The article focuses a lot on crappy cheap front drive cars that are zero fun to drive, and drifting.
I think this comment is a big part of it at least on a large scale sale ability aspect:
I do remember back in the early 90s, people that were not car enthusiasts were sick of RWD in the winter. I still hear the stigma today when I talk about getting a new Camaro due to it being RWD. From what I hear, the new RWD cars with Traction Control are not a problem anymore. I had the joy of driving an 85 Monte Carlo SS, no posi, in the winter. I can definitely see the average person not wanting to deal with that. Since auto makers need to sell cars for all climates, this could have had a lot to do with the change to FWD. Now technology looks like it has overcome the winter hurdle, and people are remembering how fun those cars were when not holding on to the wheel for dear life in the winter.Ryan AlbaaRaphael Orlove
Today 4:57pm
Maybe because traction control and stability control are advanced enough that they can offer RWD in a "safer" package to multiple audiences (the masses and enthusiasts). Appealing to the enthusiast market seems important, since they have a strong voice in automotive marketing. At least in my opinion.
Other good comments:
Dr_WatsonaRaphael Orlove
29 minutes ago
Was all economics. There weren't really any *fun* RWD cars that people could actually afford to purchase, run, and maintain on a $3.25/hr job.
My experiences in GenX car culture:
Everyone wanted: RX7, ZX Turbo, VR-4, Supra, Corvette, 5.0 Mustang
What everyone could actually afford: Eclipse, Civic/CRX, J-Body, (then later the Focus and Neon)
*special note: The F-Bodies were both affordable and RWD though mostly shit and general consensus suggested people would rather just get the cheap FWD and hot it up a bit rather than be perceived as a mulleted redneck drug dealer.
I agree with all of this. In the 90s, the Asian market was blazing: Civics, Integras, Supras, 3000 GTs, RX-7s, Eclipses to an extent, Maximas, and Accords were super popular. Everyone was done with American.
I will say that front or rear drive didn't seem to be the topic of debate, it just had to be Asian. Because Americans were done with the F-Bodies, and the boring American BS that came out of the 70s, 80s, and 90s.
The 00s seemed to be limbo. People were finding out that once the Asian car companies were mass sales entities, their products got very watered down, and lost a lot of the stuff that made them popular to begin with. People were realizing that they did break down, and didn't last forever, and they didn't get great gas mileage when they got bigger as they progressed through time. A Corolla today has to be as big as the Cressida was.
That is all turning around now. Nissan went from one of the best to one of the worst. American brands are moving to the top again. Honda is no longer the Car Maker Golden Child, and Toyotas are dependable, but boring as hell.
Mazda is actually on top of every Car and Driver shootout now, which was actually probably from being helped by Ford.
Hopefully GM gets on the RWD bandwagon, or they will likely lose out to the foreign competition again.
I know that GM has cars that are RWD, but I mean under 40K.