10 of the Worst Cars to Come Out of the United States.
AMC Pacer, this woeful attempt of creating an economical people’s car made anyone blessed with the privilege of having a drivers license not a fan of the Pacer.
AMC Pacer, this woeful attempt of creating an economical people’s car made anyone blessed with the privilege of having a drivers license not a fan of the Pacer.
Mustang II, this hideous line of cars, which lasted five years, was the visual representation of the oil crisis the United States was dealing with at the time. With the highest trim, you could get 138 horsepower from a 4.9 liter V8, disgraceful to have the same name of a car that started a revolution in the car industry.
Chevrolet Citation, you should be glad that you didn’t know this car even existed, partly due to its terrifying styling, but mostly due to the worst name ever fitted to a car.
Chrysler PT Cruiser, a disturbing attempt at a blast into the past where wagons were a regular sight, specifically the “woodie wagons”, unfortunately it became one of the ugliest cars ever created and still plagues the roads of US today.
Pontiac Aztek, despite having a starring role in Breaking Bad, the Aztek is widely known for making people sick upon sight of the car. Bringing it back to Breaking Bad, the designer was probably on some sort of drug while designing this since not a sane human being would ever think of making something so ugly.
Cadillac Cimarron, just look at it, dull, slow, and built by people who didn’t care or didn’t know what they were doing. This was unfortunately branded as a Cadillac, the home to American luxury and style, represented by this turd looking car.
Ford Pinto, this “hatchback” was so ugly that it made you want to set yourself on fire. Conveniently, the Pinto did just that thanks to its rear mounted gasoline tank which was the cause of the fiery deaths of many of its customers.
Saturn Ion, although having a peppy performance version, the normal Ion was pathetic on all levels, the interior, the design, and the engine, were all apart of the unsettling vibe you get while looking at one.
Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme Diesel, the idea of diesel taking over the automotive industry was very possible in Europe, but this being an example, it was not the direction for the United States. The 4.9l V8 Diesel in this car produced an atrocious 90 horsepower.
AMC Gremlin, love it or hate it, either way its a horrid car with an extremely thirsty V8 or a straight 6 from ancient times. The Gremlin is definitely ugly, but it has an odd ambience to it that doesn’t make me hate the car, kind of feeling sorry for it.
Comments
Pacer: No, it isn’t everybody’s cup of tea. But it did have room, and you have to credit AMC, who ran on a nearly nonexistent budget most of the time, for trying something…anything…new.
Mustang II: More appropriate in size to the 1964 Mustang, V6 from the Ford Capri, one of the best front suspension setups sold in the 1970s. The four can be turbocharged to the moon, and like any 1970s crap pile in the U.S., one engine swap later you’ll achieve greatness.
Citation: Decent plan undone by GM’s mismanagement. Sad tale, but true. What should be noted is how well it sold before the problems cropped up…if GM had actually shaken the car down properly instead of panicking over the gas crisis, they could’ve knocked this out of the park.
PT Cruiser: Retro was in and Chrysler was cashing out big time. What else can you say?
Aztek: The styling might be questionable and the interior plastics do make Tupperware jealous. But seeing what’s on new car lots today, and I’m not seeing anything prettier, but I’m seeing a lot of the same functionality.
Cimarron: This one doesn’t get a pass. There’s a story of a guy high-up within Caddy who has a huge poster of this car on the wall with the words, “Never Again” written on it.
Pinto: A solid shot from American manufacturers for a subcompact. It had power, it had space, and it had the right price. Looks are subjective. And the Pinto is responsible for educating American consumers about just how much the auto manufacturers cared about them.
Ion: Not a bad car, not a great car. The car for someone who needed a car but cared nothing about a car.
Olds Diesel: on it’s own, yes, it’s a royal failure. But re-work the block to run on gasoline and suddenly things get nice and interesting, and the cars they were put into were some of GM’s better efforts (G-body Cutlass, B-body 88 series)
Gremlin: Again, styling is objective but again, this was American Motors: Little money, lots of talent. The Gremlin (along with it’s source car, the Hornet) underpinned most of AMC’s lineup from 1970 until the Chrysler takeover in 1987. You can’t kill that six, the 304 can be made into an outright stomper that acts bigger than it is, and for many, the body shape is the entire reason they bought it.
Something else about the Pacer. The original engine was meant to be a Wankel, but GM killed off the source engines before AMC could get any, but after the bodies had started production. So, they had to shoehorn in the 4.2L straight 6 instead. Then, they were so popular for their first year, that they had to rush them out the door, which lead to build quality problems. After that, the fad was over, and they lingered on, even getting a V8 that they supposedly never recouped the engineering money on.
Rutledge Wood became a miracle worker when he converted the downright ugly Aztec into a completely badass off-roader for Top Gear USA. Amen to that!
Honestly, I love the look of the Pacer..
I love gremlins! My grandfather had one and according to him, with the 304 v8, it did great burnouts. My dad had a Pacer (aka Fish Bowl) as well as a winter beater while he had his 76 vette in the 80’s, said it was the best winter beater he ever owned.
For some odd reason I wouldn’t actually Mind a Gremlin!
Citation - My mum actually had one, was passed down to my brother, who preceded to roll it into a ditch.
PT Cruiser - My mum was looking at buying one when they first came out, thankfully she did not!
Came here to see the pinto on this list, was not disapointed.
I actually like the AMC Gremlin for only one reason. ROADKILL!
No Corvair?
This is the second time they’ve posted about the Pinto without doing any research into what actual happened. Just as bad as the people who misrepresented it back then.
Honestly, I think the list is kind of lame. Why hate a car for either it’s looks or name? The veyron and gtr, both r34 and r35, are the ugliest modern cars to me, but that doesn’t mean that they’re the worst cars to come out of their countries. The only one’s I agree on in this list are the aztek and pinto. They’re both ugly lemons. But cars like the ion and pt cruiser, though ugly, are cheap and semi-reliable and very fuel efficient. In fact, I’d say for what they are or what the company was aiming for, they’re excellent cars that cane from the states.