In the thirties and forties, GM pioneered and brought to market some of the most innovative, successful and lasting new technologies: diesel-electric locomotives, the modern diesel bus, automatic transmissions, refrigeration and air conditioning systems, high compression engines, independent front suspension, and many more. But GM’s technology prowess was just one facet of its endlessly warring multiple personalities. Planned obsolescence, chrome, fins and financial rationalization were the real moneymakers, especially during the technically conservative fifties. But in the period from 1960 to 1966, GM built three production cars that tried to upend the traditional format: the rear engined 1960 Corvair, the front-wheel drive 1966 Toronado, and the 1961 Tempest. And although the Corvair and Toronado tend to get the bulk of the attention, the Tempest’s format was by far the most enduring one: it was a BMW before BMW built theirs. If only they had stuck with it. (Read More…)
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Beerboy12 - I need a small, economical, spacious vehicle for weekend activities. Now if I could have that with a diesel.
28-Cars-Later - I wasn’t aware of the Viper “move”, thx for the info. Funny Dodge has seemingly become two...
Lorenzo - What about the mysterious middle-eastern lady?
genuineleather - The Viper is already under the SRT brand; the next-gen Challenger will follow. Trucks, the biggest,...
Beerboy12 - Two thinn pillars that you can see past… Not two fat ones.
28-Cars-Later - Maybe, maybe not. I still argue the guy got to close to something and was considered a liability. In...
jpolicke - Since the hitch is being installed as a protective device and not for its intended function, are they going to bother with the trailer wiring? Or maybe...
28-Cars-Later - Goats and giraffes are never to be trusted.
28-Cars-Later - Ah, very possible as well.
TomHend - Hate the GM unions and management all you want, the reason GM failed is because of the US Government.