Everyone loves 1990s cars. Over the past decade their popularity has risen rapidly as the differences between them and contemporary models have become ever more distinct.
What’s the reason? After all, 1990s cars are now 25 to 35 years out of date. And there isn’t the same love out there for the cars of the 1980s or 2000s.
It’s tempting to blame simple nostalgia: teenage kids of the mid-1990s are approaching 50 today. Back then they desired the cars of their era; today they can do something about it.
We believe there’s much more to it than that, though. Today, the cars of the 1990s are admired by a far wider cohort of enthusiasts than those teenagers of the time. There’s a unique purity and originality baked into the best of them that speaks especially of the 1990s.
What was so special about the era? Sociologists say our lives were simpler. The world economy boomed, the internet was in its infancy and there were no smartphones. Computers were boxy beige appliances people used only at work. One pithy 10-word summary of the 1990s speaks of ‘better music, better movies, better people, better cars, better economy’.
For car companies life was simpler, too. Climate change wasn’t yet an issue. Government regulation of car design was a factor, but shapes and structures were limited far less than today.
Dieselgate was two decades away. No one saw a need for today’s vast investment in electric cars and battery tech, but car companies’ economics were already greatly assisted by platform theory: distinct models built off similar underpinnings. Car companies were far more free to concentrate on creating cars people could love – and they did.
This realisation, this rising interest in the 1990s, is what encouraged us recently to gather 10 of the best and most disparate 1990s cars we could find at a favourite location in Gloucestershire.
The mission was to drive and understand the rationale behind them all over again, to enjoy them and to discover, above all, whether all the love was misplaced. Here’s how it went, alphabetically speaking.
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I'm guessing it's a great article to read, but since Autocars website has become infested with viral ads, it's no longer a useable website. Great ad for the premium version.
I was first able to afford a new or nearly new car in the 90s, so i remember them fondly. Actually i dont have to remember 2 of them, because i still have them, a 406 V6 and a 405 MI16. The 406 has been faultless and could still be used as a daily if i needed to.
Looking back, we didnt realise we had it so good, or how what we would be allowed to buy would be watered down by legislation to the point there isnt anything new i want. There were still good cars in the next 20 years, just less and less of them.
The MGF outsold the Mazda MX5 for every year of its life in the UK. Head gasket issues aside I much preferred it to the Miata it was introduced against,