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Welcome To Alphanumeric Car Hell (theverge.com) 224

Jason H. Harper, writing for The Verge: Et tu, Hyundai? Until recently, the Korean brand offered two upmarket cars, the Genesis and the Equus. The first name had biblical shades and the latter shared a title with a play where an adolescent likes to get naked and straddle horses. So while the connotations were a bit muddled, at least they were memorable. Now Hyundai has spun Genesis into its own luxury brand, akin to what Toyota did with Lexus decades ago. And in so doing, it has cast off those memorable names in favor of an alphanumeric naming strategy. The Hyundai Genesis is reborn as the Genesis G80 and the Equus sheds its horsey homage to become the G90, which guarantees that I won't remember the new names. I'll just call the G90 the Model-Formerly-Known-as-Equus. And while the two models seemed well differentiated before, now the distinctions are hazy. The G90 apparently has 10 more units of something over the G80. Perhaps it is 10 percent better. Ten percent bigger? Ten grand more expensive? Welcome to Alphanumeric Hell.The rest of the article is worth a read as well.
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Welcome To Alphanumeric Car Hell

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  • Numbers Are Easy (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Luthair ( 847766 ) on Tuesday August 30, 2016 @01:33PM (#52797489)
    Weird names and letter combinations no one has a clue what any of them mean.
    • Re:Numbers Are Easy (Score:5, Informative)

      by i.r.id10t ( 595143 ) on Tuesday August 30, 2016 @01:50PM (#52797633)

      Numbers are easy, until marketing and/or legal gets involved.

      Porsche numbered their cars based on project number. So the iconic 356 is the 356th project that Porsche Engineering undertook.

      Except Ferry didn't want his first customer to think they were the first... so the first project was #7, so the 356 is actually project number 349 (this is where marketing kicked in for him).

      This carried on with sub assemblies - the 744 transmission, etc.

      Then the 901 was introduced. And after they made 34 cars, Peugeot called their legal department and it was decided that they had an issue with any other car maker making a car and badging wtih a 3 digit number where the middle number is a 0. And so overnight the 901 became the 911.... of course, one of those first 34 cars with the 901 badging are VERY collectible, even over and above any other early 911...

      • Re:Numbers Are Easy (Score:4, Interesting)

        by kalpol ( 714519 ) on Tuesday August 30, 2016 @02:08PM (#52797775)
        And the numbers actually meant something back in the day at least for Mercedes and BMW. A 280SE was the 2.8 liter Super body with fuel injection (Einspritz), so the midsize sedan, unless qualified with an option like the 280SE 4.5 or the 450SEL 6.9, which happened to be a totally different production line than a standard 450SEL. A 300D was the 3.0L diesel, not super or long, so the small sedan, and a 450SL was the 4.5 liter Super Light (sports car). my favorite was a 500SEL (5.0L Super Einspritz Lange). It all made perfect sense.
      • Sounds similar to the old BMW naming scheme. The first digit denoted the vehicle body type (3 series, 5 series, 7 series) the next 2 digits were for the engine typically the displacement or some close approximation there of (18=1.8l, 20-2.0l, 23=2.3l, 30=3.0l 40=4.4l) then there was a letter typically an i indicating fuel injection c for coupe, l for long wheel base (7 series only) or x for all wheel drive. So if I said I owned a 325i someone would know I had a 4 door 3 series with the 2.5 liter engine that
        • The 535i e28/e34 never had a V8. Was a silky smooth 3.5l straight 6. The e34 530i was a 3l V8, the generation after had a 530i which was a 3l straight 6.
          • I was referring to the e39 535 [wikipedia.org] which did have a 3.5l V8, but still the last 2 numbers do tell you the displacement even if it isn't clear if it is a big six or the v8 but that would be something that is specific to the body version. So while not old like the e28/e34 we aren't talking the current F10/F11 bodies either. Personally I have never driven one of BMW's big sixes but the little sixes are really nice engines and pretty damn durable and I would imagine that the big six would be as well just with more
            • We never got an e39 535i so I never knew they existed :-) We had the 540i e39, and I guess the market wasn't big enough for both the cars (they must have been very close in characteristics).

