AFTER 50 YEARS IN THE U.S., SAAB REMAINS A STATEMENT OF
INDIVIDUALITY
Only six years after selling its first car and becoming
established in Scandinavia, new Swedish automaker Saab
was ready to test the deep waters of a brand-new
market: the United States. Saab made its American debut
at the 1956 New York Auto show – with an admittedly
small display of cars – and there was much anticipation
in Sweden, as the U.S. was potentially the largest
export market for the fledgling automaker.
As a successful aircraft manufacturer, Saab already had
an international network of parts distributors. In the
U.S., Saab’s parts-buying agent was Ralph Millet,
ex-pilot, aeronautical engineer and graduate of
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Millet’s
company, Independent Aeronautical, was based in New
York and had close communications with Svenska Aeroplan
Aktiebolaget or Swedish Aircraft Company, known as
Saab, based in Trollhättan, Sweden.
From Trollhättan to Manhattan
In late 1955, Saab’s chairman, Tryggve Holm, came to
the U.S. to meet with Millet about purchasing aircraft
parts. Between the business discussions, Holm asked
Millet his opinion of importing the new Saab 93. Millet
was pessimistic about the idea and skeptical of
American consumers’ acceptance of a two-stroke-powered
car, as it was necessary to mix oil into the gas tank,
like a motorcycle or lawn mower. And Millet confessed
that, frankly, he knew nothing about the car business.
But, two days later, as Millet was driving Holm to the
airport, Holm insisted that he wanted to send a few
cars to be shown at the next major auto show, and see
how the public reacted. Without delay, five Saab cars
were shipped, and Millet dutifully booked an exhibit
space at the 1956 New York Auto Show. Three cars were
shown: two Saab 93 models and a Sonett Super Sport.
Saab’s first major model evolution of the original
two-cylinder 92 was the 1956 Saab 93, equipped with a
33-hp, three-cylinder, two-stroke engine. A partially
cut-away model – revealing the unusual engine,
front-wheel-drive and hearty steel construction – was
exhibited along with a road-ready car. The Sonett Super
Sport was a limited-production roadster originally
intended for competition; only six examples were built.
As an original Saab “concept car,” the Sonett Super
Sport was a sensation on the auto show circuit.
The public’s enthusiastic response to the cars helped
dissolve Millet’s original skepticism. Millet said, “On
the first day of the New York Auto Show, I was an
expert on spare parts for aircraft. By the final day, I
was in the car business with Saab.”
He formed a new company, Saab Motors Inc., first as a
subsidiary of Independent Aeronautical, and then taken
over by the Swedish Saab parent company. Before the end
of the year, Millet was president. The new company
established its very modest “headquarters” at a small
office on West 57 th Street, in Manhattan.
The first sizable shipload of 200 Saab cars arrived
several months after the New York show, and Millet
focused his marketing efforts almost entirely on the
Northeast. Fifteen dealerships signed up the first
year, and Saab established a warehouse and vehicle
preparation facility at the port of Hingham, Mass.,
near Boston.
One of Millet’s first promotional activities was to
enter three Saab 93s in the Great American Mountain
Rally, during Thanksgiving weekend, 1956. With Saab’s
enthusiastic support, chief engineer Rolf Mellde came
from Sweden to drive one of the cars and American rally
driver Bob Wehman was recruited to drive another of the
entrants.
Fresh snow made the grueling 1,500-mile, three-day
winter race even more challenging for the 63
competitors, which included many American brands, as
well as Austin-Healey, Renault, Triumph, Volkswagen,
MG, Jaguar, Volvo and Mercedes-Benz. After three days
of sliding around slick roads with snow up to 16 inches
deep, most cars did not finish. Only one American car
finished among the top 20 – and to everyone’s surprise,
first place went to one of the new Saab cars. Wehman
piloted a Saab 93 to victory, followed by Mellde in
sixth place, while the third Saab finished seventh.
Saab took the team award and finished first, third and
fourth in its class.
Great publicity accompanied Saab’s outstanding
performance in the rally, with much credit attributed
to Saab’s remarkable front-wheel handling, Sweden-bred
heater and robust construction. Locally and nationwide,
word spread among car enthusiasts about the new import
from Sweden. Road & Track was impressed enough to
note, “The performance has done more to win respect
than a million dollars’ worth of advertising.”
Saab had landed
In 1957, the first full year of U.S. sales, 1,410 Saab
93s were sold, approximately 14-percent of
Trollhättan’s total output. By the end of 1959, some
12,000 Saab 93s had been shipped to the U.S., making it
Saab’s biggest export market.
