 am)
Reply
...I'd pick three cars as significant "lasts." The 1996 Cadillac Fleetwood, Buick Roadmaster, and Chevrolet Caprice were the last full-size, full-frame, RWD, V-8-powered GM cars. Ten years ago, these cars were numbers one, two, and three on my car-shopping short list
#301 of 349
Re: Well... [lemko] by bumpy
Oct 13, 2006 (9:02 am)
Reply

Replying to: lemko (Oct 13, 2006 8:30 am)

Hmmm. I'd say the Impala SS would be a good runner-up for 1994 and might have made the grade if GM hadn't killed the RWD cars two years later to build more Tahoes.
#302 of 349
Re: . [fintail] by kyfdx HOST
Oct 13, 2006 (1:22 pm)
Reply

Replying to: fintail (Oct 12, 2006 5:44 pm)

Normally, I wouldn't know.... But, I had a '95 Pathfinder SE... the last of the boxy ones...
 
Well, it wasn't really the last.... as noted by others, the boxy look is back...

Messages Page 31 of 36
1
...
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
...
36
Prev
Next
Last
Go To Msg #
Search This Discussion
To POST a message, please Sign In.

New? Join Now!

Forum Tools

Please sign in.
Email Address:

Password:

Forgot Password?

Search Forums

Enter Keyword(s)

Advanced Search

Browse by Vehicle



View All Vehicles
Advertisement
Ask the Community
See What People Are Asking

Browse by Board

Browse by Topic


View All Topics
Advertisement