              The m30 engines were actually quite great. Super smooth revver all the way up to redline. The one I drove for a few months was a much better driver than the 540i it was replaced with. I'd love to buy a new car with those engines.

              Finally, what a coincidence - I had an '86 e28 with the 2.7l engine (m20). Very nice torque c

  • No! No It Is Not. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 30, 2016 @01:37PM (#52797513)

    The rest of the article is worth a read as well.

    TFS wasn't worth the read, manishs. No need to bother going to The Verge to read the article.

  • wait till you see G100
  • Was their 120 20 per cent better than the 100?

    Was their Twin Six twice as good as their plain six?

    Is the AMD FX8350 twice anything of the FX4175?

    What's your point?

  • by jenningsthecat ( 1525947 ) on Tuesday August 30, 2016 @01:40PM (#52797539)

    "News nerds don't give a shit about. Stuff that matters only to marketdroids".

  • "The rest of the article is worth a read as well."

    Well the summary was complete shit.
  • WTF Slashdot? (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    What the fuck is an article like this doing on here?

    Whatever next, a review of Britney's new album, or an instructional video showing how to assemble IKEA furniture ?

  • by cpotoso ( 606303 ) on Tuesday August 30, 2016 @01:43PM (#52797569) Journal
    /. is becoming more and more irrelevant

    why is this a worthy topic? why is this a worthy article?

    Gosh, I miss the good old days where interesting things were discussed rather than these stupid topics.

    • by wannabe ( 90895 )

      I think your nostalgia is clouding your perception of what was reality. Much the same as so many people in the older generation have come to forget the realities of the 1950s and 1960s and instead believe The Andy Griffin Show or Leave it to Beaver was some historical documentary on true life.

      Sadly, there has always been crap that rolled through the front page. Back in the 90's we complained that other sites did a better job whether it was Fark or Kuro5hin or later on Digg or some other now-defunct site t

      • by spun ( 1352 )

        You were here in the 90s, Mr. 8 digit user ID? Because I was, and no, it was never this bad in the 90s. There was none of this crap. Yes, this is my first time logging in in about 10 years, and I did it just because this article was about the dumbest thing I've seen here, and I had to point and laugh. Seriously.

        • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 30, 2016 @03:35PM (#52798359)

          by wannabe ( 90895 )

          You were here in the 90s, Mr. 8 digit user ID?

          I think you lost your reading glasses, old man. :)

          I had a 5-digit ID too, and from my memory, there's some truth to both of your statements. Slashdot the past few years has been markedly worse than it used to be, but even back in its "glory days" it still had a lot of garbage that attracted the same kind of complaints.

          One of those content slumps is why I quit following the site for a while, and when I got around to checking back I'd forgotten my password and no longer had access to the email I used so recovery was no option. Which is why I post as AC now, if I bother to post at all. For a while I tried to remember the password, but eventually I quit, and by then I didn't even want to make a new account. IMO it hasn't been worth making a new account here for years.

          • Someone upvote the AC to let the lofty 4 digit UID guy know that he needs to take a refresher course in digit counting.

            I want to 2nd that /. has always had some fluff as its content. And props to wannabe to remind us of when K5 existed and was the answer to /. "going soft".

            It could very well be a slow tech news day. Talking about how marking droids, or trashing them if you so prefer, is a time honored tradition so why not have a thread about it.

    • The upside is that we haven't seen Bennett in months!
    • Just don't tell anybody that a 1TB HDD doesn't actually have 1024^4 bytes of capacity or there'll be 97 articles about that.

  • by LichtSpektren ( 4201985 ) on Tuesday August 30, 2016 @01:44PM (#52797577)
    No, it really isn't.
  • That would be 12.5% more, not 10% more
  • With a reason? (Score:5, Informative)

    by jxander ( 2605655 ) on Tuesday August 30, 2016 @01:48PM (#52797609)

    So long as there's rhyme and reason to the numbering scheme, I have no problem with it.

