Has anyone else noticed how ridiculously big and heavy cars are getting? While improvements in technology have fueled the broad trend towards technological miniaturization, with everything from media players and cell phones to laptops getting smaller and lighter, our cars have actually been getting larger and heavier. If you include SUVs in the calculation, the weight of the average new automobile sold in the United States has increased by almost half a ton since 1987. I know many would prefer to attribute this huge rush toward hugeness to America’s curious taste for the sport utility vehicle, but that doesn’t even begin to tell the whole story.
Consider any particular car, and follow its development (growth?) over the history of the model. At its release, in 1964, the Ford Mustang weighed 2445 lbs. Today, it weighs a much more Clydesdale-like 3401 lbs. The original 1973 Honda Civic weighed 1508 lbs. Today, the lightest Civic sold in the US weighs 2630 lbs, or substantially more, even, than the first Honda Accord. The original VW Rabbit weighed 1860 lbs. The 2010 version of the Rabbit/Golf tips the scales at 3200 lbs. Want more? How about this? The current version of the not-so-mini Mini Cooper weighs more than a 1965 Jaguar XKE coupe, and twice as much as the original Mini Cooper. Yes, it’s true, check for yourself.
When high performance cars are considered, the growth in weight is even more dramatic. In the mid-sixties, the Lotus Elan, the Shelby Cobra, the Porsche 911, and the Jaguar XKE were among the most coveted sports cars available. All of them weighed under 2500 lbs, and one, the Elan, weighed less than 1400 lbs. Today, the only truly high performance production sports cars that I can think of available for sale in the US that weigh under 2500 lbs come from Lotus. The lightest of those is the Elise, at 1984 lbs. The Porsche 911, which weighed 2,249 lbs in 1965, now weighs 3075 lbs. Meanwhile Jaguar’s modern spiritual heir to the XKE weighs 1300 lbs more than the 1965 XKE coupe.
As far as fuel economy goes, the automobile industry hasn’t even scratched the surface of what’s possible with currently available technology. How do we know? Consider the Honda Civic CRX HF and the Chevrolet Geo Metro XFi from the late 1980s. Both cars achieved 57 mpg on the highway. Today, almost thirty years of technological improvements later, there is not a single non-hybrid automobile offered for sale in the US that can deliver within 12 mpg of what those cars were able to deliver with the technology that was available 27 years ago.
Now, don’t get me wrong, I’m a car guy, not a tree hugger. I want light cars for the same reason Collin Chapman did, because light cars are faster and more fun to drive. It is merely a convenient coincidence that light cars are also more efficient. So my point here is that I’m wondering out loud how to get the auto industry back on track. What kind of public or government action might encourage the production of the next generation of lightweight sports cars? My first thought is some sort of exemption from all federal regulations (except emissions) for all cars that weigh under a certain amount and get above a certain fuel mileage. My other thought is some kind of broad tort reform with regards to product liability. Anyway, that’s my two cents. What do you think?