7 Terrible Versions Of Amazing Cars

When a manufacturer builds an incredible car, they'll often offer a number of variants to appeal to a wider audience. Unfortunately, there are occasions where these alternatives ruin everything great about that car
7 Terrible Versions Of Amazing Cars

1. Porsche 996 911 Cabriolet

7 Terrible Versions Of Amazing Cars

There are obviously many good things to say about the Porsche 911, but if you’re an enthusiast you’re probably going to want to stay away from this particular 996.

As it’s the convertible version it’s not quite as dynamically capable as its hard-top equivalent. Couple that with the fact it’s packing a Tiptronic automatic gearbox and you have a rather uninspiring 911 combination - automatic gearboxes aren’t inherently bad, but the Tiptronic is an old-fashioned slushbox rather than a whipcrack-fast double-clutcher.

2. Toyota Supra

Suggested by Taser
Suggested by Taser

In full fat twin-turbocharged mode, the Supra is an absolute animal. It’s a tuner’s dream project, as the 2JZ engine is ripe for more horsepower. The car also came with an entry-level model, which utilised a naturally-aspirated version of the 2JZ inline-six making a fairly healthy 220bhp, but in a relatively heavy car that made it rather gutless.

The Supra also came with a four-speed automatic gearbox option. Couple this to the N/A engine and you’ve got yourself a cheap-to-run, if wholly unexciting, JDM legend.

3. Second-generation Ford Mustang

Suggested by Constandinos Zantis
Suggested by Constandinos Zantis

With the late 60s new car market leaning towards smaller cars, the Mustang was in need of a new look, and it got it thanks to the Ford Pinto. The second-gen Mustang was based on the Blue Oval’s then-new compact car, and some of its uninspiring styling transferred over.

The Mustang has a rich and glorious history, but the second-gen was certainly a bit of a blip - as CTzen Constandinos Zantis pointed out, it “didn’t even have a V8 for several years”, instead packing an inline-four and V6 initially.

4. BMW E46 M3 Cabriolet

7 Terrible Versions Of Amazing Cars

I’ve written about my experiences testing the M3’s different gearboxes before, and the general gist of it is that the SMG is pretty rubbish unless you’re on track, at which point it comes alive. On the flip side, the manual is pretty rubbish unless you’re driving normally. Basically they’re both a bit of a let-down, but I’d be inclined to side with the manual since the vast majority of driving is ‘normal’ driving.

So if the SMG is only good for track use, it wouldn’t make sense to pair it with the less engaging, less lap time-oriented cabriolet variant, right? Exactly, and that’s why the E46 M3 Cabriolet with SMG gearbox is the rubbish variant of an otherwise decent machine.

5. Nissan 240SX

Suggested by Jermaine Directorscut Riley
Suggested by Jermaine Directorscut Riley

There are few cars more legendary in the drift scene than Nissan’s S-chassis. In America, dubbed 240SX, a variant was offered that had an automatic gearbox and an open differential, two things you probably want to avoid when you’re looking to do mad skids.

6. Mazda RX-7

Suggested by NikTheJdmGuy
Suggested by NikTheJdmGuy

The appeal of the Mazda RX-7 is in its lightweight, hardcore, driver-focused approach to driving, and as such it has a lovely manual gearbox. The fizzy rotary engine loves to be revved, and in manual form it’s a joy to smash gears home as you tear up a track.

A four-speed automatic was also offered, and sucked all of the urgency out of proceedings. You’ll still have fun in an auto Rex, but you’ll always feel like the car’s a bit more reluctant to go nuts than its manually shifting companion.

7. Toyota GT86

7 Terrible Versions Of Amazing Cars

It might seem like we’re hating on automatics here, but we’re not. What we are doing is hating on rubbish autos that aren’t worthy of the brilliant cars they’re placed in. The GT86 is a perfect example of this. It’s one of the last remaining routes to affordable rear-wheel drive performance, and its manual shifter is an absolute delight to use - it almost feels as if the shifter is sucked home at the merest suggestion of a gear change.

Unfortunately the auto isn’t quite as good. It takes an age to change gear, is slow to react to your paddle inputs, and if you leave it to its own devices it’ll hold on to gears far longer than can ever be deemed sensible.

Check out all the original suggestions here.

Comments

Anonymous

My mom had a Mustang II Hatchback with a nice v8 in her golden ages, i must admit, i would have loved to see it, and she told me some stories about it; she bought it junked, it was wasted, but she gave it new life, “it was so sexy (yes she actually used that word), it ran so soft and nice, ah, i’ll miss that car, i loved it”. But she had to sell it because she gave birth to my sister, “Can’t maintain car while maintaining children, i had to sell it to take care of your sister”. So she bought a Volkswagen Atlantic and so on, until i was born 13 years later, she bought then a Ford Fiesta, and later on, our recent Volkswagen Gol (Voyage in other countries)

03/17/2016 - 20:51 |
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Anonymous

No love for the AE85?

03/17/2016 - 20:59 |
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Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Single cam disappointment

03/17/2016 - 23:49 |
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Anonymous

No comment about the 240SX coming with a truck engine instead of the SR20?

03/17/2016 - 21:04 |
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Deus Robert Paulsen

One could add a mx5 with automatic. Or just picture a sloppy older automatic in general. Because this ruins every real sportscar.

03/17/2016 - 21:19 |
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Anonymous

Talking about automatic transmission. WRX CVT is surprisingly good but only thing missing would be the backfire from the manual transmission

03/17/2016 - 21:46 |
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Anonymous

I feel like the n/a 300zx should have made this listed.

03/17/2016 - 21:54 |
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Anonymous

I’d have to disagree on the Toyota 86 there, I own an 86 and yes it’s an automatic (mind you I hate automatics and I’ve said I’ll never buy one) but once I drove my 86 of the first time it was completely different and the best transmission I’ve experienced. I will agree it’s not as fast as the manual or as fun or connected to the car but it makes up for it. The paddle shifts are good fun on the way to work going in and out of traffic (and actually changes gears quite fast, almost like DCT, so it’s impressive), and it’s not like it’s not capable on the track, I’ve done basic drifting and track events and I’ve surprised myself and others. Now if I was to add forced induction or have a track car then I’ll consider/go a manual and at times I wished I brought a manual, but a 86 shouldn’t be looked down if it’s an automatic it’s still an awesome piece of engineering!

03/17/2016 - 22:36 |
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Ian Gale

What about base model auto Lancers? It’s still hard for me to wrap my head around the fact that Mitusbisbi manages to turn those things into EVOs.

03/17/2016 - 23:20 |
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Martin 1

No 90’s Eclipse GS???? FWD and NA, contrary to the AWD Turbo GSX

03/18/2016 - 00:12 |
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unicornjuice

996 Tiptronic is actually pretty good.

03/18/2016 - 00:16 |
0 | 1

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