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- <text id=94TT0740>
- <title>
- Jun. 06, 1994: Autos:Kings of the Road
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jun. 06, 1994 The Man Who Beat Hitler
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- AUTOS, Page 57
- Kings of the Road
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> As putative antidotes to suburban life, 4WDs are hot and heading
- upscale
- </p>
- <p>By John Greenwald--Reported by Edward W. Desmond/Tokyo, Joseph R. Szczesny/Detroit
- and Bruce van Voorst/Bonn
- </p>
- <p> To understand what makes the descendants of the Jeep the hottest
- vehicles of the 1990s, consider this fact: one of Chrysler's
- biggest challenges four years ago was to design the Grand Cherokee
- so the CD player wouldn't skip when going over rocks.
- </p>
- <p> That's because Ford Explorers or Chevy Blazers are not about
- exploration or blazing, or even about fat tires meeting bumpy
- terrain. They are about the possibility of it. "They suggest
- you could drive off-road if you wanted to, even if you never
- do," says Christopher Cedergren, senior vice president of AutoPacific,
- an automotive consulting firm. In other words, they perform
- the neat psychological function of persuading baby boomers that
- reaching middle age has not turned them into grownups. "They
- don't carry the same label of suburban domesticity as our vans
- do," says Chrysler vice president Bernard Robertson, general
- manager of the company's light truck and Jeep division. "We
- get letters all the time saying, `I've got a Mercedes or BMW,
- but I always drive the Jeep.'"
- </p>
- <p> That vanity trick has paid off for auto manufacturers, who are
- finding that these sports-utility vehicles, which typically
- cost between $20,000 and $30,000 and can come loaded with leather
- upholstery, cup holders and cellular phones, have replaced luxury
- cars like the Lexus as the baby boomer's favorite way to tool
- around the neighborhood. Detroit is rushing out increasingly
- pricey models, and foreign luxury-car makers are jumping in
- too. Just last week Chrysler confirmed plans for a large upscale
- sports vehicle that may sell for as much as $40,000 when the
- first one arrives by 1998. It will square off against a Mercedes-Benz
- model that the German company will build in Vance, Alabama,
- and plans to sell for as much as $60,000 when production begins
- in 1997. Not to be outdone, BMW roared into the market in February
- by paying $1.2 billion for an 80% stake in Britain's Rover,
- whose sports-utility vehicles include the $52,000 Range Rover
- County and the $29,000 Discovery; both arrived in the U.S. in
- April. (Rover expects to introduce a more luxurious version
- of the County in the U.S. early next year.)
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, American companies are straining to keep up with
- the demand for existing vehicles. Sports-utility sales rose
- 16.5% in 1993 and have increased 18% so far this year. With
- those kinds of gains, Chrysler is adding a third shift to build
- Grand Cherokees around the clock at a Detroit plant this fall.
- Chrysler is also reopening a Missouri facility that it closed
- down four years ago and will now use to make Jeeps. For its
- part, Ford is converting a St. Louis plant that currently makes
- Aerostar vans to sports-utility production at a cost of nearly
- $600 million. And General Motors is juggling shifts at plants
- in four states to make room for a new Chevrolet Blazer this
- summer and new Chevy Tahoes and GMC Yukons in 1995.
- </p>
- <p> The vehicles do different things for each of the sexes. While
- men revel in their swaggering, go-anywhere prowess, women like
- the high cabins that enable them to look out over traffic and
- feel secure. "Before, when I drove around town, I always had
- my hand on the horn because I was worried about my visibility
- to other drivers," says Jill Headstream, 41, a legal assistant
- in Austin, Texas, who traded in her Ford Probe for an Explorer
- in April. "I'm noticed now." Besides, says Headstream, Jeeps
- and their cousins have helped bolster the position of women
- in the road's ancient gender war. "For years men drove around
- in big cars and trucks and looked down at women, at their legs,"
- she says. "Now I think a lot of women are enjoying riding around
- and looking down at the little men."
- </p>
- <p> As for men, some report having had real adventures inside their
- sports-utility vehicles. Jim Banks, 42, who sells hair products
- in the San Francisco Bay Area, nearly ran over a mountain lion
- with his Toyota 4Runner while returning home from a camping
- trip at 3:30 one rainy morning. "I swerved to avoid it and hit
- a guard rail," he recalls.
- </p>
- <p> With such safari fantasies within reach, few owners--or manufacturers--have given much thought to the low gas mileage that could
- limit the appeal of these cars during the next energy crunch.
- Jeep Grand Cherokees equipped with V-8 engines get only 14 m.p.g.
- in city driving, for example, compared with 20 m.p.g. for the
- comparably priced Chrysler Concorde sedan. But carmakers profess
- few worries. "In America gasoline prices are so cheap they're
- virtually irrelevant," says a Mercedes official. "And in Europe
- the high cost of gasoline doesn't play a role with those who
- can afford these vehicles." (In Japan, though, Toyota three
- weeks ago unveiled a compact-size four-wheel-drive vehicle called
- the RAV4 that gets about 30 m.p.g. and has a sticker price of
- about $14,000.)
- </p>
- <p> For truly macho driving, there's always the Hummer from AM General.
- It can cost $60,000, it averages 12 m.p.g. for combined city
- and highway driving, and it performed flawlessly during the
- Gulf War.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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