The Underrated List
#1
The Underrated List
I've been getting a lot of angry e-mails lately from rosy-cheeked sycophants calling me a hater. One guy wrote, "You hate everything, The Mechanic, and I'm tired of it. I hope you die."
Die? Now there's some positive vibe.
But the long trail of e-mail from the mentally disturbed did give me pause. "Maybe I am too negative," I said out loud. "Maybe I really do hate everything. Maybe I should write a positive piece for a change." It sounded like a good idea, but I was talking to myself, and that's never a good sign. So I took my meds. I don't really need them anymore, only when I see the giant bugs in the sky. They live in clouds, you know. And they only come out at night. Just last week one chased me around my neighborhood for four hours. I went to take the trash out and.... Well, long story short, I got away, but then I couldn't sleep so I wrote this. It's about the underappreciated.
The fact is that there are many things in our little world of cars that don't get the recognition they deserve. So I decided to make a list of things I thought were underrated. This is my Underrated List and I'm positive you'll enjoy it.
Jaguar XK
Jaguar sold just 2,779 in 2008. Meanwhile, BMW sold 5,341 6 Series and Mercedes moved 5,464 SLs. The XK is beautiful from the curb and from the driver seat. It's the best car Jaguar has ever made. More people should be buying them.
Domestic quality
This one is tricky for two reasons. First, everyone has their own definition of quality, and second, there are some vehicles I don't think this applies to. But if you're not buying a Ford Flex or a Buick Enclave or a Pontiac G8 or a Cadillac CTS or a Ford Edge, etc. because you think it's going to fall apart and spend most of its days at the dealership service department, you're living in the past. And the Inside Line Long-Term Test blog is packed with real-world data to support this.
Chevy Corvette ZR1
Sure, everyone says it's great. But it's even better than that: it's the world's greatest performance car. No, I'm not kidding. Nail the throttle in a ZR1 and your life changes. It alters your reality. I must have one. And GM should be getting the credit it deserves for building the damn thing.
Mitsubishi Lancer
Forgotten in a sea of Civics, Corollas and Mazda 3s. The Lancer is a hell of a nice car that gets lost in the mix. Maybe now that the new Mazda 3 looks like the Chevy Cobalt drives, more people will give the Lancer a chance.
Wagons
They're always the next big thing, but never seem to be. They should be. Ninety-nine percent of the fools out there driving around in SUVs, crossovers and even minivans should be driving a wagon. And not some fake high-riding wagon like the Benz R-Class, the Ford Flex and that new Toyota Venza thing. I mean a real wagon.
BMW 3 Series
Best all-around car on the market today. A marvel of engineering. If you find it unappealing, you probably live and work in Detroit or have ball bearings for brains. Wait a minute, that's the same thing. Forget it.
Pushrods
See Chevy Corvette ZR1 above. By the way, they're also under the hoods of the Dodge Challenger SRT8 and the Chevy Camaro SS.
All of the wonderful Inside Line/Straightline Readers
Simple pandering.
Hatchbacks
The "Americans don't buy hatchbacks" thing has been around too long. Fact is, they only buy good hatchbacks like the Mini Cooper and the VW Rabbit. Hatchbacks, like wagons, should be in more American driveways.
Chrysler 200C Concept
The most important car at the Detroit auto show. Proves Chrysler isn't dead on the inside.
The Ugliness of the Nissan Murano
Looks like 16 different people designed it. Which would be fine if any of them had any design talent. How do you make a Murano look good? Park it next to a new Maxima.
The Stupidity of iDrive
Amazing, even after all these years of calling it stupid, iDrive remains so stupid, its stupidity makes this list.
The It Factor
The one part of a car that cannot be designed or engineered. It's also the most important part of any car. Without it, you've got the Cadillac XLR.
Jeep Grand Cherokee SRT8
The only SUV that could make me give up on wagons.
Audi TT
An engineering and design marvel. Think about it; it's a VW Rabbit underneath.
Pontiac G8 GT
Dollar for dollar, pound for pound, feature for feature, this is America's best sedan.
Tires
Inarguably the most important part of any car. Think about it, it's the only part of your vehicle that touches the ground. Cheaping out by not replacing them in a timely manner or buying them at Pep Boys because you can get 4 for $50 is just foolish. And for god's sake, check your tire pressure.
Driving a car that makes you feel good
Completely forgotten since gas prices went haywire. Worth remembering.
Ford Flex
Ford's best. Proof Mulally and Co. are capable of getting it 97 percent right.
Honda Accord
Still the benchmark for the class. A real example of Honda's talents. Load one up, however, and the price starts making a Pontiac G8 GT look like the one.
The failure of Cadillac's V-Series
Last year Cadillac sold fewer than 1,000 V-Series cars. Meanwhile BMW moved 1,400 M5s. Yes, just M5s. Maybe the new CTS-V will get the V-Series back on the map, but let's face it: After several years of trying, Cadillac is again starting from scratch. -- The Mechanic, Inside Line Contributor
E-mail me at themechanic@edmunds.com.
Die? Now there's some positive vibe.
But the long trail of e-mail from the mentally disturbed did give me pause. "Maybe I am too negative," I said out loud. "Maybe I really do hate everything. Maybe I should write a positive piece for a change." It sounded like a good idea, but I was talking to myself, and that's never a good sign. So I took my meds. I don't really need them anymore, only when I see the giant bugs in the sky. They live in clouds, you know. And they only come out at night. Just last week one chased me around my neighborhood for four hours. I went to take the trash out and.... Well, long story short, I got away, but then I couldn't sleep so I wrote this. It's about the underappreciated.
