Dodge Is Bringing Back The ‘Hornet’ So Let’s Look At Every Car That Ever Had That Name. There Are More Than You Think.

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In this morning’s Dump you may have noted that Dodge seems to be planning to release a small crossover based on the Alfa Romeo Tonale that they’re going to call the Hornet. This got me thinking about the name: Hornet is a fantastic one for a car, and it’s certainly been used before, but I want to know just how many cars were called Hornet. Well, I dug around to find out, which means in a matter of moments, you’ll know, too. There are more Hornets out there than you’d think!

Let’s do this in chronological order, why not, from oldest to un-oldest. Ready for a swarm of Hornets?

1905-1906: Hornet

The first car to have the good sense to be called Hornet happened way back in 1905. I haven’t been able to find an actual picture of this car, but it sounds wonderfully strange: transverse, vertically-set inline-twin located, somehow, under the seats.

That car up there was sold by the same Horner & Sons firm that sold the Hornet, but is actually a Queen. It’s the closest image to this Hornet I could find.

My copy of the New Illustrated Encylopedia of Automobiles also states that the engine was a “massive” 3078cc unit making 24 horsepower, and an even more massive 6158cc four-cylinder was available, making a weirdly precise 48.6 hp. For 1905, these were extremely impressive numbers!

The Encylopedia also notes that “coyly, the company advertised these as “9hp” and “18hp.” Is this the first case of a carmaker sandbagging the actual power of their engines? Maybe!

 

1930-1936: Wolseley Hornet

British carmaker Wolseley, known for its famous illuminated radiator badge, had a Hornet from 1930 to 1936. It came in a variety of body styles, including four-door sedans, coupés, and roadsters, and coachbuilders could even buy the bare chassis, ready to have any kind of body plopped on.

These first Wolseley Hornets (foreshadow!) had charmingly tiny 1.3-liter six cylinder engines (those pistons must have been the size of thimbles) and, interestingly, four-speed gearboxes. These were really appealing little cars.

 

1951-1954: Hudson Hornet

Arguably the most famous of the Hornets, partially because this Hornet got a starring role in a Pixar movie, the Hudson Hornet is sometimes thought of as a sort of proto-muscle car because at the time of its introduction, it offered the largest straight-six engine you could get (5 liters!) and an optional (later standard) “Twin H-Power” dual-carb intake manifold that pushed output to 170 hp.

Hornets did incredibly well in stock car racing, partially because of their power, and partially because their “step down” chassis design (where floor pans dropped between frame rails, instead of riding on top) gave them a lower center of gravity, and, as a result, better handling.

They didn’t really sell all that well at the time, despite their racing successes, but are coveted by collectors today.

This use of the Hornet name marks the start of a lineage that goes from Hudson-Nash to AMC to Chrysler to Stellantis today.

1958-1961: Humber Hornet Malkara

This Hornet had a genuine sting, in the form of a missile launcher that could launch a pair of missiles at any enemy tank that was unfortunate enough to cross this little brute. Derived from the Humber Pig armored truck, the Hornet used wire-guided Malkara missiles, and these were pioneers of anti-tank weapon systems.

Wire-guided missiles like the Malkara are kind of bonkers things: they were literally controlled by a joystick connected by a wire to the missile. In fact, the digital joystick got its start from these systems, and in the case of the Malkara missile (co-developed by Australia and Great Britian) the joystick’s “cable” was about 5,900 feet – that’s over a mile!

The Hornet used an inline-six engine making 120 hp and made by Rolls-Royce, of all companies. At over five tons and 120 horses, these things weren’t exactly quick, but, then again, neither were tanks.

Most importantly, these were a lot cheaper to build than tanks, so consider one for your next budget-conscious war effort.

1961-1969: Wolseley Hornet

Look! Another Wolseley Hornet! This one was a modified version of the BMC Mini, but had a little trunk grafted onto its ass, and got a substantial nose job with Wolseley’s traditional upright grille stuck on in place of the usual horizontal Mini grille. Mechanically, they were essentially the same as the Mini, though sometimes they got refinements a bit earlier, like concealed door hinges or more powerful brakes.

