Everything about Personal Luxury Car totally explained
A
personal luxury car is a
marketing term used to describe highly styled,
luxury vehicle intended for the comfort and satisfaction of its owner/driver, sacrificing passenger space, cargo capacity, and other practical concerns for the sake of style. The personal luxury car has often been a lucrative
market segment of the post-
World War II automotive market.
Definition
Personal luxury cars are usually, though not necessarily, two-door
coupes or
convertibles with two-passenger or
2+2 seating capacity, sometimes with more seats. They are distinguished from
GT cars or
sports cars by their greater emphasis on comfort and convenience than on performance, although the distinction between a luxury GT and a personal luxury car is often hazy. Personal luxury cars are typically mass produced (rather than
custom-bodied), sharing their mechanical components with more prosaic
sedans to reduce production costs and increase profitability. A modern example is the
Ford Thunderbird.
History
Origins
The antecedents of the personal luxury car are the expensive, often custom-bodied sporting luxury cars of the
1920s and
1930s, some of the most prestigious of which were built by
Alfa Romeo,
Bugatti,
Delage,
Delahaye,
Duesenberg, and
Mercedes-Benz. Two well-known examples were the
Duesenberg SJ and
Mercedes SSK: tremendously fast and stratospherically expensive automobiles eschewing the comfort of pure
luxury cars while being too large and heavy to be true
sports cars. They nonetheless offered distinctive style, impeccable craftsmanship, and strong performance for wealthy buyers (including film and music stars, kings, and gangsters) who wanted to project a dashing image. The
Great Depression and
World War II eroded the market for these expensive, bespoke cars, but the postwar era still produced noteworthy examples like the
Bentley Continental R Type with its fine two-door body built by
H.J. Mulliner. A related, primarily postwar phenomenon was the
grand tourer (GT), a relatively comfortable, high-performance car intended for high-speed, long-distance travel.
Italy became a major producer of GTs, with marques like
Ferrari and
Maserati offering distinctive, often custom-bodied models of considerable performance. Alfa Romeo never recovered from the Second World War. This void was filled by
Ferrari.
Both the bespoke luxury car and the GT were beyond the reach of all but the wealthiest buyers, and the
1950s saw a growing trend in both the
United States and
Europe towards mass-market "specialty cars" catering to drivers who coveted the image of the bespoke machinery, but who couldn't afford the cost -- and to wealthier buyers who could afford the genuine article, but disliked the inconvenience and complexity of servicing and repairing it, especially outside of a major urban area where foreign car dealerships were few and far between. Buyers were also interested in
automatic transmission,
air conditioning,
power steering, and other convenience options not generally offered on GTs or sports cars of the day. In its August, 1967 issue,
Motor Trend magazine noted that the domestic "luxury speciality cars" of the day (Ford Thunderbird, Buick Riviera, Oldsmobile Toronado, Cadillac Eldorado and Pontiac Grand Prix) appealed to buyers who wanted reliability and durability not found in the exotic European imports of the 1950s along with those aforementioned American-style options which kept them buying American cars." M/T added that "Motorists of just about every stripe can find a now car with pleasing and distinctive lines, good performance and all the things that go to make a car enjoyable."
The result was a burgeoning market for "factory customs," models using standard or mostly standard
engines and other mechanical components, but with unique styling. A prominent early example was the
1953 Cadillac Eldorado convertible, whose customized styling gave it a price tag nearly twice that of a standard Cadillac rag top despite nearly identical underpinnings.
The personal luxury car market segment in the
United States was largely defined by the
Ford Thunderbird. The first Thunderbird, launched in
1955 and sold through
1957, was a two-seat convertible, but despite its compact size and respectable performance, Ford made no claims that the softly sprung T-bird was a true sports car, calling it a "personal car." Although some Thunderbirds were quite fast for their time, and some successfully competed in various forms of
competition, it was more of a compact luxury car than a GT.
In 1958, Ford transformed the Thunderbird into a bulkier, four-seat model with a large array of comfort features and styling gimmicks and found it a tremendous success, outselling any of the earlier, two-seat T-birds. This market segment was previously the province of the
Studebaker Golden Hawk, a highly styled hardtop in the GT tradition with muscle car performance. While the four-seat Thunderbirds had only average performance and mediocre handling, their airplane and rocketship-inspired design cues found a receptive audience.
The personal luxury market emerges
Curiously, other U.S. automakers were slow to react to the success of the Thunderbird. It wasn't until 1962 when
Pontiac offered the
Pontiac Grand Prix and
Buick offered the
Wildcat, followed the next year by the
Buick Riviera, as well as the
Studebaker Avanti, that the T-Bird had serious competition. In 1963, "GM design chief Bill Mitchell's 'personal luxury' land yacht set sail, with the Riviera squarely aimed at Ford's big Thunderbird in the four-place sports coupe marketplace."
American Motors introduced the
Marlin, a full-sized sports fastback that was based on an
intermediate platform. By the late 1960s and 1970, this market segment was growing, and would achieve even greater success in the later 1970s.
While Europe's slower economic recovery meant that it didn't venture as much into this market until the 1960s, there were exceptions like the
DKW 1000Sp, the custom-bodied
Alfa Romeo 1900 Sprint,
BMW 507, and
Mercedes 190SL were popular in the personal luxury market, albeit on a smaller scale. By the 1960s models like the
Jaguar E-Type,
BMW CS coupes,
Citroën SM, and
Mercedes SL roadsters, while more expensive and somewhat smaller than their U.S. equivalents, were very much aimed at the same type of market. Indeed, the initial
6-series BMW's of 1977 were very comparable to models like the Riviera: they shared most of their mechanical components with contemporary sedans, offering very similar (and even slightly inferior) performance and less practicality at a higher price, but their distinctive style and image made them desirable automobiles.
The decline of the
muscle car in the early 1970s coincided with a strong upswing in the personal luxury segment, as buyers shifted emphasis from performance to comfort, although there were some muscle cars that could be classified as personal luxury, such as the
Dodge Charger (SE models). The models of that time, including the
Lincoln Continental Mark series,
Cadillac Eldorado, and Ford Thunderbird, largely abandoned any pretense of sport for a more intimate, luxury-oriented feel, with plush interiors and vintage styling cues like
Rolls Royce-style
radiator grilles,
opera windows, and
vinyl tops.
Decline
American 'personal luxury' cars began to die out in the late
1980s as younger buyers moved toward imported European and
Japanese cars, or toward
sport utility vehicles. After years of steadily declining sales, the
Oldsmobile Toronado died after 1992, the
Lincoln Mark after 1998, the
Buick Riviera after 1999 and the
Cadillac Eldorado after 2002.
Nevertheless, conceptually similar imports from Japanese manufacturers like
Lexus SC and
Infiniti and European marques like
BMW and
Mercedes continue to sell well, even though their vehicles tend to be higher priced than their former American counterparts.
Further Information
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