What Is Every Automaker’s Best Vehicle?

Aa Best Cars Ts2
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Some days I choose violence. Other days I choose chaos. Today is a chaos day because today’s Autopian Asks wants to know: What do you think is the best vehicle made by each and every automaker (or, least the ones that come to mind). I’m serious. I have a list. A list!

“Best” is extremely subjective, and it would be great if you could explain all of your reasons. It’s also completely fine not to explain at all. The goal here isn’t to just think of your favorite cars from each automaker, the question is: what’s the best car that company has ever produced? It will be contentious. I want contentious. I want us to have fun.

Here’s a list to start with, but feel free to add and subtract:

  • Tesla:
  • Toyota:
  • Porsche:
  • Mercedes-Benz:
  • BMW
  • Chrysler
  • Dodge
  • Jeep
  • VW
  • Ferrari
  • Honda
  • Ford
  • Chevy
  • GMC
  • Buick
  • Pontiac
  • Cadillac
  • Hyundai
  • Kia
  • Nissan
  • Rivian
  • Subaru
  • Renault
  • Volvo
  • Peugeot
  • Mazda
  • Mitsubishi
  • Aston Martin
  • Audi

And here are my answers, which are nonsense because I’m a nonsense person:

  • Tesla: Model Y, the most important EV to date
  • Toyota: Toyota MR-2 Turbo (SW20), fun Toyota but also good Toyota
  • Porsche: W124 Mercedes-Benz 500 E, fast sedans are so much fun [Ed Note: Apparently this was developed by Porsche, but the real correct answer is the modern 911. It is objectively the best version of the best model Porsche has ever made. Or maybe the Cayenne is the answer based on sales figures… -DT]. 
  • Mercedes-Benz: W124 Mercedes-Benz 500 E, fast sedans are so much fun
  • BMW: E39, the best fast sedan
  • Chrysler: Town & Country, it’s a legend and saved the company
  • Alfa Romeo: Original Giulia, the best of Alfa
  • Dodge: 1st Gen Viper, just look at it
  • Jeep: CJ-7, maybe I’m trolling David [Ed Note: It’s clearly either the WWII Jeep, the XJ Cherokee, or the JK Wrangler; there are no other answers. -DT]. 
  • VW: Rabbit GTI, the company stopped being just cheap cars
  • Ferrari: 400i, maybe this is personal
  • Honda: Honda Integra Type R DC2, so good
  • Ford: Escort Cosworth RS, also so good
  • Chevy: 1992 Chevy Silverado, an all-time best treak
  • GMC: 1992 GMC Sierra, same
  • Buick: GNX, remember when Buicks were cool?
  • Pontiac: G8 ST, though no one has ever driven one
  • Cadillac: CTS-V Wagon, the only thing better than a fast sedan is a world-beating wagon
  • Hyundai: 1st gen, manual Veloster N
  • Kia: Carnival, I will not explain further
  • Nissan: R33 GT-R, technology and style
  • Rivian: R1T, they only make two cars so…
  • Subaru: Original Outback, important and kinda fun
  • Renault: R5, it got the country on its feet and people still like the them today
  • Volvo: 240 Wagon, I mean c’mon
  • Peugeot: 505 Dangel 4×4, I mean c’mon
  • Mazda: Mazda MP3, look it up
  • Mitsubishi: Pajero Evo, Dakar cars are great
  • Aston Martin: Virage Shooting Brake, I’m a weirdo
  • Audi: QSW, the blueprint (when it works)

Ok, your turn.

 

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138 thoughts on “What Is Every Automaker’s Best Vehicle?

  1. I’d be curious what everyone thought was each brands most important vehicle. Is it one that defined the brand? Is it one that kept the cashflow going?

    Ford: Model T.
    VW: Beetle
    Work forward from there.

  2. Really? The GNX for the Buick? Dude, c’mon. The 1961 Buick Special with the Buick 215 is the best Buick. It barely beats out the first generation Riviera with it’s trick hidden headlights where the blades of the front fenders slide down to reveal them. And if we include concept cars like the G8 ST, then there’s the 1985 Buick Wildcat.

    For Toyota it’s the X100 Chaser. Almost the perfect sedan. Simple but luxurious interior, unassuming exterior that gives it a large presence but hides how small the car actually is, very suited for being modified to do everything from drifting to drag racing to rallying, and it comes with the 1JZ-GTE.

