Home » What Combination Of Letters Just Doesn’t Work As A Performance Badge?

What Combination Of Letters Just Doesn’t Work As A Performance Badge?

Bad Badges Ts3
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When it comes to badging cars, certain letters are elevated above others. There’s a whole hierarchy going on—GLX and GLi outranking the humble GL, or R transcending a mere S or GT. These letters have become ingrained in the automotive consciousness. Even if you’ve never seen a given car before, you can guess at its relative value by the letters on the back.

Thanks to the last century of marketing and bluster, we all know which characters mean fast, cool, and expensive. They’ve changed and shifted over time; for example, the lowercase ‘i’ became less important as fuel injection became the norm. But what I find most interesting is the letters we don’t use.

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I wanted to share with you the worst performance badges I could possibly imagine. I’ll also examine how simple letter combinations get elevated to legendary status in the first place, and how automakers leverage this to sell more cars.

Type Q
This doesn’t work for a sports car, but WHY?

Doing it Wrong

Coming up with bad performance badges is actually quite easy. You can start by removing all the popular ones currently in service on fancy sports models. Forget Type R, Type S, and anything GT—they all sound rad. You have to look to the other letters—the ones that never seem to grace the back of a desirable car.

P Spec

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Grab a letter—a weird one—and go nuts. Type Q sounds silly. P-Spec sounds positively dire. Imagine putting down cash for an L-Sport, or an H-Spec. They all sound like oddball hangovers from another universe; as if a stale, tweedy culture took the world by storm in the latter half of the 20th century in place of the dominant American culture we know today.

L Sport

Stick together two or three weird letters, and it gets worse. “Oh yeah, I just bought the range-topper with 400 horsepower,” you’d say. “It’s the Supra YW.” It just doesn’t work. Nor would anyone want to buy a Mitsubishi Lancer PHF, a Honda Civic UJ,  or a Chevrolet Camaro MVD. They just sound random and ridiculous.

Gtw

You can even spoil the good letter combinations with poorly chosen additions. GT-W hardly screams racing prowess, and RS-P doesn’t exactly get your blood pumping. Poor word choices will also spoil an otherwise exciting letter. Imagine buying a Volkswagen Scirocco R-Envelope, or a Porsche Carrera Speedy-K. Okay, the last one’s kind of cool, but you get what I’m saying here.

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Ultimately, there’s a trick to making bad ones. Pick letters that have no performance link whatsoever. How could W mean anything fast? Could Q mean “big horsepower”—no it couldn’t! Beyond that, letters like P and V are dangerously close to naughty words so automakers tend to steer well clear of those as a matter of civility.

There are exceptions to these rules, of course. Automakers have, at times, dared to use some of these more obscure letters. Nissan is perhaps the most obvious example. In the 1980s, it sold the Silvia in a variety of trims themed after the traditional deck of cards—it sold Silvia J’s, Q’s, and K’s.

The J’s were naturally aspirated base models, the Q’s added a few options, while the K’s stood at the top of the lineup with the turbocharged drivetrain. They even later introduced an A’s trim, too. While it was an obvious naming convention, it failed to stick. Few owners still talk about the various trim levels today, largely referring directly to desirable engine and transmission configurations instead.

[Ed Note: Actually, in Britain, the Q-car means a high-horsepower sleeper! It’s a reference to seemingly unarmed-but-actually-quite-armed Q-ship naval vessels. -DT]. 

Nissan Kards (2)
The theme didn’t stick but it was a cool idea with some fun badging. Image: Infiniti

Good Letters

Really, though, what it comes down to is meaning. We’ll believe in just about any letter combination if it’s used for good reason. Similarly, if the first thing that comes to mind is undesirable or unrelated to performance, it’s a bad choice.

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The GT badge is perhaps the best example. It was first used on the 1930 Alfa Romeo 6C 1750 Gran Turismo. Loosely translated, it means Grand Touring, and in its purest form, it refers to a vehicle that combines high performance with a certain level of comfort for long drives. There’s a reason behind it, so it makes sense to us.

