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How Do You Define Automotive Passion?
This story first appeared in the November/December 2024 issue of Hagerty Drivers Club magazine. Join the club to receive our award-winning magazine and enjoy insider access to automotive events, discounts, roadside assistance, and more.
It has always been hard to describe our shared affection (or perhaps “affliction”) for cool, older cars. For instance, I’ve never referred to myself as a car “hobbyist” because the term seems insubstantial. Car guy? Petrolhead? Gearhead? Jeez!
Are we “car collectors,” then? I don’t think that’s the right term, either. Many people have just one special car, not several, and if you only own one of something, are you really collecting it? Imagine a stamp collection with one stamp or a coin collection with one nickel. But that one car really stands for something!
How about the term “car enthusiasts”? That one gets used a lot. But is that what we are? Being an enthusiast means to be “filled with spirit.” Nothing wrong with being filled with spirit, right? But again, it’s not strong enough. It suggests a casual relationship to cars and driving, which doesn’t accurately describe most car people I know. They’re positively nuts about cars and have been that way their whole lives. We need a term that captures that passion, but one has escaped me so far. Maybe it doesn’t exist.

And how about the cars themselves? Are they antique cars, classic cars, vintage cars, collector cars, or just plain old fun cars? When I joined the family business full time in the 1990s, insurance regulators used the term “antique” for any car older than 25 years and “classic” for any car newer than 25 years. Now those words make me shiver. Some of the cars I own are, in fact, old—antique, even. The oldest, for instance, is a 1903 Knox with actual oil lamps for headlights that I drive annually—very slowly—in the London to Brighton Veteran Car Run. It has a top speed of about 25 mph with a good tailwind. As cars go, it’s definitely antique, but I don’t let it sit on a shelf and gather dust. In my view, even very old or expensive cars are meant to be driven. It’s their purpose in life. We all need a purpose. And sometimes, 25 mph is plenty fast.
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Semantics aside, all this matters in the context of how dramatically our car world has grown and changed in recent decades. To paraphrase the Oldsmobile commercial: “It’s not your father’s hobby anymore.” Not even close. Back in the ’70s and ’80s, according to my friend Dave Kinney, publisher of the Hagerty Price Guide, 85 to 90 percent of the collectible cars out there were domestic brands from the early 1960s and older.
Contrast that with today’s market. Domestic cars, muscle cars in particular, are still and always will be a significant slice of the classic car pie. The rest consists of cars, trucks, and motorcycles of all makes, nationalities, and prices. Cars, SUVs, and pickup trucks from the ’80s and ’90s are hugely popular now, as are Japanese makes, supercars, restomods, and more. Car preferences are staggeringly diverse compared with the past. That’s a great thing.
The demographics of the car world have changed dramatically as well. Earlier this year, Hagerty commissioned a survey of 2000 American adults to gauge their feelings about cars. Nearly half were interested in owning a special car, but interest from Gen Z respondents was significantly greater at 60 percent, compared with 31 percent for baby boomers. That’s an amazing generational change. Do you know how young members of Gen Z are? They were born between 1997 and 2012!

The car world is a big tent activity now, with wide and varied tastes. And to keep the momentum going, we need a better shared vocabulary to help us talk about the hobby now and into the future with younger and diverse audiences. Younger generations, in particular, aren’t going to be energized by fusty terms like “collector cars” or “enthusiast vehicles.”
So what words should we use? I would love to hear your thoughts on that.
Until next time, keep on driving.
No need to pigeon hole us with labels.
MacAutonut.
Masochistic Automotive Nutcase.
What happened to the “ Milestone “ era ?
I see that, so far, no one has offered “the word” that describes what and who we are. We who have been captured by a passion for cars. Not surprising really; they are art, they are puzzles, they are frustrating, they are satisfying, they are fun, they are maddening, they are useful and they and the passion they induce in us is perhaps indescribable with a single word to describe who and what we are…except, perhaps, one.
I suspect this may be due to our modern use of our ancient language. We tend today typically to describe people first by what they do and then sometimes by what they are: i,e, he is a “good” accountant, or, a “lousy” linebacker. So, at the risk of high centering this discussion on our current most used meaning of the word, and after checking my copy of the Oxford English Dictionary, I suggest that we who celebrate all things cars are best described as “ Machinist(s)”
The OED has its first definition of this word as “One who invents, makes or controls machines or machinery: an engineer.” Today we generally think of a machinist as the person at the factory making things from hunks of steel or aluminum, we think of machinist as a trade. I think we are all Machinists at heart. Simply put, we like machines. Our cars are beautiful, complex, maddening, satisfying and operating them, caring for them and admiring them is enjoyable on so many levels. As an engineer for the past 56 years, I offer Machinist as the word.
Machinist works for me
“Motion is Lotion, Rest is Rust”, Body, Soul, and CARS !!!!
how about its my true love
You coined it yourself early in the article…describing “car people”-“they’re positively nuts about cars”. And indeed- “Car nut” is the term most often applied to me by me friends.
Pretty much every comment mentions the word “car”.
Seems to me “car guy” or “car gal” adequately our passion for automobiles of any age, type or condition.