Home » The Plood, The Goooste, The Booogt, And More Amazing, Confusing Automotive Emblems

The Plood, The Goooste, The Booogt, And More Amazing, Confusing Automotive Emblems

Mitsubishi 3000 Gt Ts
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As an Autopian, you probably get asked questions about cars on a daily basis. A common query I get is after-the-fact car identification from people hoping I can tell them what kind of car was in front of them at a light.

“I’ve never seen one before” they’ll say. “It was this sort of sporty-looking thing with a strange badge on it.” That gives me basically nothing to work off of so I ask if they had any idea at all what the logo might have said. “We’ll, I think it was called an ex-ra-tee?”

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

An Exraty. An Exraty? Damn, that’s a new one. It’s nearly unheard of for me to encounter a mark from the last 100 years I’ve never heard of at all. Can you describe it a bit more, I ask. “Well, it had two wings on the back like a biplane.” Whoa, that’s odd. Could this Exraty be some bespoke coachbuilder, perhaps outside Tuscany, where artisans are inspired by World War II aircraft to create cars that … wait a minute.

I quickly tap a search into my phone, select Images, and present my likely suspect. Is this the car you saw?

“That’s it!”

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1987 Merkur Xr4ti Turbo Rosso Red For Sale Classifieds 5 Rear Badge
source: New Old Cars (car for sale)

Nope, not Italian. The Exraty is a Merkur XR4Ti, or the Americanized version of the Ford Sierra XR4. No wonder this thing didn’t stand a chance in this market.

Aw 20150330p122520merkur20
Image: Ford

We laugh, but that’s an odd mouthful of a name for a car and easy to see how someone might read it wrong in that stylized font. “Surely that’s an A between the R and T, why would it be a four?” They aren’t alone.

My Rental Car Is A What?

Typography is a tricky thing. It can be done extremely well where the eye is fooled into reading exactly what the designer wants you to see, even if technically it’s not actually there. Take a look at the Studebaker Lark badge below. The letters are all connected by a horizontal chrome band at the bottom. Other emblems have used similar connecting material between letters, but you’re not supposed to read it as anything other than masybe an underline. So you might expect to read this basdge as “Iark” since that thing in the front might be a capital “I,” but the only thing anyone I’ve encountered reads it as is Lark, without an annoying space between the “L” and the other letters. It’s rather brilliant.

Lark V 8 11
Image: Ebay

American Motors was famous for using straight-up Helvetica font for most of the graphics on their cars and, more famously, on Jeep products. It created a recognizable style for the Kenosha Kar Krafters, and it was also tremendously legible:

Chief Logo 8 11
Image: Bring A Trailer

Other badges, well … they have occasionally not read as well as the makers likely intended. As car people, we typically know what the make and model the thing is since we’ve already seen it on a website or in a magazine for older machines, so we don’t have misread-emblem issues. You would never, for example, call a Toyota MR2 a “Mister Two.” [Ed Note: I would, and do – Pete]

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But if you have no automotive inclination whatsoever, you might be forgiven for misreading certain emblems. There are plenty of examples of badges that graphic designers possibly should have taken a second look at before they tooled up to make tens of thousands of them.

They Should Have Gone Back To Fancy Cursive Shit

It might sound hard to believe, but I’ve personally heard accounts of all of these misreads of badges below. Honestly, I probably can’t blame the readers of these emblems.

Pontiac really got into the Halloween spirit in the eighties, offering not only the GOOOLE (I usually hear it pronounced GOOH-lee) but also the GOOOSTE to scare the kids. Nobody has asked me what a Pontiac “GOO-lay” was, but to name a car after the guy whose appearance on TV caused Elvis to shoot the screen might be worth it.

Gooolee 8 11
Image: ebay

We all know that Tesla offers a PLAID model, but at some point they sold a PLOOD version as well. Was that ultra slow or something?

Plood 8 11
Image: ebay

If there was ever a more appropriate badge than 74 Oil I don’t know what it is. Finally, a car that is honest about how many quarts of synthetic it will burn up a month (the early V8s were terrible).

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740ip 9 11
Image: Autohunter

I wouldn’t mind being Stealth, but it would be so much better to be BOOOGT, wouldn’t it? Not a GOOOSTE, but close:

Boogth 8 11
Image: ebay

Displacement is usually noted in cubic inches or liters, so I’m not sure how large the motor is in the Datsun 24 ounce:

240 8 12
Image: ebay

We can ignore the Ford Fiso (pronounced FI-sow), the French-sounding Toyota Le Hybrid and even De Coupe by dem guys at dat dere Mitsubishi n’at.

Typo 8 8 2
Images: Levittown Ford, Valley Toyota, automart

Let’s Eat Grandma / Let’s Eat, Grandma

What’s the issue here? In many cases it’s the typography being too similar. There are no breaks between letters and other times the numbers and letters look identical (like the zeros and “O”s in the 6000 LE and 3000 GT).

