Saab 900 - Awards and Achievements

Awards and Achievements

1998

  • Best in Class, cars US$25,000-US$35,000 (900 S Turbo) - Kiplinger's Personal Finance, USA

1996

  • Among Top Ten Sports Cars - Consumer's Review, USA
  • IBCAM British Steel Auto Design Award (Saab 900 2.0i CoupĂ©) - The Institute of British Carriage and Automobile Manufacturers, Great Britain
  • Best Buy - Consumers' Digest, USA
  • New world-records for endurance, at Talladega, USA

1995

  • Top Car in its Price Class (Saab 900 SEV6) - American Automobile Association (AAA)
  • Best Buy - Consumers' Digest, USA
  • Among Top Ten Sports Cars - Consumer's Review, USA
  • Technology Award 1995 for Saab Sensonic - Autocar, Great Britain

1993 and 1994

  • Top Choice in annual Car of the Year reader poll - Autoweek Magazine, USA
  • Annual Special Prize To Saab Safeseat - Motoring Journalists' Club, Denmark
  • One of the Ten Most Improved Cars And Trucks of 1994 - Syndicated automotive experts Mike Anson and Steven Parker, USA
  • Import Car of the Year 1993/94 in Japan - RJC (Automotive Researchers and Journalists Conference of Japan), Japan
  • Best Buy - Consumers' Digest, USA
  • Excellent Swedish Design 1994 - The Swedish Society of Crafts and Design, Sweden
  • Family Car of the Year (900S) - Motoring '94, Canada
  • Scandinavian Design Prize 1994 - The Scandinavian Design Council (The Nordic Design Centres)
  • Executive Car of the Year 1994 - Portuguese Car Trophy
  • 1993 Best Buy - Consumers' Digest, USA
  • 1994 Design of the Year - Automobile magazine, USA
  • Best New Car - Kiplinger's Personal Finance Magazine, USA
  • Car of the Year 1993 - Moottori magazine, Finland
  • Best of What's New - Popular Science, USA
  • 2nd Most Popular Car - STATUS magazine, Germany
  • 1994 Technology of the Year (for Saab Trionic) - Automobile magazine, USA

Read more about this topic:  Saab 900

Famous quotes containing the word achievements:

    Our achievements speak for themselves. What we have to keep track of are our failures, discouragements, and doubts. We tend to forget the past difficulties, the many false starts, and the painful groping. We see our past achievements as the end result of a clean forward thrust, and our present difficulties as signs of decline and decay.
    Eric Hoffer (1902–1983)