From GM’s 550-hp twin-turbo sedan to Honda’s cute little Fit, we’ve lost some good ones.
Trunks are an endangered species. While there are several vehicles listed here—one of which will merely be on sabbatical for a year—not one of them is a crossover. Okay, the Dodge Journey might plausibly be a crossover, but it’s really more like a front-drive zit with seating for five.
Every year, manufacturers tweak the model mix to reflect the market they expect to encounter in the upcoming year. Just like the cars discontinued last year, 2021 will bring far fewer two-door coupes, four-door sedans, and what’s left of available wagons. It also means fewer small economy cars as they’re superseded by small, economy crossovers.
Will the world be better for these changes? Let’s hope 2021 is nothing but joy and life. Because, well, we’re sick of 2020, and we still have a few months left.
The Acura RLX has sold in horrifyingly dinky numbers. During 2019 only 1019 made it into the hands of United States customers. Way back in 1988, Acura sold 70,770 Legends, also a V-6-powered large luxury sedan. The once mighty has fallen, and now it’s time to bury it. So after 35 years in production, the Legend family line, the last of the original Acura models, will breathe its last VTEC breath.
Likely the most uncompromised and most demanding sports car available, it’s hardly surprising the Alfa Romeo 4C never sold in significant numbers. In fact, the sales were hardly detectable. Alfa only found 144 buyers for the 4C Spider and leftover 4C coupes in 2019. Sales so far during 2020? How about only 71. That many Toyota Corollas fall off trains every week. And yet, there’s a certain teary-eyed sadness about the 4C Spider’s passing. There may never be anything like it again.
In June, BMW built its last i8 small-engine/big-battery sort-of supercar. Available as a coupe or roadster, the i8 used a Lilliputian 1.5-liter, three-cylinder internal combustion engine paired with a battery pack and electric motors to produce a total of 369 horsepower. That’s a modest amount for a car that looks this exotic, this futuristic, and this totally wicked. There will likely be another car of this sort in the BMW lineup soon, even if it’s not called i8. Mostly likely it will show up first in the next Mission: Impossible movie with Tom Cruise driving it to a doctor’s appointment to have his prostate checked.
The names still resonate in American car culture: Fleetwood, DeVille, Seville. Names that carried substance, presence, and prestige wherever they went. A Cadillac sedan meant success. But with a name like CT6, this last—and one of the best—of the large Cadillac sedans didn’t stand a chance. Not even with the 4.2-liter, 550-hp, twin-turbocharged, DOHC, 32-valve, Blackwing V-8 under the hood of the CT6-V high-performance version. CT6 sales in the U.S. peaked in 2017 at 10,542 units. A pathetic 7951 made it through dealers in 2019. Sales for this big sedan were better in China. Maybe someday big sedans will return as the generation being raised in crossovers rejects what their parents drove. Or maybe not.
The last Chevrolet Impala was produced February 27, 2020, at General Motors’s Hamtramck plant in Michigan. A mere few days later, the coronavirus hit. Coincidence? You decide.
Chevy has used the Impala name on and off since 1958, and it seems unlikely this will be the end. It may just be too good a name to resist using on some future autonomous crossover pod.
Back in 2011, Chevrolet was looking to successfully launch the new Sonic subcompact. So, in the parking lot of California’s Magic Mountain amusement park, it had former pro skateboarder and then-MTV sensation Rob Dyrdek launch one up into the air, do a full barrel roll, land on another ramp, and drive off. The Sonic was introduced as a 2012 model. In most of the world outside of the U.S., the same vehicle was simply the second generation of the yawn-inducing Aveo. Assembled in the same Lake Orion, Michigan, plant as the all-electric Bolt, the Sonic was the only subcompact car being screwed together in the U.S. The line producing the Sonic will begin assembling a new crossover-ish version of the Bolt called the Bolt EUV in 2021.
The last Dodge Grand Caravan, the fifth generation, was introduced for the 2008 model year and was archaic by about March 2010. It was a simple box powered at the end by Chrysler’s familiar 3.6-liter Pentastar V-6. It was inexpensive to buy, incredibly useful, and cheap to rent at Enterprise. So, Dodge kept it around because why not? The Grand Caravan is being replaced by the Chrysler Pacifica, introduced for 2017, and the de-contented version of that avant-garde minivan introduced last year, the Chrysler Voyager.
The minivan is dead. Long live the minivan.
It’s C/D‘s least favorite SUV, the last vehicle sold by Fiat Chrysler with a four-speed automatic transmission, and a vehicle no one thinks about unless Avis doesn’t have anything else at the airport. The Dodge Journey is finally dying. About time.
