Tesla Model S Is This Decade’s Greatest Car, Hagerty Claims

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Originally published on EVANNEX.

If you’re a collector of classic cars, you’re probably familiar with Hagerty. Started in 1984, this industry leader protects over one million vehicles — insuring some of the world’s finest collector cars. With real-world expertise valuing the classics, Hagerty decided to put together a comprehensive list which includes: “the greatest vehicle of each decade, from the earliest days of the automobile to the present.”

Source: Tesla

Hagerty notes that their “final list, which spans everything from pre-War luxury to hot rods … highlights some of the brightest moments in automotive history.” What unites most cars on this list? Hagerty’s Andrew Newton explains, “cars still work pretty much the same way they always have, powered by a piston engine that’s fueled by the black goop that we pump out of the ground. Only one car of the 2010s has lit a different path.”

Newton adds, “Only one [car] has shown the world not only the efficiency and environmental advantages of electric power, but it has also shown the performance advantages of electric power and wrapped it all up in a sleek, appealing, and expensive-but-attainable package. In other words, only one has made the electric car cool, and that’s the Tesla Model S.”

HAGERTY’S PICKS FOR “GREATEST CAR” OF EACH DECADE

1890 — 1910: Ford Model T

The 1910s: Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost

The 1920s: Duesenberg Model J

The 1930s: ’32 Ford

The 1940s: Jeep CJ

The 1950s: Mercedes-Benz 300SL

The 1960s: Ford Mustang

The 1970s: Lamborghini Countach

The 1980s: Dodge Caravan

The 1990s: Mazda Miata

The 2000s: Chevrolet Corvette ZR1

The 2010s: Tesla Model S

Source: Hagerty. One caveat though, Hagerty notes, “we’re technically not through with the 2010s, [but] we think it’s already safe to pick the greatest car to come out of this decade.”

Newton calls the Model S, “a luxury sedan that looked handsome … [yet] was also decidedly different underneath. The lack of a bulky combustion engine and transmission tunnel gave it tons of extra storage space, and the placement of the heavy batteries gave it a low center of gravity. Safety ratings for the Model S were top-notch, the Autopilot feature made semi-autonomous driving a reality, and the Tesla Supercharger network mitigated ever-nagging electric car issue of limited range by allowing owners to charge their cars much more quickly on long trips.”

Furthermore, “the Model S is just a savagely quick car. The constant torque available from a standstill makes stomping on the accelerator pedal in a Model S both intoxicating and addictive, and properly equipped cars with their ‘Ludicrous’ and ‘Insane’ modes will scoot off the line more quickly than almost any other car you can buy today.”

Source: Tesla

Newton concludes, “Tesla [Model S] has gone in a more radically different direction than any other car in recent memory. More importantly, it has done so with great success, because instead of coming out with an all-electric car that people felt that they should drive or that they had to drive, Tesla came out with an electric car that people really want to drive. It will always be remembered as the one that made electric cars truly desirable, and that’s why it is one of the greats.”

Source: Hagerty

Featured image: Tesla Model S charging at GreenWay charging station in Wroclaw, Poland. Photo by Zach Shahan, Tesla Shuttle


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Matt Pressman

Matt is all about Tesla. He’s a TSLA investor, and he loves driving the family's Model 3, Model S, and Model X company cars. As co-founder of EVANNEX, a family business specializing in aftermarket Tesla accessories, he’s served as a contributor/editor of Electric Vehicle University (EVU) and the Owning Model S and Getting Ready for Model 3 books. He writes daily about Tesla and you can follow his work on the EVANNEX blog.

Matt Pressman has 332 posts and counting. See all posts by Matt Pressman