6 Reasons Why Hot Rod And Muscle Car Culture Is Dying #blogpost

It seems as if as time goes on, talk and love for muscle cars and hot rods dissipates. There are several factors that cause this and I will talk about them now…

One: Dying Enthusiasts and Rusting Cars

A lot of hot rodders and muscle car enthusiasts are older men. Go to any hot rod or muscle car meet and you’ll see that’s the case. As a result of this, they tend to kick the bucket more than young JDM enthusiasts (even when they’re drifting canyons). Even if they don’t die, they might grow too old to be ripping at the autocross or rocketing down the drag strip. Many cars that hot rodders and muscle cars love have ceased production long ago. The number of cool old rides diminishes day by day much to the chagrin of their enthusiasts.

Two: The Rise Of JDM Culture

Up until the 90’s if you wanted cheap car thrills in America, you got a muscle car. Yes there was the AE86, RX-7 and the early Supra’s but Japanese sports cars didn’t start to get really popular until the 90’s. Now a lot of new and used Japanese cars are cheap to buy, cheap to own, big aftermarket and culture plus decent fun. Most Japanese cars handle pretty well too, where muscle cars unashamedly give a crap about straight line speed. There are turbochargers and computers and all sorts of new technology while most muscle cars are seen as archaic. The Muscle vs JDM battle is still going on today, and it won’t stop until car enthusiasts themselves stop breathing.

Three: Fuel Concerns and Emissions Laws

Although this kind of thing affects car culture as a whole, it especially applies to muscle cars. This problem isn’t a new one, this problem has had a big effect on muscle cars in the past as well. An oil embargo and tightening emissions regulations in the 1970’s temporarily ended the glory days of the American performance car. Nowadays, fuel economy and emissions are real concerns among many Americans, even when the Big Three are producing 500 plus horsepower cars. CVT’s, hybrids, electric cars and engine downsizing are common. These trends and technologies are an effort to improve fuel economy and reduce emissions, things hot rodders and muscle car enthusiasts couldn’t care less about.

Four: Autonomous Cars And Lost Interest In Driving

It’s very clear that many drivers all over the world see the act of driving as a chore. Many chores are being taken over by robots, like vacuum cleaning for example. Autonomous cars in different forms have been popping up recently. Teenagers are losing interest in cars, why? Because technology has replaced cars as a means of connecting with friends. Back before the internet sprouted into existence, people had to use cars, bicycles or their own two feet to hang out with their friends. Nowadays, you can play video games, video chat and text your friends even if you’re thousands of miles away. Because of this, teenagers are completely fine with taking public transportation, walking or using their bike. Heck, those modes of transportation might be cheaper than driving most of the time.

Five: Poor Global Outreach

With the exception of Scandinavia and Australia, muscle cars are rare and expensive outside the USA. Yes, the Mustang is currently being sold in Europe, but for the most part, the big three seems perfectly OK with keeping muscle cars an American thing. This is a bad thing for the far and few between enthusiasts across the world. This is how American car executives see it, “Why sell muscle cars in a place where people don’t want to buy them or a substantial profit can’t be made?”

Six: Advancement of Engine Technology

Back in the day, if you wanted big power you had to have at least a V8 engine. An engine with less cylinders than that wouldn’t do. Nowadays, that’s not the case. There are six cylinder and even some five and four cylinder engines that make as much or more power than V8 engines do, why? One word, turbochargers. Recent development of turbochargers and engine technology means that there really is a replacement for displacement. The side affects of these developments is that the V8 has been replaced by turbochargers as the holy grail of power.

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Comments

ThatWeirdGinger

MEANWHILE IN CANADA (Or the Classic car capital of Canada, aka. my neighbouring town of circa 35000 people, the biggest one around)…

Classics are everywhere. If it isn’t raining and the weather is decent, I guarantee you will see at least one factory original ‘60s classic on a walk or drive around town. JDM culture doesn’t exist… I just saw my first 240SX (or any S-Chassis car) EVER only yesterday. V8 power is still the thing to have, and most kids my age dream of 1960s and ‘70s Mustangs, Camaros, and Chargers. Restoration shops are everywhere, yes, even my hometown of 963ish residents has a concours quality one, and RM auctions was founded, yes founded and grown, out of the aforementioned town of 35000. Almost every weekend, there is a classic car event, each one attracting as many as 3500 cars, from 1000s of miles away. Some great cars roll out of shops around here, and there is a mechanic on every block ready to rebuild anything and everything, from lawnmowers to boat engines to your V8.

And guess what? When I first joined Carthrottle, I fell for the JDM scene, and I mean HARD. I loved Skylines, Supras, RX7s, and the like, but you know what? Every day that goes by, I feel myself fall for what I grew up with again, more and more. I love watching Roadkill, and fantasizing about thousands upon thousands of rusted pieces of crap in a big heap, waiting to be resuscitated once more by my own hands. By luck, I inherited an RX7, and I will indeed cherish the car for years to come, but I have always dreamt of owning an old american classic, from ‘30s rods, to the floaty, plush and extravagant cruisers of the 1980s, and as soon as I can, I hope to get a job at a restoration shop, and I mean within the month. I would die at an office job, I want to get my hands dirty and greasy and downright destroyed from the years of restoration I want to spend. In my town, all of this is a quick bike ride and a job interview away, and that’s what I want to do. I want to preserve the hot rod scene for our youth, and the youth of the future, and generations to come. They deserve a chance to love American muscle, and to be like their relatives before.

Now that was a short write-up.

08/23/2016 - 03:02 |
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Semi crazy jr ( the Subaru tech)

I dont think muscle car culture is dying its just over shadowed by the jdm culture.

08/23/2016 - 07:49 |
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It is, especially with the way it’s exploded over the last 30ish years and how a bigger percentage of JDM fans use social media

08/23/2016 - 11:40 |
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Akashneel

NO! I don’t want the Camaro to be discontinued!

08/23/2016 - 11:05 |
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Zach (I met Harambe)

Do you live in America?

08/23/2016 - 14:02 |
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Zach (I met Harambe)

And it’s not dying at all, it’s growing.

08/23/2016 - 14:02 |
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Unique Performance

My business is booming and yes most of my customers are older white men who want a car no one has in the Hamptons on Long Island. Though the trend is resto mods I actually just did a 1967 Ford Mustang “Eleanor” resto mod WITH ADAPTIVE CRUISE CONTROL. It was a challenge but stipulated in the contract. So I took the system from a 2013 BMW and had to bring in a specialist aka someone smarter than me.

08/24/2016 - 10:16 |
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H5SKB4RU (Returned to CT)

True….merican muscle cars are really expensive in europe except worn out 2005 mustangs

08/31/2016 - 00:51 |
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AXL163

I lso like the JDM culture and Muscle cars too,but,man thats sucks!
I really hate this generation of POS electric cars,even my mother always she said:-“This is the reality that would you live,and the petrol cars are start to contaminated and dying more the Envirommental and its very necessary to change things,and other would not running for more time”
And the only thing that I wish to said:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hTOKJTRHMdw

09/18/2016 - 18:04 |
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