2022 Mustang Ecoboost Fastback Nite Pony Package
Mustangs have long worn the GT badge to denote the V8 models. Image: Ford
2022 Mustang Ecoboost Fastback Nite Pony Package
The “Five-O” badge has become an icon of the Mustang line, even referenced by Vanilla Ice. Image: Ford

The GT moniker then got used on a whole bunch of vehicles from all kinds of manufacturers, most of which used it in the same way. Each new vehicle wearing a GT badge added to the narrative, to the point that it became ingrained in our collective psyche. Now, just about anyone knows that GT has at least some kind of performance connotation.

The same goes for the beloved R badge. R stands for “racing,” it’s just that simple. Nissan was the first to tack it on to the GT prefix, creating the legendary GT-R family line that continues to this day. Those three letters have come to stand for outright performance, most often stamped on halo models and race cars. Other companies prefer to use R all by itself. Honda is perhaps the best known in this regard, creating legendary Type R models for the Civic, Integra, and NSX over the years.

R Badge.
Honda has built a legendary reputation with its Type R models. The raciest letter is tied to the color red—which also appears on the modified Honda logo. Image: Honda
Honda Integra 1998 Images 1
The Type R badge has weight because Honda has never watered it down or applied it to weaker models over the years. Image: Honda

Overall, the GT- prefix is perhaps the most flexible performance badge. Mitsubishi built the Lancer Evo GT-A—denoting the automatic version of the rally-bred monster. Then you have legends like the Plymouth GTX or the Pontiac GTO. The latter designation typically stands for Gran Turismo Omologato, referring to specially-built roadgoing versions of racing models.

Meanwhile, Ford went oddball with the FPV GT-P. It’s traditionally a clumsy letter, as it can recall a popular part of the male anatomy, but it worked in this case. It stood for Premium, denoting a more luxurious version of the basic FPV GT.

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Fpv Gt P 2008 1280 0c2f1a5213d7049f0a2b4cb0e169084696
Image: Ford
Fpv Gt P 2008 1280 69a262812edf4caca52814d2b1eb92704e
Even an awkward P couldn’t spoil the GT badge on this Falcon. Image: Ford

It’s also worth making an honorable mention to Subaru here. It created a performance division named Subaru Technica International—with the unfortunate acronym of STI. And yet, through quality product and sporting success, it created a badge with a grand reputation even despite its awkward connotations.

Make Your Case

I could spend all day listing various letter combinations. You wouldn’t like most of them. You might retort to my suggestions, stating “they’re just made up!” Here’s the thing about any combination of letters, though—indeed, they’re all made up. Somebody, at some point, lashed them together in an attempt to evoke an emotion, or catch an eye. The question is always the same—how well did they do their job?

There is an excellent example of this from modernity. 2012 was the fine year that Hyundai gathered a group of researchers and engineers and tasked them with creating a new performance brand from the ground up.

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Hyundai’s N badge has become an icon for the Korean automaker, along with its Performance Blue paint and red trim.

The Korean automaker could have gone down a well-trodden route. It could have designated its sports models with an S or an R, as so many companies do, or some other bland existing moniker. Instead, it decided to strike out boldly by declaring the letter N its new banner for speed, performance, and handling.

This could have easily faltered, but Hyundai hit all the right marks. It rooted the choice in some real life meaning—N referred to Namyang, the Korean home of Hyundai’s R&D center, as well as the famous Nürburgring racing circuit. It developed an eye-catching N logo that would be stamped all over its performance cars, and modelled it after a chicane.

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Pxl 20220512 073106415
It helps that Hyundai went hard, plastering the logo all over its performance models.

