Volkswagen Will Use Real Names Again, and These Were Some of the Best
Volkswagen is now admitting its mistakes with the naming of its line of EVs. The ID.3, ID.4, and ID.7 aren't the worst we've seen, but the ID.Buzz, ID.Every1, and ID.2all are just plain weird and utterly forgettable. It's too easy to forget what kind of vehicle goes with what name. Seriously, why couldn't Volkswagen call its electric minivan the Westfalia or something similar from its past? It has a retro style, so give it a name that's evocative, not strange. Now, the brand wants to pivot by returning to proper names, the kind that many brands abandoned over the past few decades.
The guilty parties are the brands that have employed alpha-numeric model names in place of names with character, having copied the Germans' methodology. Car companies wanted to be viewed as cultured and sophisticated like the Europeans, but almost nothing dilutes a car's personality like getting rid of a proper name. Acura used to have great names like the Legend and the Integra (thankfully, it's back now), but moved to meaningless names like RL, CL, TL, et al. Mazda eliminated names like Tribute and Millenia in favor of 626, 6, CX-5, CX-9, and so on. Cadillac used to have the DeVille, the Eldorado, and even the Allante. Okay, so we don't miss the Cimarron or the Catera, but at least we remember what those cars looked like. Thankfully, it still has the Escalade.
When Lexus and Infiniti emerged as luxury sub-brands, they went right to alpha-numeric names without hesitating. The LS, SC, RX, and ES were born, and Infiniti's Q, J, QX, FX, and M names weren't much better. When Genesis hit the scene decades later, it did the same with its G80, then G70, G90, GV70, GV80, and the electric GV60.
Then, there are just plain confusing ones that don't roll off the tongue. The BMW X5 sounds fine, but transmogrify it into the BMW X5 sDrive40i? Really? Enough already with all the letters and numbers. How about a real name?
We love it when automakers do the right kind of course correction, and we get that naming vehicles presents challenges. Model names should be unique and evoke the brand identity well, but that doesn't mean the results are always worthy of respect. According to Volkswagen, 'ID' stands for 'Intelligent design, identity and visionary technologies'. Snooze. Where's the passion?
The 'ID.' style naming convention isn't widespread across VW's stable, but it dominates its EVs. The brand still has the Golf, Jetta, Taos, Tiguan, and Atlas (no one misses names like the hard-to-pronounce Touareg or the tepidly labeled Passat), but it recognizes that the ID. vehicles lack some naming verve. VW's head of marketing and sales, Martin Sander, stated to the German publication Auto Und Wirtschaft: "The cars will get proper names again. Neither the ID. 2all nor the ID. Every1 will have those names in series production. We'll announce that when the time comes."
What the revised EV names will be is unknown, but we know that the current ones really need to go. You can't just slap an "ID" and a "." along with goofy made-up words tacked on in hopes that customers will know what they are. They sure won't go down in history as great car names. Here are some of the best names from Volkswagen's illustrious past that we think should make a resurgence.
The Rabbit name never should've disappeared. It was used for the first generation of the North American Golf, and was cute and memorable, more than even the iconic Golf. It was boxy-handsome, fun to toss, and very affordable. VW would earn the praise of just about everyone if it brought back the name. Of course, the Golf "Rabbit" is perfect for the upcoming ID. Every1.
The Scirocco (shir-ROC-o) is probably the best name VW ever came up with. It comes directly from a Mediterranean wind, and boy, does it sound cool. Also known as the Type 53, the two-door, front-wheel drive hatchback was meant to be a successor to the Karmann Ghia coupe and a sportier alternative to the more economical Golf. Please, VW, put it on the ID. CODE and bring that China-only EV here. The name alone would make it sell.
The Corrado was the successor to the Scirocco, but it didn't last long in the United States. It briefly sold next to the outgoing Scirocco, but its price and limited practicality prevented wider appeal. Its last year stateside was 1994, and the two-door, front-wheel drive hatchback never had a successor. The name came from the Spanish verb "correr" (to sprint), and boy, did it leave quickly. The Corrado name would be a great replacement for the ID. CROZZ 2-door electric crossover.
