Posts Tagged ‘Saab’

Porsche 911 Overhang Hangover

Tuesday, August 23rd, 2011

When we saw the new 911 last week, we were immedi­ately struck by the size of the overhang. We thought it made the car look ugly.

It’s predictable that when a new version of the totemic Porsche comes along, it puts the cat among the pigeons. You get used to seeing so many of the current edition at any one time, it’s always going to be an aesthetic jar when a new version comes along. Human nature is draw to the familiar and rejects instinct­ively anything that disturbs that comforting field.

The 911 with its big flat six buried in the rear overhang itself ever since its conception at the start of the sixties, has always been a rare excep­tions —  a sports car that works with a lot of rear overhang.

Balance, handling, performance and aesthetic consid­er­a­tions all go into the mix when designers make decisions about something so funda­mental to a car’s very ethos as how much steel extends out beyond the wheelbase.

In cars with the engine in the front, a rear overhang of course helps with storage — and a bit of for’ard overhang will balance this out aesthet­ically and also accom­modate a nice big engine. You see this a lot on family wagons and tourers, partic­u­larly your BMW five and seven series cars and the genres they dominate.

When you stick the engine in the rear as in the 911, you situate the mass of the engine to the aft of the the wheelbase, which contributes to that delicious back-​​happiness as well as providing a nice rear crumple zone to protect in the case of a collision.

So, while your sports car designer has usually sought to reduce overhang, we can think of at least two sporty cars with loads of it. Think of the E-​​Type, with an acreage of front and rear overhang (beautiful thought it is) and the love-​​it-​​or-​​hate-​​it Saab Sonnet (below) which had a spectacular amount of front overhang but hardly any at the rear. We’ve never driven a Sonnet, so we wouldn’t know, but we imagine it must have suffered from terrible understeer…

And predictably, now we’ve had a few days to mull over these things, we’re kind of digging the new 911’s long, low, sleek lines. And you can bet it’s going to be a gem to drive.

Norse Gods

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

Sometimes, to really under­stand a car, you have to see it in its native habitat. So if you’ve never really got Swedish cars, and never really under­stood why some people are so obsessed with them when they don’t handle, don’t have much power and seldom look that sexy, it might just be that you haven’t spent much time in Scandinavia.

The driving up here is unlike anywhere else on earth. Power and handling just aren’t important when it can take two days to drive between major towns on sheet-​​ice roads you’d struggle to stand up on, across which Arctic gales blow powder snow so hard and fast that your headlights illuminate what looks like a weird white conveyor belt running at right angles over the road. There are orange markers to show where the road is, or was, but you lose sight of them when the snowdrift blows higher.

It is  — without question — the most beautiful envir­onment I have ever driven through. It starts out Alpine, then turns polar as you head north. It is stark, monochrome and alien. Much of the time you can only see three things – rock, water and snow – and three colours; blue, grey and white. The feeling that you’re driving through a Tolkein novel is exaggerated by the place names; on one 2000-​​mile Norwegian Arctic road trip I passed through Hell, Moan, Hammerfest and Orcanger. There’s something Mordor-​​ous about the long, narrow, rough-​​hewn rocky tunnels through the mountains, and the weird optical and climatic effects you get this far north. As well as the Northern Lights, there’s the midnight sun and the Fata Morgana, where the dry atmosphere and low temper­atures combine to reflect images of the landscape onto places they couldn’t possible be, like a mountain range on the sea horizon. It’s beautiful, but deadly at the same time. You look at the whiteness, feel the painful cold, and realize that man is simply not welcome there.

So you start to realize why Swedish cars are the way they are; why their prior­ities are different. Longevity, utter depend­ab­ility, seat comfort and clever cabin design suddenly assume huge signi­ficance. And while it’s dangerous to gener­alize about whole nations, Scandinavian cars reflect their national traits as much as their driving condi­tions. They are a deeply democratic, practical, unflashy lot, and that – together with punitive new car taxes —  means exotic metal is rare. Despite the condi­tions, cars are made to last longer, and you see healthy, cared-​​for, Cold War-​​era kit that you wouldn’t find in a scrapyard elsewhere in Europe. Until you get very far north they don’t bother much with SUVs, despite daily driving condi­tions that would bring Britain grinding to stasis. The Scandinavian car of choice is an old Volvo, Saab, Merc or Audi estate, maybe all-​​wheel drive but always running dinner-​​plate fog lamps, studded tyres and a roofbox for the skis, sides streaked with salt and being driven flat-​​out through a white-​​out, powder snow billowing out behind it.