    Mazda’s got the Cosmo. No, not the original L10 Cosmo, as brilliant as that is. The JC Cosmo. Twin or even triple rotor spinny triangle, tech for the time that was actually useful instead of just being the marketing equivalent of greebles, and a beautiful shape and interior that no Japanese manufacturer has been able to match since 1990. Seriously, that wraparound dash where there’s a continuous line that goes aaaaaaall the way around the cabin, the gauges hidden behind the smoked glass that runs the entire width of the dashboard, and the steering wheel that gives off the same comforting appearance as a pair of well made leather loafers.

    Mitsubishi has to be the EC5 Galant VR-4. You know the Lancer Evolution that everybody loses their shit about? How about all of the stuff that makes one of those great, but in a station wagon. Yes. Seriously. A manual AWD twin turbocharged station wagon with a real world rated horsepower of 290 that with just a few bits from the aftermarket tuning scene can make 400. And it has six way adjustable leather seats with power memory control.

    I disagree with the first generation Viper. The SR-II is better because it uh… Well, it actually has a roof instead of a strip of vinyl that you have to tack into place like on an aftermarket K-10 Blazer soft top conversion. Also you won’t die of heat stroke or second degree burns on your legs while driving one because they actually properly routed the exhausts.

    For Subaru it’s the Justy. Why? It’s the only somewhat normal car Subaru has ever made, which makes it an anomaly in their lineup. It’s the Subaru equivalent of the Chevrolet Cavalier. It also saved the company when they were about to die and were rushing to complete the Impreza. Many of the mechanical achievements that went into the Justy are what Subaru built on in the following decades, like electronically controlled 4WD instead of mechanically controlled, CVT transmissions, and single piece firewall construction.

  3. Alfa Romeo:
    AMC: Eagle Wagon
    Aston Martin: V12 Vantage
    Audi: Quattro
    Buick: GNX
    BMW: E39 M5
    Cadillac: ’62 Coupe De Ville
    Chevy: ’63 Corvette GS
    Chrysler: ’68 New Yorker 2-door Hardtop
    Datsun: 240Z
    Dodge: ’69 Charger
    Ford: ’32 Tudor
    Ferrari: 288 GTO
    GMC: Syclone
    Honda: CRF300L
    Hyundai: Santa Cruz
    Isuzu: Vehicross
    Jaaag: XE SV Project 8Jeep: XJ 2-door
    Kia: Stinger GT
    Lotus: Evora GT
    Mazda: FD RX7
    Mitsubishi: Pajero EVO
    Mercedes-Benz: 560SEC AMG
    Mercury: ‘49 Mercury Eight
    Nissan: 300ZX Z32
    Peugeot: 205 T16
    Plymouth: ’70 AAR ‘Cuda
    Pontiac: ’69 GTO Judge
    Porsche: 930 Turbo Slantnose
    Renault: R5 Turbo
    Rivian: R1S
    Saab: 9-3 SportCombi
    Subaru: 22B
    Suzuki: Samurai
    Tesla: Roadster
    Toyota: 1st gen 4runner
    Volvo: V60 Polestar
    VW: R32

  4. Alot of comments dogging on GMC (for decent reason) as just being a copy of whatever Chevy throws out, but I’d argue their most important was the first/second gen Denali trims that came out. If memory recalls, they were some of the first vehicles (at least from the US), that introduced trucks and SUVs as being everyday family/city vehicles rather than being rough/plasticky/rough riding workhorses. The escalade got it’s start as being a rebadged Denali, I believe.

  5. I’m really only commenting because I wanted to say Nissan: Stagea (swapped to GT-R running components, see Benny and MightyCarMods)
    Oh, and for Subaru either the Super Levorg or SuperGramps. Basically, any of MCM long-term keeper builds.

  6. The Rivian delivery van: am I a joke to you?

    Toyota: Corolla, for being the “an car” for so long

    …I’m still learning and don’t necessarily gravitate toward enthusiast cars, so I’ll leave this at that while people with strong opinions duke it out

  7. RE: Willys-XJ-JK

    Can we get a DT article talking through this and explaining how the JK(U) was the spiritual successor to the XJ? The 4dr model was notably more popular and the JKU refilled the void in Jeep’s rugged lineup left from 02-06 as the Liberty went IFS and the WJ remained up-market and the even-larger Commander launched leaving the same gap open.

  8. Or maybe the Cayenne is the answer based on sales figures…

    YEEEEAH BOOOOOI CAYENNE IS ALWAYS THE ANSWER

    Except here. 2.7 RS, anyone??? Paris-Dakar 959???? 917!!!!?!!?!???? 919 HYBRID EVO???????????