Ok, so we're not 100% behind this one, but hear us out. The originally military-use vehicle isn't pretty by any means, but the name is totally memorable. Otherwise known as the Volkswagen Type 181, it was originally created as a semi-amphibious vehicle for the West German Army. We don't doubt that any modern Volkswagen would look prettier than this boxy SUV inspired by cardboard boxes, but we could definitely see a boxy Jeep-style electric SUV with the "Thing" name slapped on it. It would be perfect if the ID. LIFE concept was brought to life.
We get that the future of automotive is electric, but that doesn't mean VW's EV names have to suck. Finally, someone higher up in the Volkswagen ranks is talking sense, and maybe other automakers will follow suit. Is it marketing suicide to change names midstream? Not necessarily. It could be risky, but it's been done before. VW would be making a smart move, in our opinion, and properly done names could make their vehicles more easily identifiable and memorable.
Volkswagen Will Use Real Names Again, and These Were Some of the Best first appeared on Autoblog on May 28, 2025

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Business Upturn
3 hours ago
- Business Upturn
Top stocks in focus on July 1: IREDA, NHPC, NTPC Green, HUDCO, Bharat Electronics, Hindustan Copper and more
Here's a quick look at the stocks likely to be in focus during today's trade based on recent updates, business developments, order wins, appointments, and corporate actions. Stocks to watch Aavas Financiers: Aquilo House Pte. Limited has been designated as the new promoter of the company. IREDA: The Indian Renewable Energy Development Agency reported a 29% year-on-year increase in loan sanctions for Q1, amounting to ₹11,740 crore, compared to ₹9,136 crore a year ago. United Breweries: The company introduced a new product, 'Amstel Grande' beer, in Karnataka, targeting the premium strong category. Balaji Amines: Commenced commercial production of Isopropylamine at its Osmanabad manufacturing unit. NHPC: Commissioned Phase IV (53.57 MW) of the Karnisar Solar Project, bringing total operational capacity to 214.28 MW out of a planned 300 MW. HUDCO: Reported loan sanctions worth ₹33,904 crore and disbursements of ₹12,812 crore in the first quarter. Thangamayil Jewellery: Opened new branches in Chennai as part of its retail expansion. Timken India: Started commercial production at its new manufacturing facility in Bharuch, Gujarat. Bharat Electronics: Secured additional orders worth ₹528 crore since the previous disclosure on June 20. NCC: Received new orders worth ₹1,690.51 crore in June 2025, focused on the building division. Apollo Hospitals: The board approved a scheme of arrangement involving Apollo Healthco, Keimed, and Apollo Healthtech. Sona Comstar: Exploring the manufacturing of rare earth magnets in India, according to media reports. Kalpataru Projects: Announced fresh orders valued at ₹989 crore across various segments. HCL Technologies: Partnered with OpenAI to advance enterprise-scale artificial intelligence adoption. NTPC Green Energy: Commissioned 32.8 MW of solar power capacity at the Khavda project site in Gujarat. Astec LifeSciences: Launched a ₹249.35 crore rights issue priced at ₹890 per share. ITI Ltd: Signed an agreement with BSNL for the ₹1,901 crore BharatNet Phase-3 project (NER-II package). Godrej Industries: Increased its stake in Godrej Capital to 90.89% through a ₹285 crore investment. Oil India and ONGC: Administered pricing mechanism (APM) gas prices revised upward to $6.75/mmbtu from $6.41/mmbtu. SJVN: Began commercial operations of a 100.25 MW solar capacity, part of the 1,000 MW Bikaner project. Hindustan Copper: Signed an MoU with Coal India for joint exploration of copper and critical minerals. Gabriel India: Set to consolidate Anand Group's auto components businesses through a share swap arrangement. Jet Fuel Price Update: Aviation turbine fuel (ATF) price in Delhi increased by ₹6,271/kl to ₹89,344.05/kl. CG Power: Plans to raise ₹3,000 crore via a qualified institutional placement (QIP) following its highest-ever order win. Bharat Forge: Board approved transfer of the defence business to Kalyani Strategic Systems through OCRPS worth ₹500 crore. ESAF Small Finance