The Hornet, along with the nearly-identical Riley Elf, was sold as a more luxurious version of the Mini, and was a bit more practical thanks to increased luggage capacity. In the sense that they were tiny luxury cars, they sort of predicted the Aston Martin Cygnet, kinda.

One very odd limited-run Wolseley Hornet variant was a series of 57 specially-built convertibles made for a Heinz Soup contest. Yes, soup. In the UK Heinz is known for beans and soup as much as they’re known for ketchup here. Fascinating world we live in, right?

1970-1977: AMC Hornet

One of the better-known Hornets is a direct descendent of the Hudson Hornet, as Hudson was absorbed by AMC, which then gained access to the Hornet name for its new compact, mass-market car.

The Hornet was born from AMC designer Dick Teague’s Cavalier concept car, a car that maximized cheapness by re-using fender and bumper stampings. While the production Hornet didn’t go that far in cost-cutting, it did retain the clean, crisp look of the concept, and was an appealing, straightforward car.

It used AMC’s reliable inline-six powering the rear wheels, and came in sedan, coupé, and wagon (the Sportwagon!) variants. But what makes the Hornet really interesting is just how flexible it was, becoming AMC’s primary platform for years and years.

Lop off its butt, and the Hornet became the sub-compact Gremlin. Give it a fastback and a rear hatch, and it became the Spirit. Make a more luxurious version and boom, there’s your Concorde. Leverage AMC’s Jeep know-how to make a 4×4 version and now you have the AMC Eagle. What couldn’t the AMC Hornet do?

Other than completely save AMC, I mean.

1970 or 1980 something? De Novo DNK NCK-Hornet

I’ll be honest: aside from an entry on AllCarIndex, I haven’t been able to find out much about this thing. There seems to be a German car dealership named De Novo, but I don’t think it’s related.

Based on the license plates, the De Novo DNK NCK-Hornet seems to be a UK car, and based on the proportions and stance, I’m wondering if perhaps this isn’t some kind of crazy re-body of a Jaguar E-Type?

I’m pretty sure there was only one of this Hornet.

Various years from 1970s on: T&J/BWE Hornet

These Hornets are kit cars meant to look and drive like the legendary Lotus 7. Sold under both the T&J and BWE names these kits used a little European Ford Cortina sedan as the donor chassis and could use the Ford Kent Engine or the engine from the Ford Pinto.

The body tub is plywood with metal skin, and can use Ford Sierra parts (not Lotus 7 parts, even if it looks like a 7).

2006: Dodge Hornet Concept Car

In 2006 Dodge was showing concept cars that had a certain kind of bulldog-aggressive look about them, including the Nitro (which went on to a production version) and the Hornet. The Hornet was kind of like a Scion xB that was tired of being bullied, and spent all summer brooding, working out, and listening to bad music.

The resulting car was sort of fun despite how obviously and desperately hard it was trying, and the rear suicide doors were certainly cool, especially with no B-pillar in the way.

It’s kind of a shame Dodge didn’t end up going with a little, boxy car like this, as I think those have a quirky charm and are surprisingly useful. The face can definitely be seen in the production Nitro, and proportionally I suppose the Fiat-based Jeep Renegade is a close modern Chrysler/Stellantis version of this thing.

That’s a lot of Hornets! I hope Dodge appreciates the significant legacy their new Hornet will have to carry on: stock car champs, plywood kit cars, AMC’s bread-and-butter, and soup-themed convertibles.

36 thoughts on “Dodge Is Bringing Back The ‘Hornet’ So Let’s Look At Every Car That Ever Had That Name. There Are More Than You Think.