The groundwork was laid, but this alone wasn’t enough. Hyundai couldn’t simply tell everybody that “N” was now a synonym for speed. It had to prove it out in the real world. It was many years before the first N models actually hit the market, but when they did, they proved Hyundai knew what it was doing.

The 2017 Hyundai i30 N combined turbo power with a sharp aesthetic and pointy handling, and set the stage. The brand was further reinforced by the Veloster N in 2018, and the company’s entry into the World Rally Championship a further year later. A flood of high-quality, high-performance N models followed, and in a few short years, N began to become synonymous with performance in people’s brains.

It’s a formula that Hyundai executed well. It chose a letter, and had a reason to tie it to speed. It then built products emblazoned with this symbol that reinforced the connection.

Pxl 20220514 055208867
You’ll find it inside the vehicles and out.

An interesting corollary is the story of Lexus in recent decades. Starting in 2006, the Japanese automaker tried to make a similar move with the “F” and “F Sport” badges. The Lexus IS-F was the first product to wear the designation, a sports sedan with a healthy 416 horsepower.

T 10115 Scaled
Image: Lexus

The F later appeared on the Lexus LFA, RC-F, and GS-F. The letter was apparently chosen in reference to Fuji Speedway, or the word “fast”, depending on who you talk to.

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The weird F hasn’t caught on quite like Hyundai’s N. Image: Lexus

It’s hard to gauge these things, but Lexus’s F doesn’t stand out quite as well as Hyundai’s N. We could speculate about a few reasons why that might be the case. For a start, Hyundai kept its branding very clean and clear. The N is virtually always a suffix—the i30 N, i20 N, Ioniq 5N, and so on. Contrast this with Lexus stuffing F in wherever it will fit.

Lexus, like Toyota, has also had a bit of a penchant for awkward letter combinations. Toyota Racing Development has always been a bit of a joke for the scatological connotations of its acronym—TRD. The company’s luxury arm isn’t quite that bad at choosing names, but few would argue that “GS-F” rolls off the tongue or inspires excellence.

Trd Photo
Toyota has picked some awkward letter combinations over the years, none more so than TRD. Now, it’s gone with the equally enigmatic Gazoo Racing designation for performance models. GR is slowly catching on as a prefix. Image: Toyota/TRD
Carina Ed
The Carina ED is an even more hilarious example. It’s not about gentlemanly problems, it’s supposed to stand for Exciting Dressy. Image: Toyota

Sometimes, though, all it takes is a simple pattern to make a letter combination special. The best example of this is ZR1. It was a mere option code for Chevrolet order forms, and never intended to be anything more than that. However, those in the Chevy community would refer to the code directly when referencing the high-performance engine packages, and that led to Chevrolet building models with proud “ZR1” badging years down the line.

It’s the same story for the Z06 code, too. Chevrolet didn’t set out with the intention of making these special badges for marketing purposes—it just happened naturally. People associated these alphanumeric combinations with speed, to the point where it they became a selling point and an advertising tool on their own. A happy accident—it’s nice when the order forms do the marketing for you.

1970 Corvette
GM’s original option sheet listed code ZR1 for a high-performance engine package.
Gbs (1)
It later became a special model in its own right. Image: Chevy

Lessons To Learn

Ultimately, picking the right letters is an art more than a science. Still, there are a few lessons worth learning. Letters that hint at an obvious connection to speed are good—there’s a reason S and R are so popular, just as L is often used on luxury models. Meanwhile, letters that are used in more awkward words or with silly connotations—your Ps, Ws, Vs, and Qs—are best avoided. Connectivity is everything—you can take a letter like J and really make it work if your car is Japanese, but it doesn’t really translate to something of German or American make, for example.

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You can also never go wrong with numbers—if you choose them correctly. Generally, higher numbers tend to mean “better” in the automotive world, whether they refer to a greater engine displacement, number of cylinders, or total power output. Chinese automaker BYD has been bucking the trend by badging its cars with their zero-to-60 mph times, where lower numbers are faster. BMW did something similar when it built the M1 flagship many decades back. Ultimately, though, most of us know a 5, 6 or 7 is better than a 1, 2, or 3 in most cases—you can primarily thank the Germans for that.

