Modern day badge engineering
Modern day badge engineering
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Discussion

tonys

Original Poster:

1,080 posts

244 months

Friday 4th November 2011
quotequote all
Austin/Morris/BL etc. were well known for their badge engineering in the 1960s and 70s – “my Wolseley 1100 is much better than your Austin 1100” etc. etc.. At least you could work out the engine sizes though.


Is the latest form of badge engineering the way that some manufacturers are ‘badging’ their cars now; an old Merc 280, for example, was 2.8litres, whereas nowadays they have C200cdi, C220cdi and C250cdi, all with basically the same 2143cc engine. So, should that be C210?

I suppose they will say that, whereas the old cars gained extra power by means of larger engines, the new ones gain extra power by an extra tweak to the mapping (does that really justify the extra cost charged??, an extra turbo etc.. A C250 Blue Efficiency is now just a tweaked C180.

BMW are just as bad, ie 316d, 318d and 320d all have basically the same engine (1997cc), and a petrol 328 is now (or will be) a 4 cylinder 2.0 litre (1997cc), the same as the 320.

As an idea, why don’t they just use different letters to differentiate between the more lesser/more powerful versions, how about, for example, X, L, XLR, GT etc. Or has someone already used themsmile


As for an Aston Cygnet, well at least it is probably a bit better than a VandenPlas 1100; or is it scratchchin

Am I the only one who gets confused these days, or should I get a newer anorak.

twazzock

1,930 posts

190 months

Friday 4th November 2011
quotequote all
Well the alternative is to stick the full spec on the back, eg BMW 3-series 1997cc 180bhp @5000rpm, 150lb ft @2250rpm 48mpg SE, or whatever.

Or just make it dead simple and put the list price on the back, that's what most people are interested in when they look for a badge...

Liquid Knight

15,754 posts

204 months

Friday 4th November 2011
quotequote all
I saw a badge the other day that was held on with a plastic pin instead of a metal one. That just can't be durable can it?

Caulkhead

4,938 posts

178 months

Friday 4th November 2011
quotequote all
It's not a new game to MB you know. My uncle's Merc 450SEL was a 6.9litre engine. I couldn't help thinking at the time that 690SEL would've sounded so much better in the playground. . . . . smile


tonys

Original Poster:

1,080 posts

244 months

Friday 4th November 2011
quotequote all
twazzock said:
Well the alternative is to stick the full spec on the back, eg BMW 3-series 1997cc 180bhp @5000rpm, 150lb ft @2250rpm 48mpg SE, or whatever.

Or just make it dead simple and put the list price on the back, that's what most people are interested in when they look for a badge...
You ought to patent that idea before some BM PR guru reads this biggrin


J4CKO

45,457 posts

221 months

Friday 4th November 2011
quotequote all
They should ALL be named after chocolate bars, wife has a Ford "Galaxy", I have a Saab "Aero" (it is remapped so it runs extra "Boost"), am looking for something RWD though which will be my "Drifter", we have a Fiat 500 which isn't confectionery related in any way but is a bit "Flakey".

Zwoelf

25,867 posts

227 months

Friday 4th November 2011
quotequote all
Caulkhead said:
It's not a new game to MB you know.
Or BMW, the E23 745i was a 3.2 turbo. It reflects position in the range by relative power output, rather than an absolute definitive indicator of what's under the bonnet. Some are chosen for the way they are said as much as anything.

Seven-five-four-eye is clumsier than simply seven-fifty-eye, Likewise the 4.4 litre "x40is". An amusing example is found in the E34 Five Series - the 535i had a 3,430cc engine (but 534i sounds silly) and the M5 "3.6" has 3,535cc, so is a 3.5. hehe

Currently, despite being a 3.0 diesel, that can be either a x25d, x30d, x35d or x40d. In the Five Series the engine that is a 535d becomes a 640d and 740d.

Simplest method is to tick the "delete engine designation badge" NCO hehe

dvs_dave

9,040 posts

246 months

Friday 4th November 2011
quotequote all
A better way would be to classify them based on that particular version's power output to the nearest 10 hp.

Mercedes number their commercial vehicles this way (except the "class" is denoted by it's weight instead) which makes much more sense.

Eg for merc: C150, C180, C200, C230, C290, C120 CDI, C170 CDI, C220 CDI, C480 AMG etc. etc.

Same would work for BMW: 320 (204 hp), 325 (245 hp) , 330 (306 hp) etc etc.

Much more sensible as these days it's the power output that differentiates the models rather than the displacement which leads to totally meaningless numbering.

twazzock

1,930 posts

190 months

Friday 4th November 2011
quotequote all
dvs_dave said:
A better way would be to classify them based on that particular version's power output to the nearest 10 hp.

Mercedes number their commercial vehicles this way (except the "class" is denoted by it's weight instead) which makes much more sense.

Eg for merc: C150, C180, C200, C230, C290, C120 CDI, C170 CDI, C220 CDI, C480 AMG etc. etc.

Same would work for BMW: 320 (204 hp), 325 (245 hp) , 330 (306 hp) etc etc.

