Tuesday 18 November 2014

The Best Of The Worst

Regular readers of my blogs will hopefully notice I tend to take a wry and ironic look at the world as thats where I find the most entertaining ideas and narratives can be found.  There are perhaps those who have come to believe that this is my natural state and will have me as a dyed-in-the-wool cynic constantly pained by the idiocy of both myself and my fellow humans. But the reality is that its in looking for the worst it helps us to appreciate the best of our lives and I hope that most will see this as the undertow, and indeed, humour of my ramblings. 

So, bearing that in mind, I decided to look for the best examples of the worst cars ever constructed if that makes any sense at all?  Ill state from the outset that this list is purely subjective and is made up of my on-line research of similar reviews combined with my own particular pet hates but I hope will include some undisputed four-wheeled horrors we can all agree would have been better left on the drawing board. Of course, I know that beauty is in the eye of the beholder and that there are some things cars included- that can, with the passage of time, transcend their initial badness to become true contemporary classics. Maybe a few of these are listed below so lets get on and see where we end up

Austin Allegro: Many will see this as a cheap shot. How much more can be said about the All Aggrothat hasnt already been written? We all know about the amorphous shape, the square steering wheel, the (alleged) rust, the diarrhoea coloured paint options, the indifferent interiors and woeful performance; surely that should be enough. However, I find I like what Sir Digby Jones said when commenting about bad business practice: "It is what I call the British Leyland model – you put a lot of money in at the top, and an Austin Allegro comes out at the bottom.”  The only questions to answer are whose bottom is he referring to and whether it also gave us the Metro, Maestro and Montego?

Morris Marina and/or Ital: At one time the word Morris pre-fixed some very worthy motors. Try adding Oxford, Minor, A35 and youre in good, if not great car territory.  Sophisticated they werent but at least they were solid, steadfast and maybe even reliable. Salt of the earth motoring from a bygone age made by manufacturers who seemed to care about their product and produced it as well as they could.  Then at the end of the British Leyland story, there were the moribund efforts above. Cynical attempts by accountants and marketers to milk the last vestiges of integrity from a well thought of brand by applying it to whatever crap the company could be bothered to shove out of dying car factories in the West Midlands. Try buying a new Morris branded car today.  You cant can you?  I wonder why.

Triumph TR7.  The successor to the TR6 and an ignominious end to the noble TR series cars. A wedge shaped sports two-seater that resembled a doorstop or a hunk of cheese. I suppose on the plus side it does easily evoke the decade in which it was conceived and made.  Its irrevocably 70s in look and design, no doubt about that; but even if you think thats cool, even though it was driven by Joanna Lumley in The New Avengers, this was a bad car. It was the very definition of form over function in automotive clothes. Despite their futuristic looks they were badly built and based on ageing technology and platforms that were spared any form of innovation that might have made them worth owning thats a bit sad really.

Trabant: The Cold War peoples car.  After a 15 year wait residents living east of the Berlin Wall were able to purchase one of the most indifferent cars ever made.  Not only were they smelly, noisy and horrible to drive the bodywork was made from the bi-products of cotton manufacture. I encountered a lot of these cars whilst in Berlin just after the Wall came down. Liberated East-Berliners joyously drove their two-stroke Trabis across Checkpoint Charlie into the free world in search of Levi Jeans, Coca Cola and Marlboro ciggies immediately polluting the whole area with noxious, oily fumes. 

I vividly remember seeing lines of them spewing clouds of blue/white smoke which would cause most western drivers to stop and wonder if theyd accidentally filled up with diesel. Then there was the teeth clenching crunch as gears were engaged and the squeal of minuscule drum brakes. But you know what; according to some reports they just kept going with reported lifespans in excess of 28 years in some cases. I wonder if that would be the case if theyd been made in Cowley for example?

Lada Riva:  Another communist conveyance. I had a mate who drove one of these Soviet lovelies and wed tootle about quite happily in it wincing at the crashing noise as we hit potholes in the road.  But what an austere box it was. Based on a Fiat 124 the Riva pretty much defined basic motoring.  When they were introduced to the UK they traded on their cheapness and were reasonably popular as robust economy cars.  When our emissions standards changed their dirty engines didnt make the grade and that pretty much did for them as saleable cars in the UK. 

However, despite their general awfulness, they did have a couple of unique advantages over other cars in that they were designed to cope with harsh Russian winters so invariably started well on cold days and had a great heater!  As for finding any other redeeming features youd have to say: 'niet!'

Ford Pinto: This is the notorious car that killed people. Not necessarily a bad car overall until that is you were waiting to turn with your indicator flashing. Then it changed from an indifferent car into a bomb. Under these circumstances a rear end shunt created a deadly fireball as the live electrics combined with a burst petrol tank. 

Worse still, Ford knew about this design defect and instead of recalling all cars for an alleged one dollar fix, they calculated that paying the resulting lawsuits would work out cheaper. Its one of the worst examples of corporate accounting at its most cynical and dangerous. Luckily the US courts found this out and punished Ford to the tune of millions of dollars.

Pontiac Aztek: I have to mention this as it always appears on bad car lists but it I still think it a pity it wasnt sold in the UK. The Aztek personifies - to the extreme - the malign effect accountants and marketing people have on car design and, similar to British Leyland et al this blinkered penny pinching destroyed an historic US car brand. 

As a crossover SUV it apparently functioned quite well but aesthetically it was a minger to end all mingers. Interestingly the Aztek has recently been given some late-onset street cred' as the featured car in the wildly popular US series Breaking Bad.

Like him or not Top Gears Jeremy Clarkson has a subtle way of indicating hes in the presence of a bad car: he affects a Brummie accent when describing it. In this one vocal inflection he telegraphs one of the common factors that tie many of these cars and their rotten reputations together and whilst you could equally use a Scouse or Oxfordshire accent, the message is clear: at some point many car manufacturers lost their souls to money, politics or incompetence. 

Perhaps worse, many just stopped caring and as a result theyre now gone. 

So there you have it. Were my choices right? What would you have added (theres plenty more I might have mentioned)? Alternatively, perhaps youre the owner of one of these beauties, now simmering and thinking about adding a comment rebuking me for my unkind words?  If so, please refer to paragraph one, and remember I owned one or two of these cars myself.

First Published in H&H CVC Magazine  - Copyright Anthony Boe 2014 All Rights Reserved

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