A little change in scale can help. For example, there is no reason why you couldn’t scale down the “TI” in XR4Ti and have a much more readable badge. See the one I modified below:

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Compare
Image: ebay

Oddly enough, Acura has done just that with there SH-AWD logo for “Super Handling All-Wheel Drive.” You can see the difference in the sizing of the SH versus the AWD on the lower one. Oddly enough, I don’t think the one replaced the other one on Acura vehicles. Yes, I have been asked about what a SHAWD is.

Shawd 8 12
Image: ebay

Different fonts might work as well, or different colors or finishes. A few small changes would go a long way to making an easy-to-misread badge (I’m looking at you, KN Motors!) into something quite legible.

Still, where would the fun be in that? Don’t you want to hear your mom ask what a Volvo Jurbo is?

Jurbo 8 11
Image: ebay

Isn’t “Jurbo” the main guy in Breakin? I’m not really sure, but can you think of any more badge fails?

Top graphic: Thisss is a Mitsubishi 3000GT (not a BOOOGT) via Cars and Bids

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Taco Shackleford
Taco Shackleford
3 months ago

This is wonderful! And on the exact opposite side of the misreading spectrum has been my long standing thought that the 2015era Civic badge looks like it say C4/IC

https://www.autocar.co.uk/sites/autocar.co.uk/files/styles/gallery_slide/public/honda-civic-badge.jpg?itok=XqP4oHfN

Adam Wrigley
Adam Wrigley
3 months ago

Someone clearly misread “CIVIC” as “C-Roman Numeral 4-IC” and wanted to translate it for modern readers.

Hoonicus
Hoonicus
3 months ago

I drove a 1997 SAAB goose turbo convertible for 5 years, knew 9 was confused with g, hadn’t come across 6 being read as G

Jatkat
Jatkat
3 months ago

Lots of Nissans have “SL-AWD” badges. I always wonder what sort of salad a nissan SLAWD is.

Ecsta C3PO
Ecsta C3PO
3 months ago
Reply to  Jatkat

Short for “SLAWD help me there’s an Altima in the next lane”

Dodsworth
Dodsworth
3 months ago

I think TACOMA is shorthand for TACO COMA. There are worse ways to go.

Ryan .
Ryan .
3 months ago
Reply to  Dodsworth

Or a utility knife makes for Taco

https://i.imgur.com/RLB8REc.jpeg

Dodsworth
Dodsworth
3 months ago
Reply to  Ryan .

The heart wants what the heart wants.

Danger Ranger
Danger Ranger
3 months ago

I guess my old Vue was an X RAWD. XR AWD

Lifelong Obsession
Lifelong Obsession
3 months ago

Also, does anyone remember WhiteGMC trucks? Since there was no space between “White” and “GMC” and it was in all caps, I could never figure out if the pronunciation was “White GMC” or “whit-eg-emk”.

Matt Sexton
Matt Sexton
3 months ago
Reply to  The Bishop

Is it Pet / Smart, or Pets / Mart?

AssMatt
AssMatt
3 months ago
Reply to  Matt Sexton

Shop Smart. Shop S-Mart.

Freelivin2713
Freelivin2713
3 months ago
Reply to  Matt Sexton

Since you asked…used to be PetsMART, then years ago they spent millions rebranding/changing signs to PetSMART (Smart about pets)
My wife used to work there

Cal67
Cal67
2 months ago
Reply to  Matt Sexton

It’s just StupidPet.

AssMatt
AssMatt
3 months ago
Reply to  The Bishop

A(n overlooked and underappreciated) ’90s Seattle band (occasionally featured in part in Almost Live’s headbanging “Lame List”) had a great name that had a third level: Gruntruck could be Grunt Ruck or Grun Truck, but also sounded like “Grunge Rock” at a time when that alone should have meant a major label record deal.

Ranwhenparked
Ranwhenparked
3 months ago

Like Australia’s foreign travel advisory service – is it Smar Traveler or Smart Raveler?

RataTejas
RataTejas
3 months ago

Take a look at the Studebaker Lark badge below. The letters are all connected by a horizontal chrome band at the bottom. Other emblems have used similar connecting material between letters, but you’re not supposed to read it as anything other than masybe an underline.

Or, maybe, just throwing it out there… Cursive

VanGuy
VanGuy
3 months ago
Reply to  RataTejas

Eh, we’re getting away from cursive as a society as less relevant for the majority of people. We probably don’t need to encourage its use or confuse younger people unused to it.