Think of the Journey as a tall wagon version of the Dodge Avenger sedan and then try to remember what the Avenger looked like. It leaves production already shorn of any V-6 or all-wheel-drive options. All 2020 Journeys are front-wheel drive and equipped with a 173-hp, 2.4-liter four-cylinder engine. The only transmission is the last of Chrysler’s notorious four-speed Ultradrive automatics introduced for the 1989 model year for minivans and classic sedans like the Dodge Dynasty and Chrysler New Yorker. It will not be mourned.
The U.S. market will lose another convertible this year as Fiat pulls the handbrake on 124 Spider production. Built in Japan alongside the Mazda MX-5 Miata (the world’s happiest looking car), the 124 Spider packed a 160-hp single-overhead cam engine versus the Miata’s 155-hp dual-overhead cam 2.0-liter. Built on the same platform as the Miata, the 124 Spider was a more forgiving experience for everyday use thanks to its softer springs and damping. The 124 Spider Abarth wasn’t as gentle and the stiffer springs and added power, including 184 pound-feet of torque from a turbocharged 1.4-liter for Abarth models, brought turbo lag. Despite having nine extra horses, the heavier 124 Spider Abarth was slower than the Miata to 60 mph and the quarter mile when we compared the two in 2016. At our annual Lightning Lap, the 124 Spider Abarth’s lap time is quicker than any Miata we’ve lapped there.
Mazda bumped output to 181 horsepower and Fiat zipped the bag closed over the Spider’s honeycomb grille. Like an episode of Survivor, the tribe of Americans still buying tiny roadsters had spoken. Fiat only sold 1711 124 Spiders in 2020. Mazda moved 8807 of its roadsters.
Just when we thought signs of end times couldn’t be piled any higher, Ford, producer of the Fairmont, Crown Victoria, Taurus, and Focus, will no longer make a sedan in the United States. The Fusion was produced at the Hermosillo Assembly plant in Sonora, Mexico, but it has gone over the cliff Thelma and Louise style, along with the Lincoln MKZ. Although sales had declined over the last few years, the Fusion still sold over 166,000 units last year in the United States, even offering a 325-hp Fusion Sport in 2017 and 2018. Unfortunately for Ford, some of its previous Ford-car customers haven’t returned for the Escape or Edge, and have looked to Chevrolet’s Equinox for a crossover alternative or to Honda Civics and Toyota Corollas for a sedan.
The flat-plane crank in the Ford Mustang Shelby GT350‘s 526-horsepower V-8 sang to us, but as the song goes, only the good die young. It dies a decorated two-time 10Best winner, winner of a four-car comparison test against three of the most fun cars to drive today, and received much praise during our 40,000-mile long-term test. Ford announced in the fall of 2020 that it would end production of both the GT350 and track-focused GT350R while shifting its focus to its 760-hp supercharged GT500. Unfortunately this marks the end of the manual-transmission Ford Mustang Shelby. We hate to see it go, but we love hearing it drive away.
In the misty past of the 1990s, the Honda Civic coupe was the car upon which the “sport compact” fad was built. But practically no one buys coupes today, and much of the slack in the Civic line has been taken up with the five-door hatchback model upon which is based the insane Civic Type R. The 2021 model year is a transition year for the Civic as its tenth generation fades away in favor of an all-new 11th-generation car during the calendar year. But the two-door ain’t coming back. Concurrent with the announcement that the Civic coupe had been euthanized like a rabid rat, Honda also let it be known that the beloved Civic Si sedan will hibernate for a year before returning for the 2022 model year. It’s likely the next Si will be offered as both a sedan and a hatchback.
As far as small vehicles go, the Honda Fit was always amongst the most satisfying to drive. But this segment was always marginal in the U.S. Sales peaked in 2008 with 79,794 going to U.S. consumers but were down to 35,414 in 2019 and tanked during 2020 before COVID-19 arrived. Called the Jazz in many other markets, the car will continue in production for the rest of world.
Hyundai is ending the hatchback version of the Elantra, by killing one of only a handful of hatchbacks left in the U.S. market. Hyundai said it is instead focusing on SUVs like the subcompact Venue and Kona models. The Elantra GT was was recently redesigned in 2018. For now, the only hatchbacks left in Hyundai’s lineup are the three-door Veloster and its hotter Veloster N version.