3.8s Weird Byd Bage
BYD has been going a unique route with performance badges—marking the 0-100 km/h times with a “3.8s” badge on the Seal. Normally, higher numbers are better, but not in this case. Image: BYD

If you’re footloose and fancy free, though, you can always go completely off book. Tesla did that in grand style when it invented the Plaid badge, but it’s not as stupid as it sounds. It’s a reference to a popular movie—Spaceballs—in which Plaid was established as the highest speed achievable by the spaceship. It’s a silly reference, but like so many good badges , it was rooted in existing cultural knowledge—they had a reason why Plaid should mean fast.

Fundamentally, sticking to a basic level of truth really helps sell a badge. Rocket could be a fast model; Moth could not.

Models 81
Tesla didn’t call it the Model S Sport or Model S GT. Image: Tesla
Plaid Badge
They went with a memorable reference to a popular film—and created the Model S Plaid. Complete with a cool badge. Image: Tesla

Few people ever get to name a car, or a specific model—those privileges ultimately fall to a small number of people buried deep in the world’s automotive companies. Still, it’s useful to explore the basis of the names that are out there—and to try and put some meaning behind why we like the names and numbers that we do. It’s still subjective at the end of the day, but the tide of human opinion always creates winners and losers. It’s always interesting to examine the patterns that create both.

Image credits: Tesla, Lewin Day, Ford, Toyota, Lexus, Nissan
Top graphic image: Toyota

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1978fiatspyderfan
1978fiatspyderfan
1 day ago

Sports Luxury Option SLO

William
William
1 day ago

The Miata STO … Stuff taken off

Bill C
Bill C
19 hours ago

On my next junkyard trip I’m going to get rear tailgate letters from a Murano SL (there are usually many) to make my Focus a SLO, or a S-LO, or maybe find an italicized/stylized red S from another car for a little extra flair.

Old Busted Hotness
Old Busted Hotness
1 day ago

I remember a few turbo Buicks that had swapped on an Infiniti Q for the first letter. I thought it was clever, and the font was pretty close.

Also, Chrysler ruined K for all time.

Last edited 1 day ago by Old Busted Hotness
KC Murphy
KC Murphy
1 day ago

I always laugh when I’m behind an AWD Nissan with the SL package. The letters are so close together that the tag in the lower right of the tailgate says SLAWD.

Evil Kyle
Evil Kyle
1 day ago
Reply to  KC Murphy

Not too far off from Acura’s SHAWD, really.

Andy Farrell
Andy Farrell
18 hours ago
Reply to  KC Murphy

Me too!!

Mpphoto
Mpphoto
3 hours ago
Reply to  KC Murphy

Yes! I notice this too.

When I’m behind a Chevy Suburban RST, I always want to add “LNE” to it. RSTLNE, as in the letters Wheel of Fortune automatically gives you in the bonus round.

1978fiatspyderfan
1978fiatspyderfan
1 day ago

So many just look at a 1970s video top score. Fuk

Captain Muppet
Captain Muppet
1 day ago

“BRZ” is somehow much slower than “BZR” would have been.

GT86 just sounds faster though.

I wonder if that’s why no one bought the Subaru?

Shooting Brake
Shooting Brake
1 day ago
Reply to  Captain Muppet

Idk, FRS was worse than both if you ask me. But none of the many Toyotbaru names are great.

Captain Muppet
Captain Muppet
1 day ago
Reply to  Shooting Brake

We didn’t get the FRS over here, I’d forgotten about that uninspiring combination of letters.

Over here the GT85 isn’t just called the GT86, it’s called the GT86 D4-S. That sounds like the part number for the bit of your washing machine that fails early and floods your house.

I’m pretty sure “Celica GT” would have sold better.