The fact is that there are many things in our little world of cars that don't get the recognition they deserve. So I decided to make a list of things I thought were underrated. This is my Underrated List and I'm positive you'll enjoy it.
Jaguar XK
Jaguar sold just 2,779 in 2008. Meanwhile, BMW sold 5,341 6 Series and Mercedes moved 5,464 SLs. The XK is beautiful from the curb and from the driver seat. It's the best car Jaguar has ever made. More people should be buying them.
Domestic quality
This one is tricky for two reasons. First, everyone has their own definition of quality, and second, there are some vehicles I don't think this applies to. But if you're not buying a Ford Flex or a Buick Enclave or a Pontiac G8 or a Cadillac CTS or a Ford Edge, etc. because you think it's going to fall apart and spend most of its days at the dealership service department, you're living in the past. And the Inside Line Long-Term Test blog is packed with real-world data to support this.
Chevy Corvette ZR1
Sure, everyone says it's great. But it's even better than that: it's the world's greatest performance car. No, I'm not kidding. Nail the throttle in a ZR1 and your life changes. It alters your reality. I must have one. And GM should be getting the credit it deserves for building the damn thing.
Mitsubishi Lancer
Forgotten in a sea of Civics, Corollas and Mazda 3s. The Lancer is a hell of a nice car that gets lost in the mix. Maybe now that the new Mazda 3 looks like the Chevy Cobalt drives, more people will give the Lancer a chance.
Wagons
They're always the next big thing, but never seem to be. They should be. Ninety-nine percent of the fools out there driving around in SUVs, crossovers and even minivans should be driving a wagon. And not some fake high-riding wagon like the Benz R-Class, the Ford Flex and that new Toyota Venza thing. I mean a real wagon.
BMW 3 Series
Best all-around car on the market today. A marvel of engineering. If you find it unappealing, you probably live and work in Detroit or have ball bearings for brains. Wait a minute, that's the same thing. Forget it.
Pushrods
See Chevy Corvette ZR1 above. By the way, they're also under the hoods of the Dodge Challenger SRT8 and the Chevy Camaro SS.
All of the wonderful Inside Line/Straightline Readers
Simple pandering.
Hatchbacks
The "Americans don't buy hatchbacks" thing has been around too long. Fact is, they only buy good hatchbacks like the Mini Cooper and the VW Rabbit. Hatchbacks, like wagons, should be in more American driveways.
Chrysler 200C Concept
The most important car at the Detroit auto show. Proves Chrysler isn't dead on the inside.
The Ugliness of the Nissan Murano
Looks like 16 different people designed it. Which would be fine if any of them had any design talent. How do you make a Murano look good? Park it next to a new Maxima.
The Stupidity of iDrive
Amazing, even after all these years of calling it stupid, iDrive remains so stupid, its stupidity makes this list.
The It Factor
The one part of a car that cannot be designed or engineered. It's also the most important part of any car. Without it, you've got the Cadillac XLR.
Jeep Grand Cherokee SRT8
The only SUV that could make me give up on wagons.
Audi TT
An engineering and design marvel. Think about it; it's a VW Rabbit underneath.
Pontiac G8 GT
Dollar for dollar, pound for pound, feature for feature, this is America's best sedan.
Tires
Inarguably the most important part of any car. Think about it, it's the only part of your vehicle that touches the ground. Cheaping out by not replacing them in a timely manner or buying them at Pep Boys because you can get 4 for $50 is just foolish. And for god's sake, check your tire pressure.
Driving a car that makes you feel good
Completely forgotten since gas prices went haywire. Worth remembering.
Ford Flex
Ford's best. Proof Mulally and Co. are capable of getting it 97 percent right.
Honda Accord
Still the benchmark for the class. A real example of Honda's talents. Load one up, however, and the price starts making a Pontiac G8 GT look like the one.
The failure of Cadillac's V-Series
Last year Cadillac sold fewer than 1,000 V-Series cars. Meanwhile BMW moved 1,400 M5s. Yes, just M5s. Maybe the new CTS-V will get the V-Series back on the map, but let's face it: After several years of trying, Cadillac is again starting from scratch. -- The Mechanic, Inside Line Contributor
E-mail me at themechanic@edmunds.com.
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#8
He probably means the base models aren't getting as much credit as they deserve. Even some people here say they wouldn't consider a base 3 next to a G35 without every driving both.
#15
BMW 3 Series
Best all-around car on the market today. A marvel of engineering....
The Stupidity of iDrive
Amazing, even after all these years of calling it stupid, iDrive remains so stupid, its stupidity makes this list.
Best all-around car on the market today. A marvel of engineering....
The Stupidity of iDrive
Amazing, even after all these years of calling it stupid, iDrive remains so stupid, its stupidity makes this list.
#16
I think they need to specify which Accord model is underrated. I am a bit biased but I think the V6 MT Accord is indeed underrated. As for the 4 cylinder auto Accords, they dont light my fire, so basic transport.
#17
#18
It's funny, I did a preview and Legacy was there. I think someone wanted it gone...And yes, that is what I would say.
Living where I do, its too expensive to have anything else, so for the grin per dollar, it's tough to beat. The VW GTI is also in this same category.
Living where I do, its too expensive to have anything else, so for the grin per dollar, it's tough to beat. The VW GTI is also in this same category.
#20
100% The new AV6 6MT establishes itself VERY WELL as a SOLID low cost alternative to the G37C, 328i coupe and A5. It's a shame there's no sedan version....yet!
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