    BMW does this, and it's awesome. The first digit is the body style (3 is small, 5 is mid, 7 is large), and the next 2 digits are the engine displacement. They add letters on the end for extra little features: i for Fuel Injection, s for Sport Package, L for Luxury Package, etc. So a 328is is a small car with a 2.8L engine, fuel injection and sport package.

    They recently added even numbers to denote 2-door variants, and left odd numbers for 4-doors. They've also started putting x or i in front for SUVs or Electric/Hybrids respectively, but the concept holds. The alphanumeric scheme serves a purpose.

    • Best Car Name Ever: Bonus points* if you can tell me where it is from:

      6000 SUX

      * These be worthless "Whose Line" style points.

      • Hell yeah, Robocop. Back when Robocop was both a solid action flick and remarkably prescient social commentary.

    • Re:With a reason? (Score:5, Informative)

      by almitydave ( 2452422 ) on Tuesday August 30, 2016 @02:07PM (#52797763)

      BMW does this, and it's awesome. The first digit is the body style (3 is small, 5 is mid, 7 is large), and the next 2 digits are the engine displacement. They add letters on the end for extra little features: i for Fuel Injection, s for Sport Package, L for Luxury Package, etc. So a 328is is a small car with a 2.8L engine, fuel injection and sport package.

      Except when they don't [wikipedia.org], and put a 2.0 liter engine in a *30, or a 3.0 liter engine in a *28.

      They recently added even numbers to denote 2-door variants, and left odd numbers for 4-doors. They've also started putting x or i in front for SUVs or Electric/Hybrids respectively, but the concept holds. The alphanumeric scheme serves a purpose.

      The odd/even thing is stupid, especially when the 4 series is just a 3 series with 2 fewer doors, but the 6 series is not related to the 5 series stylistically (other than sharing a platform). The fact is that BMW is prone to marketing nonsense in their names like every other manufacturer. Hyundai is switching to alphanumeric model names, because that's what all mass-production luxury car makers do (it's true of BMW, Audi, Mercedes, Lexus, Infiniti).

      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward

        BMW's inconsistency isn't even new. In the 80's the 325i had a 2.5L, the 325e and the 528e both had the same 2.7L, the 535i had a 3.4L, and the 745i had a 3.2L (with a turbo).

      • Re:With a reason? (Score:4, Interesting)

        by jxander ( 2605655 ) on Tuesday August 30, 2016 @02:28PM (#52797937)

        Except when they don't [wikipedia.org], and put a 2.0 liter engine in a *30, or a 3.0 liter engine in a *28.

        Fair point. There are exceptions (most notably the M and Z series) but even those follow clear patterns for the most part. The Z1 - Z4 were simply sequential, they made a Z1 roadster until they upgraded the design to Z2, etc... (Z8 and Z9 are still dumb.) And the M series are just amped up versions of existing models, based on the associated number. An M3 is a 3-series (small frame) with all the bells and whistles. Likewise an M5 is a tricked out 5-series (mid-size).

        The odd/even thing is stupid

        No argument here. I didn't like the decision, especially as someone who drove an old 328is 2-door (1999 E36 platform). But I still respect that they've made a choice (whether or not I agree with that choice) rather than just slapping random letter number combos on their cars.

    • So long as there's rhyme and reason to the numbering scheme, I have no problem with it.

      BMW does this, and it's awesome. The first digit is the body style (3 is small, 5 is mid, 7 is large), and the next 2 digits are the engine displacement.

      Except when they aren't; these days, the next 2 digits may, or may not, have any connection to the engine size. For example, both the BMW UK page giving technical data for the 3 series [bmw.co.uk] and the BMW USA page for building your own car, after selecting the 3 series sedan [bmwusa.com] indicate that both the 320i and the 330i have a 2-litre turbo 4, with the 330i just having a more powerful version.

