Why we can't live in the past any more #blogpost
There are many wonderful people in the automotive community. And there are also some terrible people. There are young people and old people, people from all sorts of backgrounds, people from every single corner of the planet.
There are many wonderful people in the automotive community. And there are also some terrible people. There are young people and old people, people from all sorts of backgrounds, people from every single corner of the planet. Without these mostly brilliant people, there would likely be no such thing as ‘performance cars’. And that is why living in the past is only going to ensure our demise.
Imagine if, in the late 1800s, horse enthusiasts decided that they didn’t really like this whole concept of internal combustion. Horses had worked perfectly well for years. They lasted for a reasonable amount of time, and they still got the work done. What was the point in spending money on a more complicated way of doing things?
If it isn’t broken, don’t fix it.
Over the hundred years since cars became widely accepted, they have become almost unrecognisable. In just a hundred years, we have made tremendous breakthroughs in just about every aspect of what a car is. A car is now better than a horse in every single logical way.
And that’s why I have such an issue with the shape of the automotive community today.
We constantly look backwards, worshipping cars that came out twenty or thirty or forty years ago, whilst simultaneously looking down upon new technologies that may produce a change just as pronounced as the one from horses to cars.
We complain that electric cars will be the end of automotive culture, ignoring the fact that they are even more interesting, even faster, and, with enough effort, even more fun, than anything powered by petrol. We constantly make fun of the Prius, conveniently forgetting that without it, we wouldn’t have the P1, Laferrari, or 918. We wouldn’t have modern LMP1 cars that are capable of giving F1 cars a run for their money. We wouldn’t have the BMW i8. We wouldn’t have the Koenigsegg Regera.
But there’s another idea that, if possible, terrifies some car enthusiasts even more.
Autonomy.
People are one of the biggest problems with driving today. So, we remove them from the equation. Boom. Less traffic and fewer crashes. That’s what we want, right?
But, I hear you splutter, we want to drive our cars! We want to control our cars ourselves! If we want car enthusiasm to survive, we have to be able to drive!
I’m not disagreeing.
Autonomy should not and will not be enforced. There will still be the option to drive cars ourselves, only in a world with less traffic and fewer bad drivers. And we can still use autonomy to our advantage.
Let’s say you’re at a track day. You go out for a bit, and do a few nice laps. You feel like it’s possible to go faster, but you’re not sure how hard you can push. So you could turn on autonomous mode, and let the car do a few laps. It will be able to drive faster than professional drivers. It will brake at exactly the right place, accelerate at exactly the right place, turn in at exactly the right place. And that will help you to drive faster. And you will have more fun.
Some people also say that automotive design was at its best decades ago. And, while I will be the first to admit that most classic cars are absolutely gorgeous, modern cars are just as, if not more, beautiful. Well, most of them.
Just look at a modern Mazda. Any single one. Mazda has managed to do the impossible and actually made a SUV look good. Jaguar has managed to do the same. Infiniti isn’t doing too bad either. It is difficult to find a genuinely bad-looking car on sale today.
The 2010s will go down in history as one of the golden eras of automotive design.
But electric motors and autonomy and wonderful exteriors aren’t the only new things out there. And that’s why the automotive industry is what it is.
Without diversity, automotive culture really is finished. We need variation. We need to be able to adapt. And that’s what we’ve gotten bad at.
Thanks for bothering to read my little rant :)
Comments
Good article. Like you said, the only way for us petrolheads to survive is to adapt and embrace the technology. Let’s just keep our fingers crossed and hope for the best.
A lot of newer designs don’t really do it for me, a lot of those cars are designed in such a way as to be aerodynamic, lower fuel consumption etc. In my eyes, automotive design peaked during the 60’s, when cars were designed to look good, and didn’t have to conform to any rules and regulations to be able to make it to the stage of being produced.
I don’t understand why without prius we wouldn’t have the P1, Laferrari, or 918?
The Prius was the first successful hybrid. It showed that hybrid technology worked, and was affordable. Without it, there’s a very real possibility that there would have been no wildly successful hybrid, and we would have jumped pretty much straight to electric cars. So I believe that the Laferrari, P1. 918, i8, Regera etc. all owe their existence to one of the most hated cars in existence :)
I’m going to be doing a blog post on automotive design hopefully soon. I attended a Transportation Design program over the summer and am hoping to become a transportation designer. Look for it soon
2 gears isn’t really any gears cause you don’t change to the second one until you are going v fast. So pretty unusable on the road. Also it has enough torque to set off in either gear rendering it useless. Also the noise is okay but not really visceral. Also all electric cars have the same whinny noise really. Not a huge difference. But rimac is closest it has got. Also rimac got terrible reviews in magazines like Evo.
I think the most beautiful cars were designed from 60s to 90s. Today’s cars are ugly, apart from a few exceptions like Alfa 4C and Porsche 911.
The reason many enthusasts prefer 20 year old cars is because they’re more fun. Just because a modern car is faster and comfier doesn’t make it more fun.
Fantastic fantastic fantastic. What a brilliant article that was. I’m so looking forward to the future of the automotive world and I love the progress we’ve made in the last 10-20 years.
Always in motion, the future is.
I disagree, most of the changes are made by tree huggers thraumatized by diesels with rolling coal, when those things only trow harmless carbon
Im ok with electric cars but enforcing them like germany and norway wants to, No and just no! I want to choose the car i want to drive!
Autonomous feature i agrew that in long trips is useful, but what will happen 10 years later? The non autonomous cars will get more taxes to pay…just because they cant drive themselves…
Im sorry to look like a ranting old man but the automotive industry and society is going to hell, soon we wont be even to drive our cars without a annoying AI giving us warnings and forcing us to go the speed limit…future is going to ve death of petrolheads but this is my opinion