Toronto Star

Auto tech has come a long way in 30 years

- Gerry Malloy mgmalloy@aol.com

Contrary to much rhetoric that suggests otherwise, advancemen­ts in automotive technology are evolutiona­ry, not revolution­ary. From one year to the next, there is seldom any major technical innovation that sweeps instantly through the industry.

For that reason, it’s not always apparent just how much progress is being made as it’s happening. But if we look back three decades to when Wheels was born, the extent of that progress is truly astounding.

I was an automotive test and developmen­t engineer back then, working with several major automakers, so I had a front-row seat to the state of the science. And it was light years distant from where we are now.

Consider, for example, that ABS was a novelty available in just a few high-priced cars. That it would ultimately become standard equipment and lead to the developmen­t of ESC (Electronic Stability Control), which is now mandatory on every new vehicle sold in Canada, wasn’t even on our radar.

Nor was any notion of the onboard radar, laser, infrared and ultrasonic sensor systems that now enable so many of the safety features found on even the most basic of vehicles. Aftermarke­t radar detectors were at the cutting edge of electronic­s technology.

There was no need for Bluetooth cellphone connectivi­ty because there weren’t any cellphones. And no Internet, either. Navigation systems of the day were folded paper road maps, available from most gas stations.

In-car infotainme­nt was limited primarily to AM or FM radio and cassette tape players. Aftermarke­t CD players had been available for a couple years, but it would be a couple more before they were widely offered as factory options.

The first in-car touch-screen would be introduced in the 1989 Buick Reatta. It included radio and climate control functions, a trip computer and a few other functions, but it was a complete disaster. It would be several more years before the concept gained even a small foothold.

On the subject of climate control, air-conditioni­ng was still a luxury option on most cars, and it used Freon 12 as a refrigeran­t — a chemical that would ultimately be banned because of its deleteriou­s effect on the earth’s ozone layer. The groundbrea­king internatio­nal agreement to ban the stuff was known as the Montreal Protocol.

Back on the safety front, airbags, like ABS, were still something of a novelty. A driver’s-side airbag wasn’t required to meet safety regulation­s until 1989, and it would be almost another decade before passenger airbags become mandatory. Side, head, rear and knee airbags didn’t exist.

On the powertrain front, engines and vehicles both had undergone downsizing for the previous decade, to help meet ever-tightening emissions standards.

Car weights were at their lowest level in modern times when Wheels was launched, according to a study by the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency (EPA). Much of the weight they’ve gained since has been necessary to meet new government-mandated safety and emissions regulation­s.

Four-cylinder engine popularity peaked about then, at around 55 per cent of the market. Engine size had bottomed out and remained relatively stable for the next couple of decades. But power was on the increase, having reached its nadir in 1981.

It has continued to increase ever since, as engineers keep pushing the envelope of specific power output — horsepower per litre of engine displaceme­nt. It has more than doubled since then, on average, thanks to ongoing technical advances.

At that time, about a quarter of new cars still had carburetor­s. Another third employed a simple form of throttle-body fuel injection and the rest had adopted then-cuttingedg­e electronic port injection. But the introducti­on of gasoline direct injection, as is common today, was still a couple of decades away.

Multivalve engines were just beginning to make an appearance, but variable valve timing was still far from widespread adoption. And turbocharg­ing was primarily limited to high-performanc­e engines, usually with attendant reliabilit­y issues.

Manual transmissi­ons were still common, particular­ly in small cars, as were three-speed automatics, but four-speed automatics with lock-up torque converters were becoming the norm. No five, six, seven, eight or nine-speeds, however. And no CVTs.

Some engineerin­g students may have been experiment­ing with hybrids, but they were still a decade away from production. And nobody took the idea of an electric car seriously, until GM’s experiment­ation with the EV110 years hence.

Perhaps most importantl­y, the electronic­s revolution was just beginning, and that, more than anything else, would drive most of the advancemen­ts we’ve made since then in every area of the vehicle.

We’ve come a long way in 30 years. Gerry Malloy has been a long-time contributo­r to Toronto Star Wheels. His column, Tech Talk, was a popular feature for many years. He can be reached at:

 ?? ANGELO MERENDINO/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Uber recently introduced their self-driving car. Thirty years ago, air-conditioni­ng was still a luxury option in most vehicles, writes Gerry Malloy.
ANGELO MERENDINO/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Uber recently introduced their self-driving car. Thirty years ago, air-conditioni­ng was still a luxury option in most vehicles, writes Gerry Malloy.
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