Jaguar’s car sales were dismal in 2014 and the automaker needed to add another four-door sedan to its limited lineup. The Jaguar XE was supposed to be the entry-luxury sports-sedan to steal buyers from the BMW 3-series and Mercedes-Benz C-class, and net sales like the Jaguar X-type once did when Jaguar could sell up to 30,000 units of just a single model. It went on sale here in the U.S. in 2017 with a 240-hp base engine and a price tag under $36,000. We drove a 340-hp supercharged V-6 powered XE for 40,000 miles during our long-term test and ate through 10 replacement tires and three bent wheels. A refreshed XF will carry the flame, with technology updates and a lower base price. The XE’s peak year was in 2017 with 9278 sold, but only 886 have left dealer lots as of June 2020.
Like the XE, Jaguar’s station wagon is going the way of the horse and buggy for the U.S. market. The Jaguar XF Sportbrake is dead. It placed last overall in our 2018 wagon comparison test, but did so having won the fun-to-drive category thanks to its good body control and seemingly endless thirst to be pressed harder into corners. Few people buy wagons, but even fewer buy Jaguar XFs, so its easy to imagine how low the sales volumes for these were considering the supercharged V-6–powered XF Sportbrake started around $71k. That’s nearly $3000 more than a base Mercedes-Benz E-class wagon. The luxury wagon segment is now left up to Audi, Mercedes-Benz, Porsche, and Volvo.
Playing middle child between the front-drive ES series and the rear-drive LS flagship, the Lexus GS was easy to overlook even when it first went on sale in 1993 as a gussied-up version of the Japanese-market Toyota Aristo. But all GS models, with rear- or all-wheel drive, are built with impregnable Lexus quality and the silent luxury one expects of the brand. It’s going to be a used-car bargain for years to come. Also passing from the scene is the sneaky-good GS F. The last 200 examples of GS350 models for the U.S. will be special-edition Black Line GS F Sports.
While this Lincoln Continental will pass from the scene after 2020, it’s not likely to be the very last Continental that Lincoln builds. After all, the name first appeared in 1939 only to die in 1948. Then it came back from 1956 and lasted until 2002. It’s just too good a name to keep down forever. Handsome and broad shouldered, this latest Continental wasn’t quite the traditional rear-driver that old-school buyers want or the leading-edge hipster yacht that may have sold to rich millennials. It’s simply the fact that much of the Continental’s cachet has been usurped by the resurgent Navigator. With Lincoln’s bread and butter now being SUVs, the Navi is now firmly the flagship of the line.
Based on the lowly Ford Fusion, the Lincoln MKZ is a throwback to those lousy years when Lincoln dumped all its good names in favor of a meaningless series of letters. In fact, the MKZ was called the Zephyr during its first year in production. Never incredibly popular, the MKZ’s best sales year was 2007 when 34,363 found buyers. In 2019, only 17,725 found homes. Whatever place the MKZ had in Lincoln’s line has been taken up by a mix of the Aviator, Nautilus, and Corsair crossover SUVs. While the name MKZ is likely gone forever, our money is on the name Zephyr returning someday and on yet another crossover.
Little brother to the SL, the Mercedes-Benz SLC (called SLK until 2016) has been caught in a world that has left roadsters behind, particularly roadsters that look like compromises compared to their big brothers. But the world may change again. And some day there may be another SLK/SLC. But don’t count on it.
This is sort of deceptive. While the first two generations of the Toyota Yaris were dumpy machines Toyota itself made, the third generation, sold here since the 2016 model year, is actually a redecorated version of the truly good Mazda 2. So, it’s a shame that there’s no real market right now for small cars as consumers go lemming-like off the crossover cliff. But Toyota and Mazda have bonded, and it looks like a solid marriage. The last Yaris may wind up best remembered as the first in a long line of collaborations.
Yes, the base 147-hp front-drive hatchback is kaput. And 95-year-old Dick Van Dyke isn’t going to sweep your chimney. That doesn’t mean you’re going to go cold. Volkswagen ending Golf production is less about dumping the Golf, and more about Volkswagen restructuring the upcoming ninth-generation compact’s lineup in the U.S. market.
The GTI and Golf R will still heat things up with new models set on VW’s new MQB architecture. The GTI and Golf R will have more power than before and offer a manual transmission. VW has made the decision to only bring its best from Europe, and we’re fine with that, as driving a base Golf has always made us want to drive a GTI.
VW sold nearly a million Golfs in 2018 globally, but sales here were vastly different. In the United States, the Golf, Golf GTI, and Golf R sold a combined 42,271 units that same year. For now, we say goodbye to the Golf. But we’re left excited to get behind the next-generation GTI when it arrives for the 2022 model year.