    • Re:With a reason? (Score:4, Interesting)

      by ausekilis ( 1513635 ) on Tuesday August 30, 2016 @02:24PM (#52797911)
      This used to be true, but has changed somewhat after the E46s (model year 1998-2005), E90's (2006-2011) and F30s (2012-present). For example, the E46 328ci did have an inline 6 cylinder 2.8L. The E90's started introducing turbos. And most of the F30s have a turbocharged 4 cylinder that displaces less than 2L (source) [autoevolution.com], the 335 has a turbocharged 6. It used to be reliable and have that direct correlation to some aspect of the car, now it's just a rough estimate of comparable performance, 318 < 328 < 330 < 335.
      • Ahh. My last bimmer was an E36, so apparently I missed all the major fuckery.

        At least they're keeping the relative performance numerically sound, if not adhering directly to the physical characteristics.

    • by swb ( 14022 )

      But everyone on the Internet refers to BMWs by some "Exx" nomenclature, instead of their nameplate model designations.

      I'm not sure why this is done, either, unless it's to show you're some kind of BMW sophisticate. I would assume the common labels with model year would provide the same information.

      • by Sique ( 173459 )
        The E number is the body. As you can mount different engines into the same body, and have different shapes (sedan, station wagon, coupé...) based on the same body, the E number tells you the actual body. BMW doesn't have model years as the american manufacturers do, but the E number is a close relative.
    • So long as there's rhyme and reason to the numbering scheme, I have no problem with it.

      BMW does this, and it's awesome. The first digit is the body style (3 is small, 5 is mid, 7 is large), and the next 2 digits are the engine displacement. They add letters on the end for extra little features: i for Fuel Injection, s for Sport Package, L for Luxury Package, etc. So a 328is is a small car with a 2.8L engine, fuel injection and sport package.

      Fair enough, but can you explain the monstrosity that is the M240i XDrive then? I'm not a BMW fan. I don't hate them. I just don't care about this kind of car. M apparently means Performance. OK.... I don't speak German so maybe in German using M for "Performance" is actually OK because for all I know the German word starts with M. Then we come to the 240 part, which according to you is the engine size. However, the M240i has a 3.0 liter engine. And you say that "i" means fuel injected. Really? Be

      • but in general, yes, it means Performance. :)

        I agree, at this point the i for injected is somewhat a leftover. They have a pretty long history at making cars, and have stuck with it.
        I actually haven't kept up with their model for the past 10 years or so. I've had a few BMWs. A 1988 528e sedan (5 series, e = efficient instead of performance), a 1997 318i sedan (3 series, 1.8 liter), and a 1988 M3. -- that one is special. :)

        Yes, they haven't always strictly held to the naming convention, but you know bas

    • They recently added even numbers to denote 2-door variants, and left odd numbers for 4-doors

      You mean like the 4 Series Gran Coupe [bmwblog.com]? Is that the not 2 door but 4 door, not Coupe but 4 door car that makes a lot of sense of BMW's naming?

    • by dargaud ( 518470 )
      Yes, many european car brands used to have sensible numbering schemes. The higher the numbers (1xx / 2xx / 3xx...) the more expensive / luxurious the car, and the higher the end digits, the more recent they were. More or less. Then in the 90s they all shifted to completely dumb named like the mudpit, the vavina, the ratist or crap like that, impossible to remember 6 months after they came out. I'll sure be glad when this fad is over. Yup, my car is a T5, with one number increase every 15 years.
  • Then, of course, the maker might get perverted into adding subversions. So we can go to G90.3.5

    And maybe even take a hint from Apple's phones: G80.7+

    • Then, of course, the maker might get perverted into adding subversions. So we can go to G90.3.5

      And maybe even take a hint from Apple's phones: G80.7+

      If Infiniti add subversions, BMW will add gits.

  • There was a time when I paid attention to new graphic cards and all of their extra confusing numbering schemes. Looking back, I don't know why I wasted so much time on that. The only time it matters is when I'm shopping for a new one, which doesn't happen that often, and I buy a new graphic card way more often than I buy a new car.

    ... There is one thing though. Nvidia used to get a little sleazy when it comes to model numbers, rebadging previous generation GPUs as lower-end chips of the current generation
  • Because this kind of naming has worked out so poorly for brands like Mercedes and BMW . Not too mention Lexus and Acura with similar naming schemes for most of their cars.

    Maybe Mr. Harper should pull his head out of his butthole?

