Which Cars Are Most Guilty Of Looking Way More Powerful, Fast, Or Capable Than They Actually Are?

Aa Looks Fast Is Slow Copy
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“Don’t let your mouth write a check your ass can’t cash!” is a taunt you’ve hopefully never heard outside of television (it originated with Flip Wilson, what?), and it always struck me as weird. It means “don’t say fighting words you can’t back up with fighting skill,” but in that case shouldn’t the saying be, “Don’t let your mouth write a check your fists can’t cash”? I can’t say I’ve ever seen a fight that involved battling buttocks, but maybe it’s a regional thing. As for check-writing and ass-cashing with cars, it’s styling that scribbles out the checks and performance that does the cashing–be it in the form of sublime handling, prodigious power, terrain-taming capability, or superior luxury swaddling. Some cars and trucks live up to the expectations set by their sheetmetal quite admirably. See virtually every supercar and most scooped and spoiler’d hot-rod versions of solid-performing sport sedans and coupes from the big brands. And Jeeps of the Wrangler persuasion, and Broncos of the not-Sport variety–with those, what you see actually is what you get. However … 
Dmc Bricklin

There are plenty of cars currently for sale and many, many machines of the past that wrote some downright extravagant checks and absolutely did not deliver the cold, hard cash of a suitably exciting/capable/luxurious driving experience. Suspects that immediately spring to mind are the hobbled C3 Corvettes that were foisted onto mustachioed men and disco ladies of the mid-70s; the very sexy Bricklin SV-1 that was so slow Time‘s Dan Neil proclaimed, “This thing couldn’t outrun the Rose Bowl Parade;” and the wonderful, terrible DeLorean DMC-12. Seriously, John Z, a Peugeot/Renault/Volvo-sourced 130 horsepower SOHC V6? Sure, we know you had much bigger dreams for the DMC-12 and we get why that lump landed in there, but still–blech.

Now you tell us: which cars are most guilty of looking way more powerful, fast, or capable than they actually are?

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125 thoughts on “Which Cars Are Most Guilty Of Looking Way More Powerful, Fast, Or Capable Than They Actually Are?

  1. VW Arteon. Big, gorgeous, pricey, and you got the 2.0T (fine in a GTI, but not.in something that size), and you liked it. Yes, one can turn up the wick, but the car was not ENOUGH enough from the factory, and I suspect that’s why it didn’t sell.

    Also, the Passat with the 1.8T. At least put the 2.0T in there so it looks like you’re trying.

  2. I’m going to go with the Vector W8, but that’s kind of a shoddy answer. As a powerful, exotic car, it *did* deliver on the first two, but that last bit about being an actual deliverable car left a lot of people unsatisfied. Saddling it with a 3-speed automatic from the Olds Toronado was a major disappointment as well.

      1. It was a long time before or since my 1983 GT notchback 5-speed that I had a car that could turn a tire changing gears. No, it wouldn’t win any top speed challenges, but it handled like a go-kart, and it was so fun to drive.

  3. BMW i8. Looks of a supercar, with about as much power than a mid level compact luxury car. Crazy looks but only 369hp. A similar age 340xi is only like 2 tenths behind to 60 and only down like 40hp. Compared to other cars that look as crazy (488, Huracan, 570S), it’s got like 3/5th the power and performance. Compared to other cars it was priced more similar to (911 GTS, Audi R8) it’s just a bad overall package that doesn’t back up it’s looks with similar performance or experience.

    1. It’s still a quick car tho, and with it’s CF tub it’s more setup for handling/being fun to drive. Looking at metrics doesn’t do that car justice. IMHO it’s the closest thing we have to the 1G NSX.

      For a street car it’s plenty quick. It’s not a supercar. It’s a crazy looking composite street car.

    1. Eh…kinda. You could certainly make that argument for the early foxes, especially the ’79 pace car and ’80-81 cobra (can verify, I had the latter as a first car), but the specs that you are quoting are more from ’83/’84, not the later variants. By ’85, Ford added the roller cam, tubular exhaust “headers”, and dual exhaust which took it up to 210 HP. It did 0-60 in 6.6 and a sub 15 quarter (can verify, I owned one of these as well). The ’86 switched to EFI and dropped to 200 HP, but was a tick quicker and faster. Yeah, those numbers are mundane today, but for a car in that era, it was plenty fast.

      1. Can confirm. I had an ’85 GT t-top at the same time my uncle had the pace car. The quad eye will never be the pretiest mustang but it has a special olace in my heaart.

      2. Thanks for the clarification, but I think my point remains. For as much flash and noise made by these things, I find it comical that a modern 4 cyl Camry is faster in the quarter mile ( and it is not fast). They don’t call the 80s the malaise era for nothing.

      1. It was 1980. Were you there? I was there. We thought new cars would never be fast again.

        And the junkyard is chock full of SBCs waiting to live their best life between the two sexiest fenders ever designed by an American automaker.

  4. The single model year 1980 Ferrari 208 GTB/ S without the Turbo, a 155hp Ferrari that is often regarded as the slowest Ferrari ever made (not technically true as the first Ferraris are undoubtably slower, but certainly the slowest when you consider what else was on the market). They do sound good with a 2.0 V8 though.

    1. “Your ass” substitutes for “you”.

      “Get your ass over here!” doesn’t mean that the speaker wants the other person’s smelly backside to be nearer.

  5. Fiat x1/9
    Fiat spyder
    Karmann Ghia
    Pontiac Fiero
    Porsche 914
    Pontiac Grand Am (just the name)
    Renault Fuego
    Renault 15/17
    Peugeot 504 Cabriolet
    Volvo 480

    1. As much as I really wanted and still wish I could own one, the Fuego was a bit of a “looks the part, but really isn’t…” has there been an article written on that car in recent years? good list btw

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