RE: PH Blog: LA confidential

RE: PH Blog: LA confidential

Monday 3rd December 2012

PH Blog: LA confidential

After a weekend to digest the show Harris ponders the growing swagger of the European brands Stateside



I saw the best car at the LA show the moment I walked into the first hall: a 1961 Lincoln Continental – dark green, vast, dignified and incalculably cool. For me it was the stand-out machine on a curious Lincoln stand which prominently displayed several heritage models whilst hiding the new car somewhere behind a curtain. Once I’d seen the newbie, this strategy made perfect sense.

Beetle Cab with faux steels appealed
Beetle Cab with faux steels appealed
The retrospective approach wasn’t repeated by any other brands, save perhaps VW, which displayed four new Beetle Convertibles in homage specifications for the 50s, 60s, 70s and 80s. At least I think that’s what they were doing. The black car on cod steel rims looked rather appealing to these jet-lagged eyes. Amazing that we now have people making alloy wheels look like pressed steel items. Could I drive a Beetle cab for a year as my only car? No.

California is probably the most relevant place to unveil a sports car, hence Porsche’s decision to show the new Cayman. You’ll judge the design for yourselves, but the proportions are neat and the slightly higher tailgate line gives it a hint of Z4 M from some angles. The only real downside comes in the form of the Boxster – there was one a few yards away, and even though the Cayman is a seriously attractive car, it just serves to remind us how slinky the little roadster is. We’ll be driving the Cayman in February.

Competition-spec Raptor: mad, in a good way
Competition-spec Raptor: mad, in a good way
And that was kind of it as far as major international unveils went. Which I suppose marks the show down as something of a disappointment – but these things are never quite that simple.

For starters, any domestic US car show offers endless curiosities for those of us not especially knowledgeable about US models – swarms of Chargers, Challengers ‘vettes and even the new Viper, which to me looked like it was being displayed in seven-eighths scale.

There was even a competition-spec Ford Raptor, complete with cage and other trickery. Surely I’m not the only fool lurking on PH who toys with the idiotic idea of importing one of these trucks, certain in the knowledge it be undriveable in the UK?

SLS Black: no words needed
SLS Black: no words needed
Smart had a fashion designer apply his talents to one if its vehicles – the results were fairly outrageous and not dissimilar to Soprano’s gangster Paulie Walnuts’ hairstyle. Luckily, a few yards away was the SLS Black Series, which although treading a dangerous line between looking plain nuts for a factory machine, and appearing to have seen some aftermarket enhancements, made quite an impact. With 622hp, weighing 70kg less than the standard car, and using a new version of the Michelin Pilot Super Sport, it’s going to fly. One techie note: the differential is an electrically actuated plate item, allowing constantly varying locking ratios. When asked if this might appear on other AMGs in the future, a senior company employee simply smirked.

Jaguar made much noise about the F-Type, but we’ve already had a decent poke around that – so the main point of interest was the XFR-S, a great thug of a 550hp saloon which makes a Sierra Cosworth look shy and retiring. The car invokes mixed feelings – on the one hand a sense of pride that a British company is gutsy enough to make such a beast; on the other a slight sense of unease that it will ask £7K more than BMW wants for an M5, and yet the basic XF platform is really a mildly updated S-Type, a car from the late 90s. Thankfully, you can remove the rear spoiler.

Indy Honda had a pert behind
Indy Honda had a pert behind
Kia punctuated its seemingly irrepressible rise to market domination with a reminder that it can still do some pretty hateful things: there were a couple of ‘tuners’ cars from last months SEMA show, one of which was the most offensive car you will have the misfortune to view in 2012.

Honda never fails to impress me at these events. There really wasn’t much of interest on the main stand other than an Indy car, whose rear-end looks very neat up close. So as usual, it ordered a few products in a small booth to demonstrate the breadth of its engineering skills: I love little displays like this and spent more time looking at a lawnmower than I did on the entire Buick stand.

It all felt very European-dominated to me. The new Corvette wasn’t being shown, and the Ford stand was a vast empty space with a few European-looking models lurking among the weird American minivan fodder. The crowds arrived, but only when Ken Block made an appearance. But with new products and intriguing concepts from Jaguar, land Rover, VW, BMW and Mercedes, the US manufacturers appeared bland and dull. Apart from the Raptor, of course.

Chris

Author
Discussion

STiG911

Original Poster:

1,210 posts

167 months

Monday 3rd December 2012
quotequote all
Got some stones comparing Paulie Walnuts to a Smart Car - beware Garbage Trucks and trips to the butchers!

joshleb

1,544 posts

144 months

Monday 3rd December 2012
quotequote all
US cars are boring though so no wonder it was up the Europeans and Asians to bring something interesting to the show!

jbi

12,671 posts

204 months

Monday 3rd December 2012
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joshleb said:
US cars are boring though so no wonder it was up the Europeans and Asians to bring something interesting to the show!
I'm assuming that was irony wink

wl606

268 posts

200 months

Monday 3rd December 2012
quotequote all
Porsche seem to be doing alright in the US. Sales up 71% in November - http://www.heraldonline.com/2012/12/03/4456746/por...

Hellbound

2,500 posts

176 months

Monday 3rd December 2012
quotequote all
I was day dreaming about a sky blue new new Beetle festooned with wooden racks, steelies and 'surfer/sixties' stickers round the rear windscreen.

Don't laugh, it would look awesome! Maybe the 'R' version mixed up with a bit of rat look. I don't know, but there's potential there with the new shape, mark my words.