And I’d be amazed if there’s a part of the world with a better standard of driving. Stop a Norwegian to ask for direc­tions and you expect to get it in pace notes. “Post office? Down to the end of the road, then left 60 over crest, don’t cut.” The entire country seems to drive just beyond the available level of grip; I was once overtaken at 70mph on sheet ice by a VW van whose driver calmly corrected a massive oversteer moment as he came off the gas, and I tried to follow another in an Audi estate whose flick­ering tail-​​lamps told me he was left-​​foot braking into every bend. This is why they’ve produced so many Formula One and world rally drivers; if you learn to drive in these condi­tions, driving on anything else is easy.

The cars produced by these condi­tions and this mindset are distinctive. Ask a Saab nut to name ten things his car should have and you’ll find he can run on to a dozen pretty easily; the firm and its products have just about the clearest identity you’ll find. Cupholders; cool ones. A wraparound screen and an equally envel­oping dash. The ignition down by the handbrake, one-​​touch air vents and folding rear seats. Viewed in profile, a hatchback, teardrop-​​shaped glass and trian­gular rear lights. Front wheel drive, a turbocharged engine and as many fighter-​​jet cues as you can cram in.
But building a new one isn’t simply a question of ticking the boxes. Saab has a philo­sophy too, one where safety and comfort and quality are more important than simple dynamism. It adds up to a very complete picture of how a car should be. You’d have thought this distinct­iveness would have made it a success. Despite the recent financial hiccup, sales of premium-​​brand cars have skyrocketed in recent years. Saab and Volvo only needed to capture a small slice of that market; people who wanted something a cut above a boggo Ford, but not another predictable, me-​​too BMW.

But they didn’t. GM’s bosses had plainly never been to Scandinavia either. They owned Saab, but they never really got it, and it did so badly that they almost had to shut it down when the recession hit. Ford did a better job with Volvo, but both have now been sold as their parent companies restructure. Volvo is now controlled by Chinese firm Geely, and Saab has the owner it deserves in Dutch multi-​​millionaire and borderline madman Victor Muller, owner of sports car maker Spyker.

He’s exactly what Saab needs; car-​​obsessed, deep-​​pocketed and as idiosyn­cratic as the brand he now controls. If Geely has the sense to let Volvo do its thing unmolested, and with Koenigsegg and now Zenvo making nutcase supercars, Think Nordic making electric cars and Valmet in Finland coach­building cars for Fisker and Porsche, maybe more people will ‘get’ what makes Scandinavian cars so cool.

Eleven Ice-Cold Scandinavian Cars...

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

Top 11 Scandinavian cars

Zenvo ST1

Where do you start with the Zenvo ST1? With the fact this it is Denmark’s first and only supercar? With its extreme, angular, ground-​​breaking looks? With its equally extreme power and torque figures, both of which are in four figures? With the fact that its top speed has to be electron­ically limited to 233mph, at which speed it will cross its home country in just 18 minutes? Whichever way you look at it, the ST1 is a staggering new sportscar from a brand — and indeed a country – with no automotive heritage. Zenvo’s Nordic logo incor­porates a shield with the name at the top and a stylized drawing of Thor’s hammer, intended to represent “massive cars with plenty of strength”. Just 15 units are scheduled for production.

Fisker Karma

Although its HQ is officially in LA, we think the Fisker Karma deserves inclusion here. The firm’s founder and chief designer Henrik Fisker is Danish; previous credits include most of the current Aston Martin range, so he has form. His radical, gorgeous £80,000, 400bhp plug-​​in hybrid Karma will be built by Valmet in Finland; it can cover 50 miles on emissions-​​free electric power and give an average of 100mpg.