The two-stroke engine was well suited for winter
operation, and owners reveled in the fact that it
always seemed to start, even on very cold days.
Salespeople would promote the fact that there were only
seven moving parts to this simple engine: the
crankshaft, three pistons and three connecting rods.
But it was not without its flaws. Lubrication problems
due to long stretches of consistent-speed highway
driving or an incorrect fuel-oil mixture could lead to
engine seizure, a catastrophic problem that required
the motor to be rebuilt. Rather than ship the broken
engines back to the factory in Sweden, Millet set up an
engine rebuilding workship at the Connecticut warehouse
facility.
“We had an assembly line – two or three people –
working to rebuild engines,” recalled Len Lonnegren,
Saab’s public relations chief from 1963 until 1989.
“Regardless of the problem, it was often best to simply
replace the engine – a relatively quick and easy
process in an early Saab. We kept many customers quite
happy and loyal by doing this without charge, as Ralph
Millet had initiated a lifetime engine warranty to
boost confidence in the two-stroke motor.”
While Saab executives in Sweden were not enthusiastic
about this America-only policy, Saab dealers were quick
to promote the lifetime warranty, which covered the
engine as long as the car belonged to the original
owner.
Individualistic and enthusiastic owners
Who were the brave Saab buyers in the early days?
“The customer was generally a detail-oriented,
technical person who appreciated the machinery of the
car,” said Lonnegren. “Many were in an engineering
field, or small business owners, or professionals. They
were people who read Popular Mechanics. And they were
all very enthusiastic.”
A survey conducted by Saab in early 1957 revealed that
doctors were the largest single group of customers,
followed by sales executives and aircraft industry
employees. In fourth place was a significantly large
group of amateur racing drivers. Another survey, taken
almost two years later, classified the largest group as
highly educated members of various liberal professions,
such as doctors, lawyers, engineers and college
professors.
“There was a study made by the University of
Connecticut correlating the political leanings of
college professors and the cars they own,” Lonnegren
noted. “They concluded that the only faculty that were
more liberal than Saab owners were professors who
didn’t own cars at all.”
Saab’s international rally heritage was the inspiration
for the Granturismo 750, a special model created
primarily for the American market after much
persistence from Millet. Introduced at the 1958 New
York Auto Show, the GT750 had additional sport-luxury
features such as a wood-rim steering wheel, sport
seats, driving lights, tachometer and a rally timer,
plus twelve more horsepower.
A station wagon, the Saab 95, was introduced in 1959,
followed by the 1960 Saab 96 two-door. A new
four-stroke V-4 engine replaced the three-cylinder in
1967, boosting sales significantly. Saab’s famous
two-seater sports car, the Sonett II, debuted in 1966.
Updated as the Sonett III in 1970, most of these
fiberglass-bodied sports cars were exported to the U.S.
The first Saab with an inline four-cylinder was the 99,
introduced in 1968. The larger Saab 99 pioneered
several Saab world innovations, such as headlight
washers/wipers (1970), electrically heated seats
(1971), 5-mph self-repairing bumpers (1971) and
side-impact door beams (1972). Saab research into
active and passive safety systems began with the first
Saab prototype, and has intensified ever since.
The 1974 Saab 99’s radical new “Wagonback” styling –
known as “Combi Coupe” in Europe – combined the comfort
and sportiness of a sedan with the load capacity of a
station wagon. With a large hatchback door,
bumper-height liftover and fold-down rear seat, Saab’s
utility set a standard that helped maintain an almost
cult-like following of loyal owners in the U.S.
Turbocharging arrives
Although a few other carmakers had dabbled in
turbocharging, or offered turbos on expensive,
limited-production sports cars, Saab was the first
automaker to integrate a variable-boost turbocharger
into a mass-produced family-type car for extra power
and low-end torque on demand. The Saab Turbo concept
debuted in 1976, and saw production on the Saab 99
Turbo in 1978. A fleet of 100 pre-production Turbo test
vehicles (50 in the U.S.) provided in 1971 to industry
insiders and automotive journalists worldwide in 1977
received enthusiastic reviews.
The era of the modern Saab began with the unique
three-door and five-door hatchback versions of the Saab
900 in 1979. The 900 Turbo quickly became an
enthusiast’s favorite. World innovations on the Saab
900 included a cabin air filter (1979), asbestos-free
brake linings (1982), 16-valve turbo engine (1985),
distributorless Saab Direct Ignition (1985) and
award-winning Saab Trionic 32-bit electronic engine
management (1991).