    • It's what you do for luxury models. You put numbers in the name, but hide the numbers in the price.

      • by lgw ( 121541 )

        Oh, no, you never hide the price of a status symbol! That's why the number associated with most luxury cars goes up with the price.* If your neighbor also gets a luxury car of the same brand, you can immediately see which is most expensive just by comparing the number on the back. Audi is the odd duck there as they don't decorate their model number with fine-grained pricing information.

        *Tuner sports models are the exception.

    • by Sique ( 173459 )
      For Mercedes and BMW it worked, because you could just tell from the specs how the car was called. You knew that an Mercedes with a 3.0 litre injection engine was most likely be called the 300 E (Einspritzung being the german word for injection). You knew that a 320 ti was a compact BMW with a 2.0 litre twin cam injection engine.

      Since a few years, especially BMW has left that path, and now there is no connection between specs and naming anymore. Mercedes decided that the E no longer points to the type of

  • I think I gave up on this site because of censorship in their forums. They couldn't handle ideas contrary to their narrative. Not really surprised they are generating this kind of innanity.

    • You, old guy like me, remember the good old /. from 1998, but this article is really useless!

      EDITOR: Please no more article like this.
  • by fredrated ( 639554 ) on Tuesday August 30, 2016 @01:54PM (#52797675) Journal

    Someone doesn't like the name of a car?

    • by ausekilis ( 1513635 ) on Tuesday August 30, 2016 @02:26PM (#52797925)
      I liked playing the "Anal __blank__" game with car model names. Ford has some of the best "Anal Ranger", "Anal Expedition", "Anal Excursion". Plymouth has a zinger with their Prowler. Now with model names being replaced by numbers, how are we bored people supposed to laugh about car names?
    • Someone doesn't like the name of a car?

      Yes, but if we instead ran an article about how CPU's no longer put their speeds into the product title Slashdotters would loose their cool.

  • by DudeTheMath ( 522264 ) on Tuesday August 30, 2016 @01:57PM (#52797703) Homepage

    Once upon a time, Volvos had a three-digit model number: the first digit was the series, the second the number of cylinders, and the third the number of doors. So you'd know just from the model that the 245 was the lower-end four-cylinder station wagon (the "fifth door").

    When they ditched that system (in the '80s?), the first model was something like the 740; their own ad poked fun at themselves, asking "No doors?"

  • Would the author prefer meaningful names like:

    Lucid Lynx
    Karmic Koala
    Jaunty Jackalope
    Intrepid Ibex
    Hardy Heron
    Gutsy Gibbon
    Feisty Fawn
    Edgy Eft

    Yeah, I know they're sorted alphabetically. But which is Version 8.x, 9.x, etc?

    • There's nothing that stops you from doing both:

      Gingerbread 2.3 – 2.3.7
      Honeycomb 3.0 – 3.2.6
      Ice Cream Sandwich 4.0 – 4.0.4
      Jelly Bean 4.1 – 4.3.1
      KitKat 4.4 – 4.4.4
      Lollipop 5.0 – 5.1.1
      Marshmallow 6.0 – 6.0.1
      Nougat 7.0
    • Yeah, I know they're sorted alphabetically. But which is Version 8.x, 9.x, etc?

      In that case, the letter IS the version # for all practical purposes. You don't need to match it up to a number.

      Until they loop the alphabet in a couple of years. But maybe they'll increment the letter of the second word (Angsty Beaver?)

  • In China in each body style adjustment after 2 or 3 years gets a new name. For example, what in the US is called the VW Jetta over the years is called Santana, Bora, Sagitar, Lavida, and several others I forget.

  • Hyunday already changed the internal design of its cars to be "restrained", like the German makers. Now they're changing the external layout. The next natural step is to change the names to be alphanumeric, like Mercedes/BMW/Audi.
  • Audi A4 2.0T quattro : Translated:
    A4 = more expensive than A3, less expensive than A6
    2.0 = 2.0 liter engine
    T = Turbo
    quattro = all wheel drive
    It would be nice if they were all that straightforward.
  • which guarantees that I won't remember the new names

    I don't care enough about cars to remember their names. I just need four wheels and a seat. I'm lucky if I remember the name when I really need to know it like communicating with a mechanic or my insurance.