MeirdaCaja
MeirdaCaja
1 day ago

I was on a work trip to Asia, it was either Taiwan or Malaysia, where I saw a type of car with a big “STD” badge on the back, I’m assuming it’s one of their domestic offerings. This was around 2009, so I hope someone had told them by now.

Alpine 911
Alpine 911
1 day ago
Reply to  MeirdaCaja

Maybe it was declaratory

JDE
JDE
1 day ago

GR at least invokes some nostalgia for Tony the Tiger…..GRRRReat. but TRD should have been thought through a lot more and more importantly fixed decades ago.

AMG once meant something, but seems like it is so watered down and used on everything that it means a lot less thee days. Kind of like SS the world by GM in 2009-2010.

Carbon Fiber Sasquatch
Carbon Fiber Sasquatch
1 day ago

Super
Handling
Intercooled
Turbo

Aw shit…

Manwich Sandwich
Manwich Sandwich
12 hours ago

And then have the cheaper version that has all the stuff the SHIT trim Has, but without the intercooler or turbo… it would have the regular ‘atmospheric touring’ model… the SHAT

Last edited 12 hours ago by Manwich Sandwich
Carbon Fiber Sasquatch
Carbon Fiber Sasquatch
12 hours ago

The competitors call their similar system

Power
Optimized
Overdriven
Propulsion

They call their shit poop!

Ricardo Mercio
Ricardo Mercio
1 day ago

Honestly, any diluted performance badge. S-Line, R-Line, R-design, M-sport etc should all be trim.packages that don’t come with badges. At MOST, you’re allowed to badge the individual components like brakes, steering wheels and seats. Nobody needs to know that your FWD A4 is an R-line, and I bet it only pisses off S4 owners.

Luke McIntosh
Luke McIntosh
1 day ago

the Honda/Acura SH-AWD always make me sing it in traffic like “shaawty” in a 00’s hip hop hook.

Vee
Vee
1 day ago

Anything with “H” in it honestly. While the Omni GLH and GLHS are hilarious when you hear “GLH” your first thought if you don’t know the Shelby connection is “Oh it’s an Omni with extra features.” Part of this is decades of cultural osmosis from the Simpsons (“Put it in H!”), part of this is that nobody else has used H for that purpose since then, and part of this is because H has never been used as a racing series acronym aside from the NHRA (which everybody just calls “drag racing” and never the NHRA) and has no connection.

Although “B” would be a close second. Pun entirely intended. “B” brings to mind beta, prototype, lesser, secondary, backup choice, and so on. Just like in school everybody wants an “A” but nobody wants to settle for a “B.”

Mark Tucker
Mark Tucker
1 day ago
Reply to  Vee

You know it stands for “Goes Like Hell,” right?

Collegiate Autodidact
Collegiate Autodidact
1 day ago
Reply to  Mark Tucker

And GLHS stood for “Goes Like Hell Some More” (or “Goes Like Hell S’more”)

Vee
Vee
1 day ago
Reply to  Mark Tucker

Yes. I know. It’s just most people wouldn’t understand that because of later Chryslers and Fords with with the GLS trim, so they see “GL” and think “Ah, it’s got options.”

OrigamiSensei
OrigamiSensei
1 day ago
Reply to  Vee

Just to slam your point home, B is also a gearshift position on a Prius.

Shooting Brake
Shooting Brake
1 day ago
Reply to  Vee

Look up the Lancia HF models my friend, “High Fidelity”, and they used an elephant as a logo, haha, on lightweight rally cars. Not very good branding compared to the rest of the Italians but the cars are so cool I don’t care.