Hellbound

2,500 posts

176 months

Monday 3rd December 2012
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Oh and rumor has it there's going to be a 4 cylinder turbo Cayman at Frankfurt.

mr_tony

6,328 posts

269 months

Monday 3rd December 2012
quotequote all
chris harris said:
a 1961 Lincoln Continental – dark green, vast, dignified and incalculably cool
Aren't they just. Seriously plotting to import one for pimping about town duties, the garage is big enough. Just. I never tire of trawling through the us classifieds searching them out, really fancy driving coast to coast in one then sticking it on a boat home...

Todzilla

237 posts

175 months

Tuesday 4th December 2012
quotequote all
mr_tony said:
Aren't they just. Seriously plotting to import one for pimping about town duties, the garage is big enough. Just. I never tire of trawling through the us classifieds searching them out, really fancy driving coast to coast in one then sticking it on a boat home...
Ha ha... I can honestly say I feel the same, except I did it about 8 years ago! Got a one-owner black plate car out of Northern California via Ebay as a 30th present to myself...! Drove it around Europe for 7 years and then shipped it to Australia when we emigrated 18months ago - it's perfectly suited to cruising up and down the Northern Beaches!

Captain Cadillac

2,974 posts

187 months

Tuesday 4th December 2012
quotequote all
mr_tony said:
chris harris said:
a 1961 Lincoln Continental – dark green, vast, dignified and incalculably cool
Aren't they just. Seriously plotting to import one for pimping about town duties, the garage is big enough. Just. I never tire of trawling through the us classifieds searching them out, really fancy driving coast to coast in one then sticking it on a boat home...
I have 2 1960 Lincolns but I think that I need a 61-62 to keep them company...... I've been staring at that exact dark green on for some time now.

Verde

506 posts

188 months

Tuesday 4th December 2012
quotequote all
Stunning car and a brilliant salute to art deco design. I've been yearning for one for years now and still look at the ads in hope I find one to my liking. Black four door with grey or black interior, or white convertible. Suicide doors on a 4-door convertible is da bomb. But for those who don't think that U.S. cars are (albeit finally) making a comeback isn't looking very hard. The new 3-series style Cadillac, the Camry beating Ford, the EV-1, the soon-to-be Corvette and Viper and the Laguna Seca Mustang are just some of the serving suggestions. Perfect and world-beating? Not yet. But an incredible return to goodness with the curve continuing to steepen.
Oh and most of us Yanks know that the L.A. Auto Show is a pretty low bar. The OP should have asked a few of us.
V

Captain Cadillac said:
mr_tony said:
chris harris said:
a 1961 Lincoln Continental – dark green, vast, dignified and incalculably cool

Veeayt

3,139 posts

205 months

Tuesday 4th December 2012
quotequote all
Where's the rest of the pics?

AdeV

621 posts

284 months

Tuesday 4th December 2012
quotequote all
mr_tony said:
chris harris said:
a 1961 Lincoln Continental – dark green, vast, dignified and incalculably cool
Aren't they just. Seriously plotting to import one for pimping about town duties, the garage is big enough. Just. I never tire of trawling through the us classifieds searching them out, really fancy driving coast to coast in one then sticking it on a boat home...
You are me, you are.... I personally prefer the look of the '65 model, and I'd quite like a ragtop as well, even though the roof is legendarily bad, I am told.

Geek tip: The '65 hard-top was the car from the Matrix.

E-B

394 posts

178 months

Tuesday 4th December 2012
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The race ready Ford Raptor gets my vote gang (coz i'm an off road racer see).

But that Linc' is just Gorgeous!


garypotter

1,499 posts

150 months

Tuesday 4th December 2012
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Luv the hill billy truck, what sort of HP does it have? any one know

richb77

887 posts

161 months

Tuesday 4th December 2012
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Todzilla said:
mr_tony said:
"blah blah...shipped it to Australia when we emigrated 18months ago - it's perfectly suited to cruising up and down the Northern Beaches!
I hate you.

rolleyes

Trevor M

57 posts

145 months

Tuesday 4th December 2012
quotequote all
"...the US manufacturers appeared bland and dull."

Oddly, when US manufacturers are under pressure their products become exciting and interesting. Like that landmark Lincoln. If you read about how that car came about it was due to pressure to scrap the whole thing as sales were bad for the Continental. They scrambled, went through three whole different visions, and finally that masterpiece appeared.

The same thing happens with the US film industry. And practically all US corporations that produce creative things. Pressure results in creativity and risk-taking; comfort results in complacency and recycled ideas playing it safe.

This tells us that the US auto industry is under no pressure, or at least they feel no pressure this year. In recent years, yes. Not this year.

sisu

2,580 posts

173 months

Tuesday 4th December 2012
quotequote all
Did you want to go to the Essen Motor Show instead next year Chris?

Contigo

3,113 posts

209 months

Wednesday 5th December 2012
quotequote all
I was in Dubai recently and in a Multi-storey I stumbled across this interesting piece.





Care to guess who owned it and how much it sold for?


markpiston

1 posts

136 months

Wednesday 5th December 2012
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I bought a Raptor a year ago. 6.2 V8 420Bhp. I live in the Derbyshire dales so i can confirm that it fits down the lanes (just). Being so high left hand drive is no problem, and it is so comfy on a motorway stint. Only down side is that i am getting only 12mpg, but as i have converted it to LPG equates to about 24 diesel mpg's.

Captain Cadillac

2,974 posts

187 months

Friday 7th December 2012
quotequote all
Contigo said:
I was in Dubai recently and in a Multi-storey I stumbled across this interesting piece.





Care to guess who owned it and how much it sold for?
$10k-12k? Looks like a driver quality car to me...

Note: Do not ever buy an old Lincoln to restore unless you are highly experienced with them. These are not your typical simple and cheap to fix 60s Yank Tanks. Think Hydraulic wiper motors... vacuum lines for miles.. and electric gizmos galore.