These Cars Don’t Deserve The Hate They Get

I’m going to keep up my never-ending crusade of defending the DeLorean DMC-12.

Objectively a great car? Well, no. But in context and by the standards of malaise era “American” (DMC actually built in Ireland, of course) cars, it is underappreciated.

81 Corvette 0-60: 8.1s (fastest US production car that year)

81 Pontiac Trans Am 0-60: 8.7s

81 DMC-12 0-60: 8.8s (5 speed, we don’t talk about the 3-speed Renault slushbox)

It was overpriced for sure. You could almost get 3 Trans Ams for the price of one DMC at MSRP at the time, or very nearly in a new 911. But hey, at least you’d spend a little less at the gas pump with the DMC.

The DMC was constructed using a lot of off-the-shelf parts, but it was still the company’s first attempt in a brand new factory with a workforce of completely inexperienced labor and the cars tended to require a ton of time correcting production line issues after they were finished before they could be sold. The intent was to turbocharge them (and the low-compression PRV6 was in part chosen for this – the ability to fit it behind the rear axle instead of in front of it like in the 1976 prototype), but they only got a few turbo prototypes built before the Thatcher government closed the doors. The US Big 3 did their best to sabotage DeLorean by pressuring suppliers not to do business with DMC.

The interior is damn decent for 1981. The gullwing doors made tight parking spaces a breeze, needing only 14 inches of clearance to fully open. Despite the rear weight bias thanks to the rear mounted engine, the car on its Lotus Esprit-inspired chassis is pretty fun to drive. They look great, and properly cared for (no brillo pads, jesus), the brushed stainless looks great forever.

There were certainly some self-inflicted problems: John DeLorean positively pissed away company money on ridiculous bullshit all the time. He paid for prime office real estate in Manhattan, bought a company that made fake-snow machines for year-round ski slopes, tried to buy Lamborghini, tried to buy AMC out from under Chrysler, lived like a rockstar himself, etc.

The twin-turbo prototype cars were faster in tests than the Ferrari 308 and Porsche 928, and DMC ordered 5,000 TT engines from Legend Industries for the 1984 model year – which of course never got produced. It’s a shame we didn’t get to see what sort of refinements a second generation of the car would have brought. DMC was working with DuPont and experimenting with translucent automotive paint, too.

FOLLOW US ON GOOGLE NEWS

Read original article here

Denial of responsibility! Secular Times is an automatic aggregator of the all world’s media. In each content, the hyperlink to the primary source is specified. All trademarks belong to their rightful owners, all materials to their authors. If you are the owner of the content and do not want us to publish your materials, please contact us by email – seculartimes.com. The content will be deleted within 24 hours.

Leave a Comment