  1. Well the post is ostensibly about the “cars” named Hornet, but given the pseudo-tank on that list, I think for completeness (or more completeness, there are probably other vehicles) there were at least two airplanes, the De Havilland Hornet, Britain’s fastest piston-driven plane, and the ultimate Hornet, the McDonnell Douglas FA-18 Super Hornet, piloted by the Blue Angels among others. Now they had / have quite the sting.

  2. This and all other AMC-related posts need a trigger warning:

    The scars from sitting on hot, molten, summertime vinyl in my mom’s ’76 AMC Hornet wagon left deep, painful childhood trauma and odd waffle-patterned scars.

    1. You can’t talk about the AMC Hornet without talking about the Astro-Spiral jump. perfected by Jay Milligan, who also performed the stunt in The Man with the Golden Gun. It was also the first automotive stunt to use computer modeling.

  3. My father had an AMC Hornet; I don’t recall the model year, but probably from the first few years of production. It had… problems. The front fenders tended to rot out quickly, due in part to the lack of inner fender liners. My father learned to quickly pull off the road when the finicky ignition system started to cause problems; rainstorms were enough to stop the ignition cold. I remember that he made some kind of ignition cover out of an old inner tube, but it didn’t seem to help very much. And this Hornet had a bad spot on the flywheel gear that resulted in frequent starter changes. My first parking lot starter change was on this car, and I was young enough that I never even drove the Hornet…

  4. Literally a single Google tells me that (1) the De Novo DNK NCK-Hornet was a Ford Cortina-based kit car and (2) there was very likely more than one, as the All Car Index tells you the former and lets you infer the latter from the fact that they are pictures of two cars with different number plates.

  5. “ Arguably the most famous of the Hornets, partially because this Hornet got a starring role in a Pixar movie…”

    Even though the eyes are in the wrong place amiright?

  6. AMC Hornet fun fact; in the Sportabout wagon’s inaugural 1971 model year, it outsold the Hornet 2- and 4-door sedans *combined* (the hatchback coupe came later still), largely due to being the last wagon left standing in the American compact-car class just as the midsize models were starting to get *huge*.

  7. The DeNovo DNK/NCK Hornet is far more exotic than being boringly German, it was Welsh! It was also far less exotic than a re-bodied E type, it was a kit car with underpinnings and running gear from a MkIII Ford Cortina!!!!
    There were at least two that were completed and a further 8 or 9 kits were sold.
    Please do not ask me how I know this.

  8. Does a fictional Hornet qualify?
    I distinctly remember (one of only two such memorable moments) Walter Brennan ragging on some industrialist-peer in his second TV series (“The Tycoon”) saying derisively: “Get stung, with the Hornet!”

    1. Yep! The AMERICAN Motors car that was apparently classified in-game as British (because James Bond), which I enjoyed during the British challenges. Good times…

  9. Fucking lame. Just another captive import with a Dodge name slapped on the front. They will reveal it and it will barely sell and be killed off in 2-3 years.

  10. Regarding the horsepower differences in the first entry – IIRC Britain taxed cars based on their horsepower rating, but rather than using the actual output of the engines this tax was based on a formula utilizing the diameter of the cylinder bores multiplied by the number of cylinders and divided by 2.5*.The horsepower rating wasn’t always indicative of the actual output. This was done to progressively tax larger cars as well as protect British industry.

    Anyway, this is why so many older prewar British cars (and quite a few postwar ones, old habits die hard) have engines with small diameter bores and long piston strokes, and why there were so many cars called the Nine, Ten, Twelve, etc., as they fit into different tax brackets. Its also why so many cars have names like 14/60, as it was the tax rating and the actual power output.

    Thank you for coming to my TED talk.

    *Had to look this bit up, I can never remember the formula and I probably did it wrong here, too!

    1. Ah, back in the day, had one as my first 1/10th scale R/C car before upgrading to a Kyosho Ultima. Who knew then when trying to decide between a 7.2 Volt Ni-Cd sub-C battery pack with 1200 mAh or 1600 mAh cells that today we’d be all stressed out over the size of an electric car’s pack in kWh?

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