Last edited 3 months ago by VanGuy
RataTejas
RataTejas
3 months ago
Reply to  VanGuy

It’s hardly used anywhere important. Like the Constitution. 😀

VanGuy
VanGuy
3 months ago
Reply to  RataTejas

Which can be read, in its entirety, here:
https://www.archives.gov/founding-docs/constitution-transcript

Look, I wouldn’t say no one should know it…but in terms of “should everybody be taught this”, they’ve already been cutting teaching how to write in cursive from schools, and I just think there’s a hundred more important things to learn than understanding cursive.

Space
Space
3 months ago
Reply to  VanGuy

Can we please teach them to sign their names in cursive, seeing row after row of block print signatures is mentally painful.

VanGuy
VanGuy
3 months ago

Tragically, Courier New is one of the only fonts I know of where there’s not some kind of visual overlap between the characters i, I, l, L, or 1. But of course it’s also such a wide font.

Still trying to find the perfect™ visually unambiguous font (in serif, never mind sans serif!).

I truly hate Kia’s new logo. Plus, fun fact, if you duplicate it and rotate the duplicate on top of (above) the first one, you get a swastika! Feels like that wasn’t well-thought-out.

Anyway, aside from that, these badging issues are mostly confusing rather than ill-intentioned or something.

My bigger issue is vehicles that lack any badging. Yes, I do not know one Ferrari from another. Just put a badge on it so I know. You’re lucky I can distinguish Corvettes after whichever generation ditched the circular taillights.

Beyond that I have bigger beefs (beeves?) with vehicle naming in general.
Death to alphanumeric codes as model names. Talking to you, Mercedes, BMW, Infiniti, Mazda, Volvo, Saab, Porsche, [stops here before getting angrier]

Lifelong Obsession
Lifelong Obsession
3 months ago

As a kid in the ‘90s, I always thought Toyota “SR5” meant “SRS”, as in airbags. I remember looking through the window of some of those old pickups and being confused about why the steering wheel clearly didn’t have an airbag.

Jack Trade
Jack Trade
3 months ago

This is such a great one. I kinda got into cars in a serious way in the ’90s, just as airbags were popping up (out?) everywhere, and I was always confused by this.

Matt Sexton
Matt Sexton
3 months ago
Reply to  The Bishop

That actually happened to me, had a kid call me up for brake pads for a Subaru SRS. Not kidding. Took a while to figure out what it was, with some coaching on where to find the model name.

Lockleaf
Lockleaf
3 months ago

Totally unrelated to the topic at hand but one of the BMW fixes for the oil burning in those v8s was to send out a TSB stating “instead of the usual 8 quarts of oil, put in 9 quarts at time of oil change. This way, the “low oil” light will not illuminate before the customer’s next oil change.” They didn’t try to fix it, they just added extra oil so the average owner never noticed. Horrible. Genius.

https://dot.report/bulletins/MC-10149577-9999.pdf

Pat Rich
Pat Rich
3 months ago

I had a good friend in High School and she really wanted a BOOOGT. I think a little of her died when I told her it was 3000 GT

Jason Christopher
Jason Christopher
3 months ago

The Alfa Romeo Tamale commercials always make me hungry.

Fjord
Fjord
3 months ago

I always want to pronounce that at toenail.

Squirrelmaster
Squirrelmaster
3 months ago

As soon as I saw “ex-ra-tee” written out phonetically, I knew it was talking about the Merkur because I have had that exact discussion multiple times. Almost every time I then have to explain that Merkur was not a badging mistake for Mercury, even though it kind of was in that they should have badged it as a Mercury or a Ford, and the person usually loses interest.

One that made me laugh was when someone asked me about a “Pulsarks”. I had to ask a few questions, like brand and how many doors, neither or which they knew, but then they mentioned it had an odd hatchback-like rear end that looked added on and I realized they were talking about a Pulsar NX. Given how the Pulsar script is like half the font size of the NX, I still don’t know how they screwed that up…

Hangover Grenade
Hangover Grenade
3 months ago

Give me Honda CRV-EX or give me death.

Jack Trade
Jack Trade
3 months ago

For me, it was always XR4ti b/c it was so memorable – there was no other nameplate quite like it in the Ford lineup back then b/c the whole alpha-numeric thing hadn’t spawned past the Euro luxury stuff.

Jack Trade
Jack Trade
3 months ago
Reply to  The Bishop

I was a kid then – my first knowledge of it was that ad on tv where it races BMWs. “Wow what is that? It has 2 spoilers??”

Also, b/c it was the 1980s, “I don’t know what a spoiler is, but wow they seem cool…we need more of this.” I’d come to regret that view by the 2000s.

Sklooner
Sklooner
3 months ago

Wife asked what the heck a Toyota Turd was

VanGuy
VanGuy
3 months ago
Reply to  Sklooner

Mmm….I think that’s a naming failure rather than a badging failure, if that makes sense.

Like, she correctly interpreted the intended letters “TRD”. So it’s not a badging failure.