Bank: Transferred ₹733.4 crore of non-performing and written-off loans to an asset reconstruction company for ₹73.34 crore. Bank of India: Reduced its lending rates by 5 basis points across all tenors, effective July 1. Uno Minda: Finalised the acquisition of 1.69 crore shares (49.90% stake) in UnoMinda EV Systems from FRIWO GmbH for ₹141.27 crore. Torrent Pharmaceuticals: Anticipates completion of the ₹19,500 crore JB Pharma acquisition within 15–18 months. Ashok Leyland: CEO of Switch Mobility, S Mahesh Babu, to step down effective August 31. JK Cement: Declared a final dividend of ₹15 per share for FY25. Can Fin Homes: Appointed Abhishek Mishra as Chief Financial Officer for a three-year term starting June 30. Patel Engineering: Board to consider a debt issuance proposal at its meeting scheduled for July 3. Wipro: Appointed Tulsi Naidu as chairperson of its nomination and remuneration committee. Larsen & Toubro (L&T): Subsidiary L&T Energy Green Tech incorporated a new wholly owned arm, Panipat Green Hydrogen. Hindustan Zinc: Disclosed contribution of ₹90,000 crore to the exchequer over the past five years, including ₹18,963 crore in FY25. Grindwell Norton: Recommended a final dividend of ₹17 per equity share. One Mobikwik Systems: Citigroup Global Markets Mauritius sold 4.43 lakh shares at ₹246.23 per share. ASM Framework Updates: To be included in ST-ASM : Balaji Amines, Jai Balaji. To be excluded from ST-ASM : Avantel, Dam Networks, Premier Explosives. To be included in LT-ASM: Orient Bell. Price Band Revision: Diamond Power: Revised from 10% to 5%. Dividend Ex-Dates Today: Cera Sanitaryware: ₹65 per share. JSW Infrastructure: ₹0.8 per share. Polychem: ₹20 per share. Dividend Ex-Dates Tomorrow: Bharat Seats: ₹1.1 per share. Sika Interplant: ₹2.4 per share. Other Corporate Developments: Sigachi Industries : A fire incident at the Hyderabad facility resulted in one fatality; plant operations suspended for 90 days. Gensol Engineering: Keya Vimal Salot sold 3 lakh shares at ₹42.32 per share. Disclaimer: The information provided is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial or investment advice. Stock market investments are subject to market risks. Always conduct your own research or consult a financial advisor before making investment decisions. Author or Business Upturn is not liable for any losses arising from the use of this information. Ahmedabad Plane Crash


USA Today
6 hours ago
- USA Today
Hertz's new AI scanners charge renters instantly, even for tiny scratches
The Hertz rental car company, along with its Dollar and Thrifty affiliates, are rolling out AI-powered vehicle inspection scanners that scan your rental car as it exits or enters the rental lot for damage. The motivation here, clearly, is to improve rental fleet maintenance and introduce some objective data to a damage-reporting process that, traditionally, has been pretty subjective. But barely two months into the scanners' initial deployment at real-world Hertz facilities, there's already a problem. The skinny of it is a Hertz customer, Patrick, rented a Volkswagen from Hertz out of the Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport in Atlanta, which is actually the first location to implement the scanners, reported The Drive. Patrick later returned the car, albeit with a one-inch scuff on the driver's side rear wheel. Apparently, "minutes" after putting the vehicle through the scanner, he said received a damage charge for the curb rash: $250 to repair it, $125 for "processing," and an additional $65 for an "administrative fee." In total, the charge was for $440. Ouch, that's a lot of scratch — and fast It's not clear what typical Hertz repair costs are, or how quickly human-scanned damage turns into a repair estimate and charge for a customer, but the company defines the processing and administrative fees as "the cost to detect and estimate the damage that occurred during your rental" and "cover[ing] a portion of the costs [Hertz incurs] as a result of processing your claim," respectively, according to The Drive. We also figure that a human eyeing a rental for damage, inputting any such damage into a company system, and that system generating a repair charge estimate would surely take longer than a process seemingly