Saab introduced its “large car” platform, the Saab
9000, in 1986. In a notable demonstration of Saab
durability and turbo reliability, three stock Saab 9000
Turbos were driven at top speed continuously for
100,000 kilometers (62,000 miles) during “The Long Run”
at Talladega Speedway, Alabama. Along the way, they set
21 world and international endurance records, averaging
131 mph over a period of 20 days.
Robert Sinclair and the 900 Convertible – Saab
icons
One of the first dealerships to sign on to sell the new
Swedish brand in 1957 was a multi-line import
specialist based in Bryn Mawr, Penn. An eager, young
salesman there, Robert Sinclair, immediately developed
a kinship with the new Saab 93B, with its two-stroke
engine and rear-hinged doors. To garner greater
exposure for the new car, Sinclair would often
participate in ice racing.
“Eventually, with the dealer’s permission, I entered
Saab 93s in the Northeast ice-racing circuit and did
quite well with it,” he said. “I say ‘eventually,’
because for the first few competitions, I just took my
demonstrator and raced – and hoped I didn’t crash it.”
Sinclair’s career goal at that time was to work for a
car company, but he had no interest in moving to the
Detroit area where most of the American carmakers were
based.
“I decided I would go after Saab, because they
obviously were learning about the import car business,
and I’d figured I could learn right along with them,”
he recalled. “After badgering them long enough, they
hired me.”
In need of more dealerships, Saab assigned Sinclair to
find and appoint new dealers in a wide territory east
of the Mississippi, north of the Mason-Dixon line and
excluding New England. Sinclair quickly moved up in the
company, which had moved to a prestigious Park Avenue
address in Manhattan. By 1961, Saab decided to combine
its headquarters with its main warehouse facilities,
and made plans to relocate to New Haven, Conn.
Unfortunately, Sinclair was not willing to leave New
York, and informed Millet that the company would have
to move without him.
Sinclair then landed a job with the other Swedish car
company, Volvo, working mainly in advertising and
marketing until 1978. Sinclair recalled that he was no
longer satisfied with his situation there, and was
ready to seek a new job. Coincidentally, Saab knocked
on Sinclair’s door at just the right time, with an
offer directly from Saab’s president, Sten Wennlo. It
was far more than Sinclair expected: Saab wanted him to
run the U.S. operations. Although Sinclair was eager
for a new job, he played it cool, negotiated hard, and
came away in May 1979 as president of Saab-Scania of
America, with complete control over the marketing
operations.
During the negotiations, as Sinclair was meeting with
executives of Saab-Scania AB near Stockholm, Sweden, he
asked if they had one of the newly introduced 900 Turbo
models nearby.
“I told them I’ve never driven one, and I’d like to
give it a try,” Sinclair recalled. “We found ourselves
in the countryside outside of Stockholm, on some
twisting blacktop roads, and that car just blew me
away! With some racing in my past, I knew how to drive,
of course, and I tell you, I had all four wheels off
the ground. The executive VP in the passenger seat had
quite a look on his face, as he was not really a car
guy and was not used to this sort of thing. I pulled
the 900 Turbo over to the side of the road and said I
can’t believe this; this is going to be a piece of
cake. This car is fantastic! There were no turbocharged
cars on the market except Saab. It was a perfect
setup.”
Sinclair’s strategy was to move Saab upmarket in the
U.S., adding luxury features and increased performance.
By 1982, Saab was re-energized and saw incredible sales
growth. For 60 straight months, Saab set new sales
records, reaching its highest point in 1986 with 47,414
cars sold in the U.S.
After convertibles had disappeared from the American
marketplace in the early ‘80s, Sinclair realized that
there was a tremendous market niche waiting to be
refilled. While the hatchback Saab was not quite
suitable for conversion, a limited run of two-door Saab
900 coupes with conventional trunks and steel roofs
eventually sparked Sinclair’s interest.
“The two-door notchback was developed to help meet the
needs of lower-discretionary-income markets that needed
a lower-priced basic model,” Sinclair said. “I told
them that this does not fit in with our marketing
direction. We simply have no need for this car. We
pass; we don’t want any.”
The notchbacks were intended to be basic models, but
product engineers tried to be flexible so that the U.S.
market would accept the new car. They told Sinclair
that he could take the notchbacks with any
specifications he wanted, and pressured him to take
1,000 cars each year. Sinclair studied an image of the
900 notchback and, with some photographic touch-up,
removed the roof.
“I said that I would accept the cars if they were
equipped with cast aluminum wheels, leather upholstery,
central locking, fuel injection, five-speed gearbox and
convertible tops,” Sinclair told Sweden in a phone
call. “After stunned silence on the other end and a
flurry of questions such as ‘are you mad,’ I continued:
You know, hydro-electric cabrio tops. This is an
opening big enough to drive a Scania truck through.