Volvo XC90

A relat­ively rare example of a Swedish car company producing an iconic car while under foreign ownership. On its launch in 2003 the XC90 was so popular that there were waiting lists a year long in the UK – and this for a Volvo, remember, not some new Ferrari. Early versions had a lethargic diesel engine-​​gearbox combin­ation but apart from this, the firm’s first SUV was pretty much flawless in concept and execution. The seven-​​seat cabin layout is its strongest suit, with a usable third row that folds fully flat, a genius integ­rated child-​​seat that slides forward to within reaching distance of the fronts, and a front cabin almost without equal for comfort and ergonomics.

Koenigsegg CCR

Sweden makes dull, safe, dependable cars. Italy does the outrageous supercars with unpro­nounceable names, right? Not entirely. In 1994 Sweden added a third automaker to Volvo and Saab, and it makes rather different cars. In 2005, a Koenigsegg CCR broke the McLaren F1’s long-​​standing record as the world’s fastest production car at a test at the Nardo high speed circuit deep in southern Italy; home territory for its exotic rivals. Two other cars have since bested it, but Sweden’s only sports car maker had finally arrived. Founder Christian von Koenigsegg founded his firm at the age of 22. Owning a supercar by that age would be impressive; starting your own supercar maker and creating a new model that bears your name seems barely credible. He sketched the original design and two years later he had a prototype. His first client took delivery of his car at the Geneva Auto Show in 2002. Top Gear famously binned one at its test track and criti­cized the aero package, but your corres­pondent did 214mph in one and found it pretty composed.

Porsche Boxster

Eh? What’s more German than a Porsche? But since 1997, over 220,000 Boxsters and Caymans have been built for Porsche by Finnish coach­builder Valmet at its near-​​unpronounceable factory in Uusikaupunki, Finland. It is the only company or factory licenced to build Porsches outside Germany, and a sign of real confidence from a company obsessed with build quality. Other than a letter on the VIN plate, you just can’t tell the difference between a Finnish and a German-​​made Boxster or Cayman.

Volvo Venus Bilo

The first concept car is generally thought to be the sensa­tional Buick Y-​​job of 1938, created by Harley Earl, head of General Motor’s famous ‘Art and Colour’ section. But Volvo would disagree with that claim. In 1933 it built the one-​​off Venus Bilo, intended, like the Y-​​job, to test public reaction to futur­istic, stream­lined styling. The production car it spawned, the radical-​​looking 1935 PV36 wasn’t a great success, but it didn’t put Volvo off making mad concepts.

Saab 900

If space constraints mean we could only include one ‘standard’ Saab, I guess it would have to be the 900 Classic, though plenty of Saab anoraks will argue. But this car lasted 15 years and united all the attributes that we now think make a Saab a Saab, from the wraparound, helmet-​​visor screen to turbocharged engines. There was a lot that was odd about it, like the combin­ation of front-​​wheel drive and longit­udinal engine that was so space-​​inefficient you could fit a couple of suitcases in lengthwise between the motor and the wings. But much was brilliant too, like comfort, space, ride, torque, quality and reliab­ility. 900 Classics are rightly going up in value.

Saab 96

Oh, okay, one more Saab. You can’t really leave out the 96, which although it didn’t sell in such big numbers as the 900 has a madder and more distinctive and recog­nizable shape, and which opened up Saab’s most important export markets in its 20-​​year production run. Erik Carlsson’s three RAC and two Monte Carlo rally victories in the early sixties in the 96 had the same effect on Saab’s image and acceptance as Mini’s exploits in the Monte.

Volvo 240

If the 900 is the defin­itive Saab, then the 240 is defin­itely the defin­itive Volvo, with almost 3 million made over nearly 20 years from 1973. Unlike the Saab, its super-​​square looks owe nothing to aerody­namics but everything to Volvo’s seminal early ‘70s Experimental Safety Car concept. It unques­tionably saved lives, but the hearse-​​like styling looked like it was better suited to carrying those already deceased. But if Sweden had a national car, this would be it. British designer Peter Horbury, asked to style the later Volvo V70 estate, said it was ‘like being handed the Swedish crown jewels’.