1978fiatspyderfan
1978fiatspyderfan
1 day ago
Reply to  Vee

Good luck hot shot

AlterId is disillusioned, but still hallucinating
AlterId is disillusioned, but still hallucinating
1 day ago

Lexus is using “F-Sport” on the wrong products. They shouldn’t be cars that perform or even look more sporting, but the cushiest and least sporting. Soft and floaty tuning to erase all thought of asphalt, steering so light and vague that they have to provide a dashboard light for any feedback at all, and loose-cushion velour bench seats from a 1970s Ninety-Eight Regency. Because F-Sport. Lexus buyers want comfort.

And, as I mentioned in last week’s (or whenever’s) discussion, I was pleased that Dodge didn’t call the fuel-injected sport variant of its Street Van the STI.

Sid Bridge
Sid Bridge
1 day ago

I always do a double-take when I see a Taurus SES. The way the badge lays out it just looks like they did a bad job pluralizing Taurus.

Ottomadiq
Ottomadiq
1 day ago

N. 1000%

Who Knows
Who Knows
1 day ago

LPS, Corvette LPS would be funny, but probably not the best marketing

Luxobarge
Luxobarge
1 day ago

I can think of one performance trim with a W: the Oldsmoblie Hurst/Olds W30.

Olds used a W-letter code for several cars from the ’60s through the ’80s, but the W-30 seems to have become the most famous. It works, I think, because of its clunkiness and not in spite of it–like a secret code that only the initiates know.

Tempo of Doom
Tempo of Doom
1 day ago
Reply to  Luxobarge

The Pontiac Firebird had a WS6 performance package code as well. I believe it even made it onto a badge? (unless maybe the badges were aftermarket, I’m not entirely sure)

Martin Dollinger
Martin Dollinger
1 day ago

For Europeans, calling the „supercar“ Mustang „GTD“ is hilarious. For years we had the „GTD“ on slightly spicier Diesel versions of VW Passats, Golfs etc.

Bracq P
Bracq P
1 day ago

!This
It was desirable in it’s on way, often hinting to the turbocharged Diesel version.

NebraskaStig
NebraskaStig
1 day ago

How about when trim levels make it confusing as to if it’s a ‘performance’ model or not. Heat, Detonator, and Shock? These were all trim levels of the Dodge Nitro and all probably more align with how the powertrains will ultimately fail and not any semblance of how they truly rank. Let alone the name of the model was ‘nitro’ which was definitely not related to the vehicle it was put on. Detonator causes a Shock that creates Heat (explosion) of Nitro (glycerin)?
Who was in the meeting that approved this abomination of words?

GreatFallsGreen
GreatFallsGreen
1 day ago
Reply to  NebraskaStig

Too bad that era at Dodge didn’t overlap with the later era with some creative names for exterior paint. Perhaps you’d like a Grand Caravan painted Contusion Blue or maybe a Bruiser Grey Journey?

Lifelong Obsession
Lifelong Obsession
1 day ago

If anyone’s from Rhode Island or nearby parts of Massachusetts, Tasca Ford used to have some stupidly named dealer packages. The Mountaineer “Predator” (do you have to go on some sort of registry if you buy one?). The Grand Marquis Centennial Tasca Edition – the CTE (why would you want your car associated with a sports-related brain injury?). And the MKZ-R, as if ANYONE cross-shopped a Lincoln MKZ and a Type-R Honda. I guess they’re both powerful front-drivers, though.

Collegiate Autodidact
Collegiate Autodidact
1 day ago

Ha, a couple decades ago there were 4th generation Mustangs fitted with body kits around here in town (not sure if they were fitted by dealers or sourced from the internet) where some of the modifications included badges on the sides and rear bumpers embossed (à la these Shelby and Cobra rear bumpers) with the name of the body kit brand which was…Stalker. Seemed like it was in emulation of the Mercury Marauder, especially since those Mustangs so fitted were all black like the Marauder. But, really, Stalker?? Good grief.

MEK
MEK
20 hours ago

Oh the Tasca Special Editions. You still will occasionally see some ratted out old maroon Grand Marquis or Sable with a badly deteriorated white vinyl top, gold carriage lights and cheap wire wheel covers trundling it’s less than stately way to the local Stop & Shop but sadly I think they are finally a dying breed.

