An aerial photograph of new cars at Fremantle Port tells the story of modern car colours — a sea of white, dotted with some grey/silver and black, with only occasional splashes of red or blue.
One reason why I was aiming for a white car for my most recent purchase didn’t even get a mention; heat.
My family has always primarily owned coloured cars, dark blue and maroon, but I went from owning a black car to a white one and the cabin temp difference on a 30+°C day was staggering with the white car being much more tolerable.
As owner of dark green car I can say, do not buy this color, it is bloody stealth car. No one see you on the road. Have to drive with light on all the time. I guess only grey is worse that it.
Never buy a grey car. We had one during our childhood, it got hit four times by idiot drivers not watching the road. Most were distracted by phones, food, etc. Silver blends into the road fairly well.
It's a common colour here in the UK too which is terrible because it's basically invisible in the frequent rain we get here. People will drive down the motorway in heavy spray and not put their lights on just because it's daylight and don't realise that they are really hard to spot.
I remember seeing studies from years ago that statistically yellow and red cars had less accidents.
They put it down to the fact that humans see red and yellow as 'danger'. Like if you see red or yellow on snakes or spiders or wasps etc, you shouldn't mess with it
I use to have a yellow car. I think the less accidents is because drivers of yellow cars have to be more vigilant. The number of people who would just pull out in front of me when driving the yellow car as opposed to the other car I had, which was white, was ridiculous.
Boomers and GenXers used to love red cars because anyone driving a pov-pack Hyundai Excel in red thought they were driving a Ferrari.
There used to be a meme (idea) that red cars were cop-magnets because people in red cars would drive like dickheads.
All those Boomers grew old and started buying Maroon cars because they were technically red, but wouldn’t be cop-magnets.
These colours are colloquially called “Old-Man Burgundy” or “Haemorrhoid Brown”.
In the UK, the fronts of most/all trains are painted yellow for this reason. Given that cars are more abundant and less predictable than trains, perhaps making them (or just the bumpers/trim) yellow/orange would have safety benefits.
That's interesting. I'm also remembering an I don't know how old study that indicated that red cars were ticketed for speeding the most amongst all colors.
When we built our house, we specifically ordered SurfMist Blue (which is a very white colour with a hint of powder blue).
The stupid fucking builder installed WoodLand Grey. They had to tear the whole roof off our two storey and re-clad it in the correct colour.
The rents needed a new roof lately, I showed them the stats for surfmist compared to dark colourbond (which they wanted initially)
But they settled on zinc-alum which is not quite as good as surf mist for the heat, but much cheaper and still good.
They're in North West Victoria, hits 45 all the time in summer and weeks of 35+ easy.
in the us car companies have some thing that tells them the hot color for this year is X then folks like I buy the tons of them sitting around the lot from two years previous.
I remember a study that linked car colors with people's perception of the economy or something. When people were optimistic, they bought brighter colors.
But all I want is fun brought back to cars. Give me neon, pastels, or bright colors. I'm sick of the monotony on the road of white, gray, and black. Even the reds and blues are darker and deeper. Give me a nice surf green or candy apple red.
I’d argue new car designs are not very inspiring, so naturally people are choosing the colours that compliment the feeling they get from the car. No sense putting lipstick on a pig. Also the resale argument is a factor that wasn’t apparent in the past. You’d buy a car for keeps and it would be your car, these days hanging onto a car more than a few years is a huge liability when it comes to maintenance costs.
Warranties are long and your insane if you think spending $40k or more on another car every few years is better than servicing a warranted car for 7 years...
Used car market is much more favourable than it used to be for sellers so it’s a no brainer for people that like the latest of everything and always want new tech. Cars aren’t machines any more and have electronics, batteries and subscriptions, it’s shit and I don’t buy into it but you can see how little people will care about personality of the vehicle vs the status it provides as-is