Volvo P1800

Proof that the Swedes can do cool as well as cold when they try. The P1800 was designed by a Swede working for Italian styling house Frua, and its launch at the ’61 Geneva motor show was overshadowed by Jaguar’s lissome E-​​Type with its claimed 150mph top speed. But the P1800 won the public’s attention back by providing Simon Templar’s wheels in the original run of The Saint, making it one of the iconic shapes of the sixties.

Think City

Nineteen years of devel­oping electric cars, including a flirtation with Ford which cost the bigger firm $150m might finally be about to pay off. Think is putting its 60mph electric city car with a 100-​​mile range on sale in its native Norway, Austria and Switzerland, is eying other markets and planning to start production in the US too. Buyers are desperate for usable electric cars, govern­ments are keen to encourage them, and the falling cost of batteries will soon make them more affordable; expect Think to capitalize.

Stig and the Saab 99

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

As a kid, I was obsessed with Saabs. There was something supremely left-​​field about them. Something that whispered of the altern­ative, the coldly exotic. And one of the main reasons for the obsession was that they were driven on the telly by men with strange names who wore rally jackets.

And one of the most prominent of these Scandinavian men who would chuck there oddly shaped motors around dusty corners at disrep­utable speed was Stig Blomqvist.

The assault of vowels and consonants that was his seemed perfectly to fit the other­worldly nature of his Saab 99 Turbo. Whilst up against the Ford Escorts that challenged it, it’s whiney wheeze captured the imagin­ation. And the fact that my headmaster rolled up to school one morning in a brand new chocolate brown 99 one morning in 1978 didn’t detract from the cars impact.

Anyone with a name like Stig had to be someone special. The fact that this was Lennart Blomqvist’s nickname didn’t lesson the impact. Stig of the Dump was on the other side on after school after­noons, and there seemed no connection between Stig’s smelly, tip dwelling namesake and the Rally Champion. other than the fact that he existed, that is.

Stig went on, of course, to drive many of the defin­itive rally cars of the eighties, including the Fords, Talbots and Lancias — and he won the World Rally Championship in 1984 with an Audi Quattro under­neath him — but the combin­ation of Stig in the Swedish-​​liveried Saab 99 summed up a time when Scandinavian cars were as exotic as the names of their drivers.

S60 and 95 - New Swedish Ambassadors

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

There are at least two key launches this year from Scandinavian manufac­turers, and both of these are in the rather crowded ‘premium saloon’ segment.

After announcing their best first quarter for eighteen years, Volvo are throwing their hat in this compet­itive ring with the all new S60. Prices will range from £23,295 for the D3 ES (163PS) up to £36,745 for the top-​​of-​​the-​​range T6 AWD SE Lux Geartronic Premium. Orders can be placed now ahead of the car’s arrival in dealer showrooms in July, with first customer deliv­eries in August.

The design of the S60 is certainly sportier and more dynamic than most other Volvo launches of late– and the company are claiming that chassis, running gear and engine refine­ments will make this the most dynamic drivers’ cars they have ever produced.

Is that visage Insignia-esque, or a chunky new Swedish mush?

This is probably in part due to the high level of criticism levelled in that direction of the latest manifest­a­tions of the V70 and the older S40s and S60s which were relative plodders at every level. The Desiel D3 and D5s will offer an admirable level of twist, horespower and economy, while the T6 updates the tradition of the T5 series of hot Volvos with seven second pullaway and a top end of over 150MPH.

Graphite aluminium trim and interesting diallage help make the interior a winner

The company are also making a huge feature of the disturbing Pedestrian Detection system, which purports to be able to recognise movement and act accord­ingly, whamming on the anchors if the human involved fails to react. We doubt this is a selling point to real drivers, as the thought that a computer combined with lasers and motion sensors override driver input with little warning is frankly, a little bit frightening.

Dynamic new styling evolves further from the classic Volvo box

The Saab 95, meanwhile, while offering a new lease of life to an increas­ingly broad and passionate Saab faithful, may not have put clea-​​enough water between it and its mediocre forebears. Sure, there are appar­ently a host of high tech new features. But the car doesn’t well, look that different from the last 95.

The new 95's lineage looks intact: perhaps too much so??