Much more sensible as these days it's the power output that differentiates the models rather than the displacement which leads to totally meaningless numbering.
That's a bit vague, I think my idea is better hehe

Arthur Jackson

2,111 posts

251 months

Friday 4th November 2011
quotequote all
twazzock said:
Well the alternative is to stick the full spec on the back, eg BMW 3-series 1997cc 180bhp @5000rpm, 150lb ft @2250rpm 48mpg SE, or whatever.

Or just make it dead simple and put the list price on the back, that's what most people are interested in when they look for a badge...
rofl

kambites

70,339 posts

242 months

Friday 4th November 2011
quotequote all
The value of a car has little or nothing directly to do with the cost to produce it. I don't see why a 200bhp 2.1 is worth less than a 200bhp 2.8.

marcosgt

11,413 posts

197 months

Friday 4th November 2011
quotequote all
I thought this was going to be about Chyslers and Lancias and Toyotas and Subarus.

Far duller in reality...

It's not "badge engineering" where you usually got something a little different for your money it's "Marketing bullst" where they try and convince you to pay more for less! biggrin

BMW numbers always USED to mean something, not sure exactly when they started conning people, probably when the majority of people buying their cars stopped caring about what they were buying.

M.

Zwoelf

25,867 posts

227 months

Friday 4th November 2011
quotequote all
marcosgt said:
BMW numbers always USED to mean something, not sure exactly when they started conning people, probably when the majority of people buying their cars stopped caring about what they were buying.

M.
The 1971 E3 3.3Li had a 3.2 litre engine (3,188cc). The 1979 E21 316 had a 1.8 litre carbureted engine as differentiated from the 318i which had fuel injection. So for quite some time now. wink



Edited by Zwoelf on Friday 4th November 17:08

Zod

35,295 posts

279 months

Friday 4th November 2011
quotequote all
marcosgt said:
BMW numbers always USED to mean something, not sure exactly when they started conning people, probably when the majority of people buying their cars stopped caring about what they were buying.
So, if you want to think of it that way, BMW started conning people over 30 yeasr ago. There is 0of course, no con. They try to make the numbers reflect what would be the displacement of an equivalent na engine. I have a 50i car. It has a 4.4 litre twin-turbo V8, so they say it's the equivalent of a 5 litre engine. That's quite conservative, I'd say.

rolando

2,406 posts

176 months

Friday 4th November 2011
quotequote all
Why not go back to horse power, as in Austin 7, Morris 8, Standard 10, Alvis Speed 25?



wink

marcosgt

11,413 posts

197 months

Friday 4th November 2011
quotequote all
Zwoelf said:
marcosgt said:
BMW numbers always USED to mean something, not sure exactly when they started conning people, probably when the majority of people buying their cars stopped caring about what they were buying.

M.
The 1971 E3 3.3Li had a 3.2 litre engine (3,188cc). The 1979 E21 316 had a 1.8 litre carbureted engine as differentiated from the 318i which had fuel injection. So for quite some time now. wink
Wow, was it THAT long ago smile I remember the 316 with a 1.8 litre engine, but at least you were getting extra for your money biggrin

The idea that it represents a typical n/a engine makes marketing 'sense', but not any technical sense; a 545 Turbo should be quicker than a 5.0 litre car, surely?

Why not just call them 325 Turbo, 325 Twin Turbo or 545 Turbo or if the whole range is turbocharged, 325, 325+/s/tii or whatever and 545!

I suppose the truth is to provide some consistency from E number to E number.

I can remember a 323i being a quick 3 series and then, a couple of version later, the 325i was a mid range one! this way people think of the 330 as quite fast and the 335 as the quick one (M3 excepted) from version to version.

M

kambites

70,339 posts

242 months

Friday 4th November 2011
quotequote all
I had always assumed that BMW were aiming to keep the performance roughly the same for a given number - that one 318i would have roughly the same power to weight ratio as any other. I have no idea if that's actually true, though?

Zwoelf

25,867 posts

227 months

Friday 4th November 2011
quotequote all
marcosgt said:
The idea that it represents a typical n/a engine makes marketing 'sense', but not any technical sense; a 545 Turbo should be quicker than a 5.0 litre car, surely?
The 4.8 litre NA V8 (also badged 550i) that the 4.4 bi turbo superseded had an output of 367bhp, the twin turbo V8 has 402 so there is some sense in them both being badged 550i.

Although it could equally have been badged 540ti/545ti I guess. Except those are clumsier to say out loud in most languages and linguistic neatness/ease of pronunciation in world markets is a consideration.

I still vastly prefer alpha numeric model designations than names that are usually daft.

davepoth

29,395 posts

220 months

Friday 4th November 2011
quotequote all
BMW have been at this for ages. I had a D-reg E30 which was a 316. It had a 1.8 engine.

Zwoelf

25,867 posts

227 months

Friday 4th November 2011
quotequote all
davepoth said:
BMW have been at this for ages. I had a D-reg E30 which was a 316. It had a 1.8 engine.
A couple of years later though, the 316i was a 1.6.