TXJeepGuy
TXJeepGuy
1 day ago

Q could work for British cars due to the James Bond connection as well, but it would need options like ejection seats.

V8 Fairmont Longroof
V8 Fairmont Longroof
1 day ago
Reply to  TXJeepGuy

Nissan beat you to it… search up Pulsar Q – we had 2 growing up.

Root Beer
Root Beer
11 hours ago

Don’t forget the Pulsar spinoff, the variations of the NX name

The World of Vee
The World of Vee
1 day ago
Reply to  TXJeepGuy

Aston Martin does indeed use Q for their special vehicle division

Rad Barchetta
Rad Barchetta
1 day ago

I always thought Hyundai choose N because that’s what their H logo looks like in a mirror.

Last edited 1 day ago by Rad Barchetta
TXJeepGuy
TXJeepGuy
1 day ago
Reply to  Rad Barchetta

or its one higher than M

Urban Runabout
Urban Runabout
1 day ago

My favorite ridiculous letters will always be the Cadillac Eldorado Touring Coupe – Otherwise known as the ETC.
Et Cetera.

I’m holding out for the Ford SuperDuty BDE.
“Dude – You need the BDE package!”

GreatFallsGreen
GreatFallsGreen
1 day ago
Reply to  Urban Runabout

I want to say it was when they expanded the abbreviation sort of naming to other models and the Deville had DHS and DTS models, either a counterpoint or reader letter in one of the magazines said “DTS in a mirror is STD, and I don’t want either.”

Rad Barchetta
Rad Barchetta
1 day ago

Still waiting for the Lexus IS-FU, the one that tells BMW how they really feel about them.
Then there’s a family-friendly kid-hauler that sticks to the roof of your mouth, the Toyota Sienna PBJ
Then there’s the German car that instantly tells everyone about the poor choices you’ve made, the Golf STD. Brought to you by VAG.

Last edited 1 day ago by Rad Barchetta
GP66
GP66
1 day ago
Reply to  Rad Barchetta

“the Golf STD. Brought to you by VAG.”

I could see this being an model. Golf S Turbo Diesel.

Last edited 1 day ago by GP66
Matt Sexton
Matt Sexton
1 day ago

I think there’s a lot to be said for how the moniker rolls of the tongue, both in terms of sound or syllabically. “ZR1” is easy to say and sounds good. “PFJ” is kind of clumsy.

It kind of reminds of my aunt who had a theory that first name/surname sounds best when it is collectively four syllables (she named her kids accordingly), or Jon Anderson of Yes who explained his sometimes incomprehensible lyrics by saying sometimes he just needed sounds that went together well or sounded good when sung.

Last edited 1 day ago by Matt Sexton
I'm an Evil Banana
I'm an Evil Banana
1 day ago

Lincoln ruined the “MK” nomenclature by slapping on nearly every one of their vehicles and confusing the hell out of anyone who might be shopping for a slightly upscale Ford.
Quick, without Googling it…. which is larger, the MKS or the MKZ? How about the MKT vs MKX?
Before this foolishness, When i saw MK associated with Lincoln, mind went back to the Mark III, IV and V of the ’70s and the (awesome) Mark VII and VIII of the ’80s and ’90s.

NebraskaStig
NebraskaStig
1 day ago

They followed Cadillac when they went all CTS, DTS, STS, BTS with their lineup. I don’t care for it either and glad Lincoln went back to model names.

Urban Runabout
Urban Runabout
1 day ago
Reply to  NebraskaStig

Tho can you imagine if Lincoln went with Cadillac’s nomenclature instead?

Navigator Ultra Touring SUV = NUTS
Aviator Nurburgring-edition Touring SUV = ANTS
Corsair Ultra Nurburgring-edition Touring SUV = CUNTS

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