The innov­ation Saab claim is mostly under the skin. For example, there’s an aircraft inspired head-​​up inform­ation display (HUD), MP3/​iPod integ­ration, Harman Kardon audio system, DAB radio, adaptive cruise control, DriveSense adaptive chassis with continuous damping control, keyless entry and starting, dual-​​zone climate control, adaptive parking assistance, and XWD with electronic LSD — the all-​​wheel-​​drive system.

Saab enthusiasts will enjoy the chunk of the new 95's design

The all-​​turbo power­train line-​​up carries forward Saab’s right­sizing engine strategy, focusing on responsible performance through the devel­opment of highly efficient and four cylinder turbo engines. Starting at 1.6-litres* (180PS) all trans­mis­sions are six speed and with diesel power, CO2 emissions as low as 139 g/​km are also on offer.

But, then, Saab interiors were always a strong point, as were the drivetrain.

For us, there’s something lacking in the whole package, that difficult-​​to-​​define element that made Saabs like the 900 and the 96 solid but stylish cars and ones that could achieve cult status through their driver feedback and offbeat character. We would like to have seen a return to the innov­a­tions of apparent style rather than loads of invisible tech.

Wether either of these essential new launches gets these fine companies, both of which have a true heritage of producing memorable cars, back on track remains to be seen.

Saab: Fighter Planes to Crash Landings

Monday, December 28th, 2009

112_0702_32z+1960_saab_96_rally_car+front_view

Having been born and raised lusting after turbo Saabs and digging the legendary Viggen fighter planes that featured often in their ads, it’s amazing at how such a ridiculous bit of brand misman­agement can destroy a symbol of innov­ative Scandinavian engin­eering in so short a space of time.

With the recent announcement of the failure of Saab’s sale and that an ‘orderly wind-​​down of opera­tions’ of the brand was thus in place, we were wondering if there was any precedent to this mad, sad tale.

Even the older gener­ation of Saab Rally cars like the one pictured above (which were amazingly successful) have a quirky, under­stated sort of cool about them. We have often wondered if there is another example of a meteoric rise to power and glory followed by such an equal but opposite plummet back to Earth?

Could there be another example out there?

Saab Sonett – Rare as Hen's Teeth

Friday, December 11th, 2009

1956 Saab Sonett I "Super Sport"

Of all the obscure cars from Scandinavia, the Saab Sonett is the most pretty and the most frustrat­ingly elusive. As I remember there was a Sonnett 3 in a Top Trumps card game in the 1970s, but we at Influx towers don’t think we’ve ever seen one in the flesh.

The revolu­tionary two seater that became the Saab Sonett first rolled out of production in 1954. Enthusiast sites reckon that designer Sixten Sason is supposed to have utterred a Swedish word that meant ‘how nice’ when the first design was mounted on its chassis. So, the Sonett is named vaguely after an affec­tionate Swedish epithet.

That car’s body was appar­ently formed from a blend of aluminium sheets and plastic moulded panels that were welded together to form a sculp­tural hull. This influ­enced Colin Chapman, years later, who created the Lotus Élite’s fibre­glass monocoque using a similar technique.

Despite claims that the Sonett was able to make close to 130MPH from a 57 hp engine, the car never made it to production life: Jenson were set to build the bodies in the UK (as they had done for the Volvo p1800) but the deal was never sealed and only 6 of the cars were ever produced.

66_Sonnett

Premiered at the 1966 Geneva motor show, the second version of the Sonett came with a two-​​stroke-​​engine and a steel chassis with tubular elements. Evolving through around 4000 production units, the car was made until 1970 with various engines and exterior detailing – but it was twisted evolution that gave the car an awkward, bug-​​eyed aspect.

Saab Sonett III

The Sonnett 3 was commis­sioned from MIlan-​​based designer Sergio Coggiola, and the eventual car was graced with firbre­glass sculp­tural elements by Saab’s inhouse team. It retains it’s rather unique form, though the long nose format was much more Italianate than the previous versions.

It’s easy to get hold of Sonett 3s in the states, so it is said, but stone me if I have ever seen one grace British streets. But of course, you may know different.

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