Good/Great cars-ruined by image of their drivers
Good/Great cars-ruined by image of their drivers
Author
Discussion

supacool1

Original Poster:

734 posts

204 months

Tuesday 28th April
quotequote all
Hi there!

As I was reading the spotted article about the 'one of one' Corsa VXR, I got thinking about the fact it was and is a great steer but now likely remembered as a chav charriot of choice. I remember fondly how well it drove around Thruxton on the VXR days. And the fact that I liked it more than the VXR-8 - the first V8 I drove. But as the peeps on that thread rightly said it's image is now more aligned to council estate chav's and other (insert your own pre conceived prejudices) associated with that car/perfomance brand.

What other good/great cars are tarred with the same brush of 'Great cars but marred by the dipsttey of the types of owners' and I would never want to be assosciated with that type of person.

It's low hanging fruit but I'll start us off....

Any Performance VXR Vauxhaul...

.....And go.....!

Jaybee1981

67 posts

144 months

Tuesday 28th April
quotequote all
BMW 140i
Audi RS3
Mercedes A45

All great cars in their segment. All i identify with idiots.

DaveCWK

2,329 posts

199 months

Tuesday 28th April
quotequote all
C63.

supacool1

Original Poster:

734 posts

204 months

Tuesday 28th April
quotequote all
Jaybee1981 said:
BMW 140i
Audi RS3
Mercedes A45

All great cars in their segment. All i identify with idiots.
Yup...all low hanging fruit...but always driven by weapons grade throbbers...

C5_Steve

7,929 posts

128 months

Tuesday 28th April
quotequote all
E46 BMW M3.

Edited by C5_Steve on Tuesday 28th April 12:25

Trash_panda

7,876 posts

229 months

Tuesday 28th April
quotequote all
Rr svr - non legal pharmaceutical seller
Lamborghini - seems to be the brand of choice for young 'course' sellers to parade and 'flex' in

Unreal

9,488 posts

50 months

Tuesday 28th April
quotequote all
Golf R every time.

RDMcG

20,623 posts

232 months

Tuesday 28th April
quotequote all
Says more about the people who worry about their own image than the people who buy them . I personally have zero interest in buying a hot hatch, EV, Ferrari, any car with modifications, in fact anything used but these are perfectly rational choices for others.

Some people buy cars for image so is it more valid to buy a tasteful Aston that fits the neighborhood and reflects your captain of industry image than a kid buying a used BMW and putting a wing on it to feel it improves performance?

Why does anyone care.?

WH16

8,063 posts

243 months

Tuesday 28th April
quotequote all
I would say Range Rover Sport, but it seems most RRS drivers have migrated to the L663 Defender, so that. Especially in quadruple-black.

Baldchap

9,557 posts

117 months

Tuesday 28th April
quotequote all
As a former RS4 and Golf R owner, I have no opinion on this topic whatsoever. laugh

SuperPav

1,297 posts

150 months

Tuesday 28th April
quotequote all
Out of modern stuff, Golf R and RR SVR both spring to mind, along with RS3, C63.... seems to be a running theme.

Genuinely good cars, but ones where I would (rightly or wrongly) always have a slight nagging doubt about associations with the "typical" image of these. Not enough to stop me from buying a good one, but a consideration nonetheless (I've had a Golf R before, and debadged it).


But the one car that jumps out most at me when I saw the title of the OP is a Subaru WRX or Lancer Evo (of any vintage 1990-2010) - as a car they appeal to me and I grew up around them, but nowadays the image puts me off to the point I'd probably never own one. Irrational, sure, but we all have our own views...

Unreal

9,488 posts

50 months

Tuesday 28th April
quotequote all
RDMcG said:
Says more about the people who worry about their own image than the people who buy them . I personally have zero interest in buying a hot hatch, EV, Ferrari, any car with modifications, in fact anything used but these are perfectly rational choices for others.

Some people buy cars for image so is it more valid to buy a tasteful Aston that fits the neighborhood and reflects your captain of industry image than a kid buying a used BMW and putting a wing on it to feel it improves performance?

Why does anyone care.?
I don't care.

I'm just answering the OP's question. It's hardly serious.

WH16

8,063 posts

243 months

Tuesday 28th April
quotequote all
SuperPav said:
But the one car that jumps out most at me when I saw the title of the OP is a Subaru WRX or Lancer Evo (of any vintage 1990-2010) - as a car they appeal to me and I grew up around them, but nowadays the image puts me off to the point I'd probably never own one. Irrational, sure, but we all have our own views...
I think they are starting to come out the other side though. The value has risen, the performance is no longer considered anything special, and the earlier ones look positively restrained compared with the modern performance equivalents.

A standard 90's Impreza would probably go completely unnoticed by most people these days.

NH-0

675 posts

121 months

Tuesday 28th April
quotequote all
Honda Jazz

Dixy

3,526 posts

230 months

Tuesday 28th April
quotequote all
NH-0 said:
Honda Jazz
Yes but no but.
Was driven by granny and grandad but since grandad died and granny gave up driving it has been given to 18 year old who is equally unskilled.

LRDefender

509 posts

33 months

Tuesday 28th April
quotequote all
I agree with the previous poster, who gives a flying flip what other people think as I firmly believe it shows a huge lack of self confidence.

But if I had to choose one car that portrays an image of the owner then it would be any Rolls Royce. wink

alscar

8,454 posts

238 months

Tuesday 28th April
quotequote all
Perhaps geographical area needs to be added in this matrix ?
I’ve just asked my wife whose last 3 cars were an Audi S3 , RS3 and her current RS4 and not surprisingly her view is somewhat different.

RizzoTheRat

28,325 posts

217 months

Tuesday 28th April
quotequote all
NH-0 said:
Honda Jazz
This is the winner for me. They're a great car, economical, reliable, huge inside, and a small turning circle and short overhangs make it really easy to park in a tight space. Not so great on a motorway but they're pretty much the ideal city car, yet have this OAP image and don't get bought by younger people in the UK.



Deerfoot

5,176 posts

209 months

Tuesday 28th April
quotequote all
RizzoTheRat said:
NH-0 said:
Honda Jazz
This is the winner for me. They're a great car, economical, reliable, huge inside, and a small turning circle and short overhangs make it really easy to park in a tight space. Not so great on a motorway but they're pretty much the ideal city car, yet have this OAP image and don't get bought by younger people in the UK.
We were mid 30s when we bought our Jazz, even the salesman commented that we were somewhat younger than the usual Jazz customers.

Great car though.

supacool1

Original Poster:

734 posts

204 months

Tuesday 28th April
quotequote all
WH16 said:
I think they are starting to come out the other side though. The value has risen, the performance is no longer considered anything special, and the earlier ones look positively restrained compared with the modern performance equivalents.

A standard 90's Impreza would probably go completely unnoticed by most people these days.
Yes this...almost gone full circle.

Bemused by the Jazz addition. But understand, as when I see one when on my motorbike I always expect the unexpected... biggrin