1. 1984 BMW 635
As close to design perfection as any car out there, it stands the test of time (it's 40 years old). The glass cockpit remains unrivalled in visibility terms and the lines seem just perfect. I'd buy one tomorrow if I could find one in good shape.
2. 1985 Porsche Turbo
It's iconic, it's definitive and it was called at the time the "doctor killer" for it's tendencies when driven hard (The back was a tad heavy it seems). Nonetheless, it defined the brand, and the space of supercars joined by a rarified few like the Countach and the Lotus Esprit used in 007 films. Yes it's still around today, but it's been tamed.
3. Land Rover 110
4. Puegeot 406
It's the inheritance of perfect coupe design from the BMW, 20 years later. Sleek, aerodynamic and lovely. Unfortunately French (great wine, cheese and romance, not such hot cars), but overlook that to enjoy it's grace and lines. Widely exported though not to North America, the Puegeot's of the era were a renaissance for the French car maker until they lost their way once more.
5. 2009 Audi A8L

6. Fiat Spider
It is the convertible. There are many pretenders, but this is the one we think of when the term is used. Designed by the masters at Pininfarina in 1966, this car is timeless. It seems like the direct father of other classics such as the Honda S2000 and Miata, only it's simpler, clearer of purpose and more fun. Two seats, no more. It's not a rocket, it's meant to enjoy the day, just as convertibles should.
7. Toyota Previa - Generation 1

8. 1972 Firebird Formula 400.
It's the hood scoops. It was when the muscle car was cool still as well, before KnightRider and the plastic body panels. A real car, not the flashy Vette's or Cuda's that were also around then. And it was this model - the Formula 400 with the big noise and no-nonsense approach to straight line speed. It was true guy's car.
9. Porsche 928 GTS
Why 9 by the way ? Because I was struggling amongst many fine choices for #10.
Honourable Mentions...
There have been many cars that defined their era, and these include the Volvo P1800, the Triumph TR7/8 and the de-facto current 'best of' the convertible - the Boxster. Or stunning wagons like the Audi S4 Avant. Notably there's not a Ferrari on this list, though the current 458 came close. Likewise no Mercedes, Maserati's Pagonda's or Lambourghini's. I'm also not a big Jag fan, but appreciate them, having spent some quality time in E-Types. But - that's just me. As I said at the outset, the list is subjective.
What's on your list..?
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