Everybody has stopped building convertibles because
they assumed that the federal government will outlaw
them through safety regulations. But the law had never
passed, and conversion experts are converting all kinds
of cars one at a time.”
The following day, Wennlo called back and said he had
discussed the idea with his engineers, who said they
have no experience building convertibles and claimed
the conversions were impossible. Having anticipated
that response, Sinclair offered to do the engineering
and pre-production work in the U.S., funded through his
company’s marketing budget. Providing a ridiculously
low estimate of costs just to get immediate approval,
Sinclair’s plan was rolling. He commissioned American
Sunroof Corp. to create a prototype soft-top Saab 900
based on the coupe. The pearl-white convertible was
shown at the 1983 Frankfurt Auto Show as a “design
study.” Overwhelming media response and consumer
interest left Saab with no choice but to gear up for
production.
Initial production numbers for the new Swedish
soft-tops were very conservative and still based on
Sinclair’s original promise to buy 1,000 a year for
three years. Other markets would take approximately 500
each year. Instead, incredible demand kept the Valmet
assembly plant in Finland working at full capacity.
Initial Saab 900 Convertible production was a limited
run of 400 16-valve Turbo models, produced in the
spring of 1986, exclusively for the U.S. market. The
cars sold so quickly that most prospective buyers did
not even realize that sales of the car had begun. The
1987 model was sold out long before its production had
even started, and the 1989 models were already being
ordered in the autumn of 1986. Total production of the
first-generation Saab 900 Convertible, built until
1993, was more than 47,000.
The new Saab
Saab’s spectacular growth and popularity in the
mid-1980s resulted in a continually rising projected
sales graph. Profits from the U.S. market were
unprecedented, and Saab was busily planning a factory
expansion and were hopeful about adding a long-desired
third model to the existing 900 and 9000 lines. It all
came to an abrupt halt when the stock market crashed in
the fall of 1987.
“That was the year the yuppies died,” Sinclair
reminisced. “Following the hilariously misnamed ‘Tax
Simplification Act’ of 1986, when investment-type tax
credits disappeared, and the next year’s market
collapse, there was a huge impact on the general
economy and confidence of the buying public. All kinds
of things tumbled in 1987: housing starts, yachts,
airplanes, cars, everything. We couldn’t recover
because we didn’t have the corporate horsepower; didn’t
have new models; couldn’t react to the changing buying
attitudes.”
General Motors was shopping for a European carmaker in
the late 1980s, with a desire to expand its overseas
market presence. Saab knew that it needed greater
resources to develop its next-generation 900.
Discussions were held with a variety of international
auto corporations, but it was the GM-Saab partnership
that finally yielded satisfactory results to both
sides. In 1990, Saab Automobile AB was formed with its
new partner, GM, which had acquired 50 percent of
shares in the new company.
With GM as part-owner, Saab put plans for a new 900 on
the fast track. After a production run of 15 years, the
Saab 900 emerged as a completely new car in 1994, with
stronger four-cylinder engines and Saab’s first
six-cylinder, a 2.5L V-6. Available initially as a
five-door hatchback, the new 900 line was joined by a
high-performance three-door 900 Turbo Coupe and sleek
900 Convertible in 1995. The 900 became the 9-3 with
more than 1,100 improvements in 1998. The improved
handling for the new car provided the platform for what
enthusiasts regard as the ultimate “hot hatch,” the
230-hp Saab 9-3 Viggen, named for the famed Saab
fighter jet and the only model to carry the name of an
aircraft.
Saab’s factory in 1989 was taking approximately 110
hours to build each car, a rather slow process by
industry standards. GM initiated principles of modern
lean manufacturing that helped to shrink the build time
to a far more competitive 30 hours per car with the new
900.
Saab sales were up for most of the 1990s, and the 9000
was replaced by the new 9-5 in 1998, first as a sedan
and soon followed by a handsome wagon. The widely
acclaimed Saab 9-5 effectively underscored Saab's
commitment to the upper medium premium sector, offering
a highly individual alternative to other premium
competitors, with high levels of performance, safety
and versatility. But it was the safety engineering,
based on Saab's real-life safety strategy, which really
catapulted the 9-5 into the limelight. It featured an
impressively strong central safety cage with exterior
crumple zones that deformed along pre-set load paths.
The 9-5 also introduced the award-winning Saab Active
Head Restraint (SAHR), designed to reduce the risk of
whiplash injuries during rear-end collisions.
GM exercised its option to purchase the remaining half
of Saab Automobile AB in January 2000, making the
Swedish automaker a wholly owned division, and GM’s
most recognizable global brand. Work began immediately
on launching the 2003 9-3 Sport Sedan, a worthy
replacement for the 9-3 hatchback.
