[ATTACH] Lincoln Aviator[ATTACH][ATTACH]
Image Unavailable, Please Login Lincoln Aviator Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login
I get kind of an art deco vibe from it, I think because of the sloping roofline. Reminds me of an old streamliner locomotive or something.
Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login I like the overall simplicity of it. Nothing to bizarre or complicated. Or as one of the pundits put it: 'A Range Rover with a different face'
The view from a canine's perspective makes the grill look much, much better. Also, now notice the twin domed passenger cabin. Regarding the earlier question about headlamps, it looks like two transparent openings in the hood scoop area. Maybe inboard lights?
VW Pick Up Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login
I had a '91 or '92 Jetta Carat that was very close to that color. Loved that car. Not convinced by the Tron lights though, but waddayagonnado?
some novel solutions here to questions that have hardly even been asked yet... Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login
lincoln is putting out some good product lately. altho the suv seems to be a bit of a range rover rip off. i still like it.
Far, far better effort than the new Cadillac XT4 or whatever they call it. Peter DeL called it a phone phone in design job. Wonder when Johann's halo and "Moses sandals" will be taken away. Nice speeches can't always make up for uninspired product. Like Peter DeL says, that new Lincoln could be a market monster. The interior looks really good.
Not my thing but better looking than the outgoing model I dig it. Has a nice 'ready to pounce' profile.
From The Globe and Mail: Is car design becoming internationally homogeneous? Are we edging toward a consolidation of design, where there will no longer be Italian flair or American muscle? Or is the only hope to find something unique in every model and exploit it for all it’s worth? At the New York International Auto Show, which continues through Sunday, one of the stars is the Genesis Essentia concept, a futuristic all-electric sports coupe made by Hyundai’s luxury brand. There is nothing whatsoever about the car that says “Hyundai” or “Korea” – instead, it “integrates athletic elegance and Genesis DNA as defining parameters,” says executive vice-president Luc Donckerwolke, head of Genesis Design. Open this photo in gallery Image Unavailable, Please Login The Genesis Essentia concept is a futuristic all-electric sports coupe made by Hyundai’s luxury brand. HANDOUT The Essentia has a transparent hood to show off its carbon-fibre chassis and pushrod suspension, matched to a low and sleek roofline. The parabolic line that runs down the side is more Ferrari than Hyundai. “The search for dynamic proportions was contrasted with advanced aerodynamic flows to highlight the bionic combination of performance and aesthetics,” Donckerwolke says in design-speak. “Essentia embodies the genetic elements of the Genesis design.” Honda is showing off its new hybrid Insight, but the Japanese auto maker is staying cautious. The production sedan is virtually identical to the concept shown at Detroit, where it weathered the criticism of public opinion and, since it is a car that will be sold around the world, must appeal to a wide international audience. The new Insight has a “flying wing” grille that’s become a signature style as bold as Honda dares, with a low, wide stance and sweeping coupe roofline, like seemingly everything else at any auto show. The design of a car can make or break a company, which is why concepts are introduced and discarded until the maker feels it’s got the combination right. These days, the inspiration for any vehicle’s design can come from anywhere in the world. For example, Toyota recently introduced the TJ Cruiser – a concept SUV that looks like a mix of Jeep and Hummer with a little bit of Toyota’s FJ Cruiser for good measure. Open this photo in gallery Image Unavailable, Please Login Toyota’s FJ Cruiser has a structure that is 'typical of an American car,' says designer Hirokazu Ikuma. “We wanted to create something sturdy and powerful, so it ended up looking like an American car,” said its designer, Hirokazu Ikuma, an assistant manager in Toyota’s global design planning division. “If it was a Japanese car, the bodyline would be different, with more curves and more ridges. It has a very big 3-D structure, which is typical of an American car. There’s no decision to sell this car, but as a concept, it can be accepted anywhere in the world.” Ikuma studied automotive design at the Toyota’s Calty design centre in California, and he’s one of the growing number of car creators who take inspiration from experiences in different countries to produce a truly global product. “There is a unique feature about Japanese designers,” he explained. “I think we’re very particular about finishing the very small details, whereas American or European designers are very good at coming up with grand themes. We’re always trying to learn from them, so we can also come up with big, grand design themes There’s probably no car more American than the Ford Mustang, but the generation that was introduced in 2015 was specifically redesigned for a global market. The Mustang was never sold in any quantity outside of North America and its designers had to produce a car that looked American but had international appeal. And then last year, with the latest “refreshing” of its design, they had to do it all over again. Just as Canada requires daytime running lights and metric gauges, so different parts of the world need some different touches. Europe didn’t get hood vents on its Mustangs because they didn’t meet pedestrian protection requirements, “so we spent time on the placement of the vents, and deciding how to do the hood, and what was underneath it, to meet those requirements,” says Carl Widmann, Mustang’s new chief engineer. Open this photo in gallery Image Unavailable, Please Login Carl Widmann, chief engineer for Mustang. “The design has to be authentic to what a Mustang is, but then the engineering requirement, if it’s to be global, is more about how we interpret that to actually execute it.” The Europeans criticized the 2015 Mustang’s overall quality, so Widmann’s team worked hard to make improvements that wouldn’t cost too much extra money. The chrome now has a satin finish, for example, to better suit European tastes. “It has this very refined look to it, but you can’t put your finger on it, that it’s one single thing,” he says. “There’s probably 50 different things that we’ve done, but just in very small ways.” Even so, there had to be compromise. The amber turn signals must be clear in Europe because that sells better. “They don’t like amber in the front of the car,” Widmann says. “For whatever reason, they hate amber.” It is more important for a vehicle to represent its brand than its country of origin or final sale, and so small changes like these are acceptable, says Porsche’s head of design, Michael Mauer – but only if they’re truly small. Open this photo in gallery Image Unavailable, Please Login Porsche head of design Michael Mauer says any changes made to a car based on where it's sold must be small. 'You buy the brand and what it stands for,' he says. “At Porsche, we don’t do special country versions, because we believe one of the reasons our cars are bought abroad – in Canada or the U.S. or wherever – is due to the fact that it’s a German product,” he says. “As a customer, you don’t buy just the product – you buy the brand and what it stands for.” Mauer says the traditional stages of design are quite different between Germany and Japan. He remembers giving a lecture in Tokyo when he worked for Mercedes: “I explained that, in Germany, we have a more evolutionary approach. You have a predecessor, and then you try to further develop it. You always have to make sure that the new product is recognized at first glance as a product of that brand, but still is perceived as a new product. “And these guys explained to me that, in Japan, if the new product has still any similarity with the predecessor, then it is not perceived as a new product. They said, ‘You just have to understand our Japanese mentality. If it has still some similarity to the old product, then it’s perceived as an old product.’ ” Like almost every other auto maker now, the Porsche design team is completely international but works within the constraints of the brand’s identity. So, no, there is no consolidation of design coming among manufacturers, but there is a consolidation of branding. “I see the future as being more free for design,” says Aaron Stich, the creative designer for Buick’s interiors. “As we go forward, General Motors is keeping to more of a global portfolio. There are some trim-level differences, but we’re generally making the same cars around the world. But design is the challenge of taking technology and making it work. There will always be new ways to meet that challenge.”
and that may be the design difference between Porsche and General Motors Chevrolet division. The restrictive EU design standards hold back the design potential of the products sold their. Chevrolet would not compromise their USA built ZR1 Corvette to meet EU requirements. This hilights the compromises being forced on all car makers by the restrictive design requirements fostered by the EU requirements. The EU customers are being forced to accept design requirements that stifle innovation and unique design solutions. They are also paying a premium price for products to meet these standards.