Will Sports Cars Disappear?
Sports cars are widely loved, but a quick survey of one’s morning commute will
show they are not the most popular vehicle type on the road. Four door sedans,
SUV’s, practical pickup trucks, and small economy cars dominate the automotive
landscape. Sports cars seem to be an increasingly rare commodity. This is
because other types of automobiles are increasingly able to take the best
aspects of the sports car experience while avoiding some pitfalls inherent to
the smaller speedsters.
For a long time, high performance was ruled by sports cars. Manufacturers used
their sports car line to showcase new developments and design elements. Today,
however, it appears many of these great qualities can be easily adapted to
other car types.
The lighter construction of today’s cars, coupled with improvements in
technology, has allowed family sedans to perform almost on par with sports
cars. In fact, many of today’s “standard” offerings outperform the higher end
sports cars of only a few years ago. Even SUV and trucks boast technology and
performance that were unthinkable only a short while ago.
The automobile has evolved to a point where virtually any type of car can
capture sports car technology. Regular production cars handle better than ever
before and the only performance advantages to sports cars can only be realized
under extreme driving conditions few will ever encounter. A sports car may hug
a lynchpin turn at high speeds, for instance, better than the family sedan, but
one must wonder how often any family will be trying to set speed records on
mountain roads.
While today’s regular production models can steal some of the sports cars’
thunder, they can also offer some unique advantages over their smaller
counterparts. Sports cars are notorious for their small size. Although this
helps in handling and speed, it makes longer drives less comfortable while
making every day use less practical. Larger cars have a utilitarian advantage
that sports cars simply cannot match.
It was once sensible to trade some comfort for superior performance, but with
modern standard autos now performing so well, the tradeoff seems less and less
sensible. This seems apparent when one looks at the kind of cars people are
buying: larger vehicles with greater seating capacity.
Additionally, the limited utility of sports cars makes them increasingly rare
due to economic considerations. Few families today can afford to purchase and
maintain a hobby car. By and large, people expect to use the vehicles they
purchase on an every day basis. The old days of having a little convertible in
the garage to use for occasional bursts of summer fun no longer seems like an
economically feasible diversion for most people.
Originally, sports cars were designed specifically with rallies and contests in
mind. Auto producers tested their design and mechanical skills against one
another as they sought out ways to increase automobile performance. Later,
sports cars became popular for mainstream drivers who were seeking greater
performance from their vehicles. Lately, however, regular production cars have
evolved and now come with the higher performance parts and construction once
reserved for sports cars.
This may spell the eventual end for traditional sports cars, although producers
are sure to maintain a small fleet of developmental performance cars with which
to test new ideas. In the end, we may see a return to the sports cars of
yesterday—cars designed specifically and almost exclusively to test new ideas,
as opposed to popular cars for the larger public.
With each passing year, it seems, one notices fewer and fewer true sports cars
on the road. This trend is not likely to be reversed any time soon, as more
practical alternatives exist and the performance gap is shortened. Although
the true sports car will probably never completely disappear, it is likely to
become increasingly less visible to the public.
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