Nevermind my last sentence.It has a retractible sun-shade.
It would make me feel like I was on display to others: I think it needs to be tinted dark.
I would love that. I hate convertibles because they are heavy, noisy, consume space, and generally annoying. I do, however, love the added visibility.
Hell, give me that car and I'll take it right now
I would love that. I hate convertibles because they are heavy, noisy, consume space, and generally annoying. I do, however, love the added visibility.
Hell, give me that car and I'll take it right now
The only sort of accident that our car has happens from above, Lunar.
(Hint: it's white and comes out of birds' bottoms.)
Ha a Saturn! Perfect for that crowd. I rest my case.
Erm, the second picture is a much less flattering angle. And the Saturn badge doesn't help, either. Oh, and I need something that I can get Clean Air Vehicle Stickers for and can also handle 110+ mph comfortably.
If GM knew how to do that, they'd be selling a lot more cars. They've had this problem for a long time where the same basic car was sold by Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, and Olds. The bean counters assumed that counted as 4 unique models where as the car buying public viewed it more like 1.4 different models.But I still wish that GM would make their brands stand out a bit more from each other.
GM has some good cars but they're too spread out. A few for each "brand". That's why GM needs to take their few good models and keep Saturn and Cadillac or Chevy and Cadillac for cars and use GMC for their trucks and get rid of Pontiac, Buick, and whatever other brands they have. The Japanese have all been very successful with this strategy. They have one up-level brand, and their main-line brand.But the trick is, there are only so many form factors that need to be represented. A super-mini, compact, mid-size, full-size, 1/4-ton, 1/2-ton, and a full-ton. On top of that is drivetrain, body style and cosmetic differences. If each brand sells one of each form factor and body style, with cosmetics that appeal to their target audience, what more do you need?
Mercedes has been doing this forever. Pick your size, pick your engine, and you're off...
GM has some good cars but they're too spread out. A few for each "brand". That's why GM needs to take their few good models and keep Saturn and Cadillac or Chevy and Cadillac for cars and use GMC for their trucks and get rid of Pontiac, Buick, and whatever other brands they have. The Japanese have all been very successful with this strategy. They have one up-level brand, and their main-line brand.
I agree with you about BMW. I don't agree about Mercedes. I have no idea if a C class is higher end than a S, or if a S55 is better than a CLK320, etc... That one is not intuitive IMHO.I just wish they were more clear with their product placement (like Merc and BMW). Even if you've never seen the line before, you know about where you stand and what you are looking for.
>> It has a retractible sun-shade.Just curious, if you were to see this type of roof as an option on other vehicles in the future ;-) ... would you want it? Would you pay a little extra for it? It has a retractible sun-shade.