    And I'm happy that way!

  • The worst naming was a company that used rocks for their product names.

    Granite, Amethyst, Quartz, Topaz. These were video encoders, transport stream processors, video servers, etc., but I was never able to remember which was which.

  • If I remember Equus correctly, the young antagonist doesn't 'straddle' horses, he blinds them. That's a rather weird error to make.
  • Buying a new car is now just like buying a new GPU. Bigger numbers sometimes mean better, except when they don't.

  • It all points back to every luxury brand, regardless of origin, wanting to seem European, especially like German upscale brands. What the non-Euro brands rarely understood, or eventually forget, is that there is (or was) logic and meaning in the Deutsche-luxo name soup: it told you something about the car itself, usually something about size class and/or powertrain.

    Some of the invented Japanese luxury brands got this, and mostly still do. Cadillac and Lincoln just need to stop trying to be non-American w

    • It seems the most important part is the history of your branding.

      For instance, Peugeot has been doing the digit-zero-digit naming scheme since forever ago. So you know a Peugeot 107 is a small car, and that it's newer than a Peugeot 106. It wasn't 100% bulletproof, for instance the 306 replaced the 309. But on the whole, it mostly made sense.

      However, I think they started to notice a problem a couple of years ago when they launched the *08 models, so now they all just end in 08, and they've become ordinary n

  • Sigh (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward
    Jason is a moron. "Equus" is the genus that horses are in. Who cares that some nutbar named their book that.
  • I'm pretty sure people here are used to using (and certainly aren't afraid of) alpha-numeric strings.

    Yaz

  • In the first 20 years, it went like this:

    125
    250
    330
    365

    What that meant was displacement of each cylinder in CC. So a 250 was in reality a 3 liter engine. Then they had MM, TR, GTO tacked on after the number. The names and numbers didn't even appear on the cars. It's just what people called them.

    Then in the 70's things got weird. a 512BB is a five liter flat 12.
    A 512 TR is a 512BB hit repeatedly with an Ugly Stick.

    A 308 is a 3 liter V8. A 288? 2.8 liter turbo v8. (they got that motor from Lancia when L

  • We appreciate that you are trying to improve /. and keep it going. We really do. But you need to hire a computer nerd that will slap you up aside the head when you try to post up TFAs that don't fit.

    Like this one.
  • Nah - the first part of the article wasn't worth a read to begin with.

  • You're concerned about the naming convention of model numbers from a brand new car company? They have only 2 different models. If you want alphanumeric hell, just look at nVidia's GPUs! I challenge you to figure out what the numbers mean, and they have DOZENS of models.
  • I don't see the problem -- Genesis and Equus are just as opaque as G80 and G90, and I hadn't heard of any of those model until reading this article.

    Most consumers only have one or two cars and only shop for a new car ever 5 -10 years, so they need to learn the current models when they shop, and they can learn alphanumeric models just as easy as unique model names. And if the increasing number signifies increasing cost, that sounds even better.

    Unless manufacturers went with functional names "Ford Econobox",

  • G80 and G90 are *exactly* as meaningful as "Genesis" and "Equus", which is exactly no meaning whatsoever.

  • Stupid author (Score:3, Insightful)

    by DerekLyons ( 302214 ) <fairwater@@@gmail...com> on Tuesday August 30, 2016 @04:03PM (#52798595) Homepage

    The Hyundai Genesis is reborn as the Genesis G80 and the Equus sheds its horsey homage to become the G90, which guarantees that I won't remember the new names. I'll just call the G90 the Model-Formerly-Known-as-Equus.

    Ah yes - the new standard in "journalism". "I'm an ignorant jackass and don't like what someone had done - and my personal tastes rule!"
     

    The G90 apparently has 10 more units of something over the G80. Perhaps it is 10 percent better. Ten percent bigger? Ten grand more expensive?

    Look jackass, companies have been using alphanumeric model indicators just about forever. Nobody but you seems to be confused by them, go away and get the fuck over yourself.

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