The 9-3 Sport Sedan was the first production vehicle of
the most aggressive product program in Saab’s history.
On the heels of two sensational concept vehicles, the
9X and 9-3X, the 9-3 Sport Sedan was the culmination of
revitalized design and engineering departments who set
some very ambitious goals for the new car, only the
eighth all-new model in the company’s history.
The current 9-3 is a modern interpretation of Saab’s
Scandinavian design heritage, and it raises the bar for
fun-to-drive performance and real-life safety. A new
9-3 Convertible was launched in 2004 and a five-door
9-3 SportCombi debuted in 2006, along with an all-new
250-hp turbo V-6 engine for Aero models.
Saab continued its product assault with a
high-performance, all-wheel-drive premium compact, the
five-door 9-2X, launched in 2004. Available with a
naturally aspirated or turbocharged four-cylinder
engine, the 9-2X gave Saab access to a totally new
segment, bringing new, younger customers to the brand.
Produced in partnership with Fuji Heavy Industries,
makers of Subaru vehicles, the Japan-assembled 9-2X is
the first Saab built outside of Europe – but it wasn’t
the last: The American-built 9-7X was introduced in
2005 as Saab’s very first SUV.
Targeting the mid-luxury SUV market, one of the
fastest-growing market segments in North America, the
9-7X fulfills a long-sought niche in the Saab lineup.
While the Saab 9-7X has the expected dimensions and
capabilities of a sport utility vehicle, its
distinctive exterior and interior styling give it a
much more car-like appearance than most competitors.
Saab's market research revealed that 39 percent of Saab
customers in the U.S. currently have a SUV in the
household. Furthermore, almost 30 percent of Saab
customers who leave the Saab brand purchase a four-door
SUV.
"The Saab 9-7X provides our dealers with a great SUV to
satisfy existing Saab customers and attract new ones,"
said Steve Shannon, Saab Automobile USA general
manager.
In 2006, Saab stunned auto-show visitors with the Saab
Aero-X concept, a bold, expressive high-performance
sports coupe. Introduced at the Geneva Motor Show and
also shown at the New York Auto Show, the Saab Aero-X
two-seater is the most radical concept ever from Saab.
Topped with a glass canopy and powered by a 400-hp
turbocharged BioPower V-6, the Saab Aero-X concept
showcases two core brand elements: Saab's aviation
heritage and its Scandinavian roots. Conceived as a
study to explore future design directions, its
innovative features preview the development of a new
design language that will certainly inspire future Saab
products.
Saab today and into the future
Each new Saab model is developed with due respect for
the automaker’s rich heritage of airplanes and
automobiles. With its unconventional approach to
design, few car companies have produced vehicles with
as much uniquely strong personality as Saab. And few
companies have customers who show as much passion for
their brand.
“Saab has been, and will continue to be, The Statement
of Individuality,” Shannon explains. “We will continue
to deliver a distinctive interpretation of a premium
European vehicle, with progressive design and
driver-focused performance. At the same time, we’ll
remain practical and safe. It’s no surprise that we
attract the kind of independent-minded individuals that
we do – mostly people who are not satisfied with the
typical automobile.”
For today’s and tomorrow’s models, Saab strives to
remain true to the essence of its time-honored
characteristics – design, performance, safety and
functionality – while still expanding its presence in
the marketplace.
“We need to grow our product portfolio into the ‘right’
segments,” emphasizes Shannon, as he describes Saab’s
strategy for the coming years. “This means maximizing
our product development investment and ability to
conquest market share. This also means that we preserve
and distill Saab’s brand essence. To minimize the
impact of currency fluctuations, we must devise
manufacturing strategies that support the brand and the
necessary growth – for both the short term and the long
term. In addition, it’s essential that we communicate a
brand identity that is uniquely Saab, through
thoughtful, aggressive marketing and advertising. We
must provide clear competitive differentiation.
“For long-term success, we will collaborate with
Sweden’s global brand-building initiatives and provide
guidance for how we can ‘localize’ the Saab brand
promise and value proposition to the U.S. market.
Pulling all of this together for the customer is
perhaps the most important item in our action plan:
defining and sustaining a world-class dealer network
and premium ownership experience.”
Clean, Scandinavian design, fun-to-drive performance,
world-class safety and a comfortable and functional
cockpit are qualities that Saab drivers expect in their
vehicles. With more than 1.1 million vehicles sold,
Saab has delivered on those expectations for more than
half of a century in the United States – and will
continue to provide customers with new products that
are certain to keep the passion flying.