Chartreuse Bison
Chartreuse Bison
3 months ago
Reply to  VanGuy

“were gonna use English words for the acronym, but not look at what the acronym spells out”

VanGuy
VanGuy
3 months ago

Exactly. I think “TRD” is just another entry in the long line of “bad vehicle(/trim/etc.) names”, which is distinct from this narrower (but still interesting) question of “bad/illegible/easily misread badging.”

Chartreuse Bison
Chartreuse Bison
3 months ago
Reply to  VanGuy

Most of these examples are misread though because they are meaningless (to the average person) letters and numbers. The brain tries to form words where there aren’t any.
I don’t think there is anyway you could write out XR4Ti that wouldn’t confuse literally anyone who didn’t already know what it was.

J. Brandon
J. Brandon
2 months ago
Reply to  Sklooner

Once saw a Toyota Tacoma TRD with a vanity plate that said TRDLIFE. Dude seemed pretty proud of his truck, though.

Jonee Eisen
Jonee Eisen
3 months ago

Mazda’s first passenger car, the R360, has a badge that says “Rebo.”

https://www.below-the-radar.com/mazda-r360/#iLightbox%5Bimage_gallery_1%5D/6

Last edited 3 months ago by Jonee Eisen
Fjord
Fjord
3 months ago
Ecsta C3PO
Ecsta C3PO
3 months ago
Reply to  Fjord

Even for cursive the Fulvia badge is a little hard to read if you don’t know the car name ahead of time

Mark Tucker
Mark Tucker
3 months ago

There was also a Dodge Goose (600 SE) around the same time as the Pontiac Gooole.

Michael Beranek
Michael Beranek
3 months ago

Nothing beats the Cadillac Cataracts.

TimoFett
TimoFett
3 months ago

When I was a kid my mom told me that grandma was having cataract surgery. I replied, “but she drives a Cordoba”…mom laughed…sadly the Cordoba did not have rich Corinthian leather

Michael Beranek
Michael Beranek
3 months ago
Reply to  TimoFett

My dad’s 80 Cordoba Crown didn’t have that either, but the velour was magnificent

Rad Barchetta
Rad Barchetta
3 months ago

KN.com is still a dead link. Wish those guys would hurry up and build a website.

Spikedlemon
Spikedlemon
3 months ago
Reply to  Rad Barchetta

You’d think they’d capitalize on that. Especially where you have Chevy,com redirecting to Chevrolet.com

121gwats
121gwats
3 months ago

I can read all these just fine (shrug)

Rad Barchetta
Rad Barchetta
3 months ago
Reply to  121gwats

12 lgwats is a lot of lgwats.

Last edited 3 months ago by Rad Barchetta
Data
Data
3 months ago
Reply to  Rad Barchetta

1.21 Jigawatts! Great Scott!

121gwats
121gwats
2 months ago
Reply to  Rad Barchetta

Just enough to get to Hill Valley.. Its the license plate on my EV as well 🙂

5.7WK2
5.7WK2
3 months ago

Any Nissan that is an SL and AWD makes me think of cole slaw…

5.7WK2
5.7WK2
3 months ago

Kenosha Kar Krafters”

Oof…

5.7WK2
5.7WK2
3 months ago
Reply to  The Bishop

Reminds me of the appetite suppressant candy from the 70s and early 80s called AYDs.

RataTejas
RataTejas
3 months ago
Reply to  The Bishop

Or KTM bikes with WP suspension, up until very recently named White Power

FuzzyPlushroom
FuzzyPlushroom
3 months ago
Reply to  RataTejas

Whenever I see a white Dodge/Ram Power Wagon, I hope the owner never put that much thought into it.

Collegiate Autodidact
Collegiate Autodidact
3 months ago
Reply to  The Bishop

Yeah, likewise here, I’ve had to deal with that when ordering parts for my vintage German cars, ugh; and sometimes when I’m ordering wheel bearings for these cars I’ll find that the wheel bearings come from “Fischer’s Automatische Gussstahlkugelfabrik.” Good grief.

SNL-LOL Jr
SNL-LOL Jr
3 months ago
Reply to  5.7WK2

Current events suggest that the connotation may not be negative, in the eyes of the locality.

MEK
MEK
3 months ago

Sorry, but you’re wrong, it is Mister Two.

Data
Data
3 months ago
Reply to  The Bishop

I always thought Ford was going to 1337 speak decades early: XR Fourty

Punctured Pete
Punctured Pete
3 months ago
Reply to  MEK

In french MR2 is pronounced emm air de (as in coupe ‘de’ ville). Those three sounds together spell out merde. A straight translation for “excrement”. I don’t think it sold well in France!

Beached Wail
Beached Wail
3 months ago
Reply to  MEK

Someone in my old neighborhood had one with the license plate RU MRS2. Guess it never hurts to ask.

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