  9. Since there’s going to be a lot of overlap between people by asking for the best, I’m going with my favorites by manufacturer

    Aston Martin: 1st-gen V12 Vanquish
    Audi: Quattro S1 (the poster child of Group B)
    Austin: FL2 (civilian FX4)
    Buick: GNX
    BMW: E38 7-series
    Cadillac: Allante
    Checker: Marathon Wagon
    Chevy: Corvette C1
    Chrysler: Airflow
    Daihatsu: 2nd-gen Copen
    Dodge: 1st-gen Charger (still prefer it to the 2nd-gen)
    Ford: 1st-gen Mustang
    Ferrari: 250 GT Lusso
    GMC: 1st-gen Topkick
    Honda: Civic ES1 (my first car)
    Hyundai: FL2 Tiburon
    Isuzu: 117 Coupe
    Jeep: SJ Gladiator
    Kia: Stinger
    Lotus: Series 3 Elise SC
    Mazda: Eunos Cosmo (all the rotory goodness without the boy racer look)
    Mitsubishi: FTO (yes, not an Evo. Still one of my favorite cars from GT4)
    Mercedes-Benz: W211 E55 AMG Wagon
    Nissan: R32 GTS 4-dr
    Peugeot: 505 Break
    Pontiac: 1970 Firebird
    Porsche: 959
    Renault: Caravelle S
    Rivian: R1S
    Skoda: Octavia Mk1 RS
    Subaru: Legacy STi S401
    Suzuki: Alto Works Sport RS
    Tesla: Original Roadster
    Toyota: G40 Century
    Volvo: C30 T5
    VW: Type 1 Beetle

  10. Tesla: Model S, it made Tesla what it is today and it’s the only good looking one still
    Toyota: Corolla, basically defines the compact car (also the AE86)
    Porsche: Carrera GT, one of the last and best manual supercars ever made
    Mercedes-Benz: 300SL Gullwing, kind of the opposite of above, the first supercar
    BMW: E30, just iconic and beautiful. I wanted to say E36 because I have one, but thinking about it, I’d trade my E36 for an E30 in good enough condition in a heartbeat.
    Chrysler: I’m stealing from the answer key here and saying Town and Country because it was the first minivan
    Dodge: Second Gen Ram trucks, basically redefined what trucks were… also Twister
    Jeep: XJ because of David Tracy
    VW: Golf GTI was one of the first cars that was fun and practical
    Ferrari: 288 GTO because it was going to be a rally car before group B went away
    Honda: NSX, the first one, it seems crazy to think Honda made a supercar.
    Ford: F-series seems like the obvious one here since it’s the best selling vehicle in the world. I’m also biased since I have a Superduty and it’s surprisingly good at almost everything except parking and being cheap to run.
    Chevy: Corvette, America’s sports car
    Buick: Grand National, one of the first really fast turbocharged cars
    Pontiac: GTO, beginning of the muscle car
    Cadillac: CTSV, supercharged V8, manual transmission, need I say more?
    Hyundai: Ioniq 5, hands down the best looking electric car and arguably the best electric car you can buy.
    Kia: Stinger GT, really showed everybody that Kia is capable of making a nice car
    Nissan: R32 GTR, the original Godzilla, and it kind of started the JDM craze in America
    Rivian: there are so many options but I’m going to have to say R1T
    Subaru: 1st Gen Legacy, introduced the EJ engine and the modern AWD system Subaru uses, also this was the first car Colin McRae raced in because the Impreza wasn’t out yet
    Volvo: 850 Turbo Wagon because of that one picture of the touring car wagon on 2 wheels
    Mazda: 1st generation Miata, the answer, and as much as I want to say RX7, it’s hard to say the “best car” is such an unreliable one
    Mitsubishi: Eclipse GSX (2nd Gen), they’re just so damn cool
    Aston Martin: DB5, James Bond
    Audi: Quattro, I love rally cars and this is one of the best

  11. A few notable trends.

    * Mazda means miata. They may as well not make anything else.
    * Ditto for Kia and the Stinger.
    * Mercedes is W123.
    * Nobody thinks GMC has a “greatest” anything.
    * Hyundai gets a few “not yet”s.
    * Strong showing for Cadillac’s CTS-V wagon, over the Escalade and classics.
    * Mitsubishi may as well not exist.

    1. Surprising: as of this writing, nobody has mentioned any of VW’s buses/vans. The VW Thing has 2-3+ votes, but the microbus/westfalia/buzz or whatever the new one is called don’t have a single mention.

      Unexpected.

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