If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ by clicking the
link above. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
I'm not sure why everyone gets so up tight about what badges are on their car. The point of the other poster on badging it as a Bora is that it is not in fact the same car as a NA Jetta. Different options and parts on the Bora, although to an untrained eye, they are the same. I say put what ever badge you want on your car and don't worry what the haters think about it.
Debadging your Acura as a Honda is tacky but I disagree with what u said here. Next thing you know you'll say putting Porsche or Audi rims on a VW is tacky.
Here’s one trend we’d like to see less of: “up-badging.” The term refers to the practice of slapping additional stickers and insignias on a vehicle to make it appear as if it’s something it isn’t. You know the drill—how many Civic DXs on the import scene are masquerading as Si models? It isn’t just the imports these days… Hemi-badged V6 Chargers, 300s and Magnums are apparently also gaining traction among the badge-swapping crowd. Hell, even commercial truck owners are falling prey to this stuff.
Well, apparently the trend is a growing one, provided the wonks at CBS 4 Boston are on their game. They even managed to get scribe Jamie Kitman of Automobile Magazine to comment on the trend: “”The benefit is telegraphing other people very quickly that you have more wealth than you really have.” Somehow we doubt that Kitman’s legendary stash of vintage iron is rocking different badges.
Admittedly, the article fails to mention how some enthusiasts are altering their badges to become more like their native-market cousins (the whole “JDM” craze, as well as turning Volkswagen Jettas into Ventos, and so on). It also makes the trend sound like a recent one, but the subtle art of “all mouth and no trousers” badge trickery has been going on for decades.
Either way, at least a few of us ‘round the office prefer shaving off badges altogether. Why not let ‘em wonder about what we’ve got under the hood?
Blair Former Cars: '12 Fiat 500, '10 VW GTI, '05 Smart Fortwo, '96 VW Jetta GLX, '02 VW GTI 337.........
Well pretending to have differnt engines in their car is just wrong. (CX's badged as SI and I'm pretty sure we've all seen GSR Integra's marked as Type R's). But if you put on a Bora badge on a Jetta, the interior options are different but the engine is identicle. Some tuning sites don't even list Jetta as a VW model, they list the Bora. I personally prefer Bora on my car than Jetta, I figured euro car, euro name. Whatever works for you I guess.
Comment