Sunday, October 27, 2019

1986 Audi 5000 CS Quattro - No, it's not prone to "sudden unintended acceleration"

In the mid-80s, Audi's sales in the US were booming as American tastes turned to high-quality cars from Japan and Germany. Then it all came crashing down for Audi, thanks to a completely fraudulent "scandal" created by CBS' 60 Minutes program. I'll let Paul Niedermeyer of  thetruthaboutcars.com tell the story:

"Let’s set the scene. It’s 1984. Audi sales had shot up 48 percent on the strength of their new aero-dynamic 5000, the hot new weapon in the perpetually-escalating suburban driveway status war. It was a stunning piece. Audi was on a roll.

Suddenly, the war turned bloody. Moms in runaway Audi 5000’s were mowing down their little kids in the driveway and pinning granny against the far garage wall.

This hadn’t happened with the Olds Cutlass Supreme Coupe, the "hot" suburban car Mom traded in for her Audi. The German car certainly felt different. Unlike the Olds’ wide push-bar brake pedal– that some Americans still operated with their left feet– the Audi had that weird, small brake pedal, kinda’ close to the gas pedal.

And these Audis had a mind of their own. No matter how hard Mom pushed on the brake pedal, the Audi kept on going, right through the garage door. This despite the fact that the little five-cylinder mill only cranked out 130 horsepower. And the top-notch four-wheel disc brake system probably could generate well over 600 g-force horsepower.

Apparently, the brakes were failing at exactly the same moment that the gas pedal decided it had a mind of its own. Perfectly plausible, at least to the 60 Minutes crew.

About as plausible as ignoring the police report of the most dramatic victim on the show, Kristi Bradosky, who ran over her six year old son. That report said "Bradosky’s foot slipped off the brake pedal onto the gas pedal accelerating the auto." Denial isn’t just a river.

Ed Bradley’s 17 minute "investigative report" aired on November 23, 1986. Between interviews of the teary-eyed "victims" (drivers) of unintended acceleration swearing their feet were on the brake pedal, CBS showed a clip of a driverless Audi lurching forward on its own.

Viewers didn’t see the canister of compressed air on the passenger-side floor with a hose running to a hole drilled in the transmission. An "expert" had rigged the Rube Goldberg device to shift the big Audi into drive and, like any automatic-equipped car, move forward (unless the brakes are depressed).

The clip was blatantly deceptive AND totally irrelevant. Nobody claimed driverless Audis were taking off and killing kids. Mom was always at the wheel, pushing the 5000’s "brake" pedal with all her might.

In 1989, after three years of studying the blatantly obvious, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) issued their report on Audi’s "sudden unintended acceleration problem." NHTA’s findings fully exonerated Audi and some other implicated foreign makes.

The report concluded that the Audi’s pedal placement was different enough from American cars’ normal set-up (closer to each other) to cause some drivers to mistakenly press the gas instead of the brake. 60 Minutes did not retract their piece; they called the NHTSA report "an opinion."

A flood of lawsuits was already washing over Audi, not to mention a tsunami of bad publicity. Audi took a questionable stance: they didn’t blame the drivers for the problem, even after the NHTSA report came out. Hey, the customer’s always right, and we sure wouldn’t want to make our American customers look stupid. Anything but that.

So the German automaker took it on the chin. Audi sales collapsed, from 74k units in 1984 to 12k by 1991. The timing added insult to injury; sales fell during the same years when Lexus arrived to battle for the hearts and wallets of America’s up-scale consumers. The Japanese autos quickly became the new suburban driveway prestige weapon."
CBS never apologized for its fraudulent report, but acknowledged that “the problem could be aggravated by vehicle design, the shape, location and feel of gas and brake pedals." So apparently, according to the network, since Audi didn't consider whether Americans might be confused with the size and location of the 5000's brake pedal, that makes it OK for 60 Minutes to broadcast a bunch of complete lies that ruined the reputation of a great car. Good grief.








Sunday, October 20, 2019

1985 Lada 1300

Who buys a Russian car? Obviously, people who have no other choice. Or, well, some Canadians. What, seriously?

The Lada 1300, aka VAZ-2101, was a copy of the Fiat 124 (who copies a Fiat?) with beefed up suspension designed for driving in snow on terrible roads. Hence the Canadian buyers.
























Friday, October 11, 2019

1973 Ford Mustang

Seattle, Washington. The kind of city where you can spot three 1973 Mustangs in just a few minutes. Start from lower Queen Anne to see this one, then check out this Mach 1 in Magnolia, then head up to Greenlake to spot this very Mad Max '73.

This Mustang has the "Grande" package, which means a vinyl roof, deluxe interior and better sound insulation.