automated end-to-end and initiated immediately upon the rental car's return. To put things into perspective, a professional curb-rash repair job typically costs between $100 to $250 per wheel. Heck, an entirely new wheel (the rented VW appears to be a late-model Jetta, based on the pictured wheel at The Drive) might even be price-competitive with the repair estimate given to Patrick, given its list price is a little over $500. Patrick claimed if he agreed to the terms and paid within two days, Hertz would give him a $52 discount. Or he could get a $32.50 discount if he paid within a week. Patrick told the outlet he wanted to speak to someone and ask about the charge. Though the Hertz website is able to connect customers with live chat agents, it doesn't seem as though the same can be said of the apps just yet; they're only able to flag a claim for later review. Patrick followed company prompts and sent an email, though a response can take up to 10 days to appear. The discount is only good for seven days, remember. As of Monday, June 23, Patrick has not paid the charge, telling The Drive: "Saving $30 to accept responsibility is not worth it." What can be done? Following this, MotorTrend has reached out to company reps to ask what Hertz is doing to make live agents more accessible to customers in the face of more automation in the rental process. We also asked if rental prices and rental repair costs were higher for customers who rent from locations that employ the scanners, as compared to those who rent from locations without them. On the record, a Hertz spokesperson responded, "The vast majority of rentals are incident-free. When damage does occur, our goal is to enhance the rental experience by bringing greater transparency, precision and speed to the process. Digital vehicle inspections help deliver on that with clear, detailed documentation that is delivered more quickly, as well as a more technology-enabled resolution process.' On the other hand, say you pick up your rental car at the start of your trip and you forget to take photos or overlook an existing bit of damage. The scanners could ensure you aren't falsely charged for dings that were already there. You're free to depart the rental lot without having to worry; ditto when returning the car — you can walk off without stress that you missed something when initially picking up the car, and (if true) confident you didn't add any patina to the car during your rental. Hertz announced its use of the AI scanners back in April. It's partnered with Israeli ex-defense and current AI vehicle inspection system company, UVeye. The scanners can measure treadwear and provide a 360-view of a car's undercarriage, body and glass. Rather than have a human come out and do a visual inspection, the scanner can do it consistently and more frequently. UVeye claims its system increases damage detection accuracy by five times. Hertz plans to implement 100 UVeye scanners at its approximately 1,600 United States airport locations by the end of 2025. It touts "transparency" as one of the main advantages its customers can expect from the tech, though it remains to be seen how transparent things remain when customers invariably require a live human to speak with to dispute the findings. To note, this is the same company that has left a rental desk unmanned for six hours, attempted to charge a customer $10,000 despite an unlimited mileage policy, attempted to charge a Tesla customer for gas, and settled for $168 million after falsely accusing hundreds of customers of stealing its cars — some of which led to innocent people getting arrested, charged with felonies, and jailed. Hertz filed for bankruptcy in 2020 but left bankruptcy after just a year when travel rebounded in full force. It was able to offload more than $5 billion in debt and invest in buying cars for its fleets and modernizing technology. Photos by manufacturer
Yahoo
11 hours ago
- Yahoo
WESTERN MIDSTREAM ANNOUNCES AVAILABILITY OF 2024 SCHEDULE K-3
HOUSTON, June 30, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Today Western Midstream Partners, LP (NYSE: WES) ("WES" or the "Partnership") announced that its 2024 Schedule K-3 reflecting items of international tax relevance is available online. Unitholders requiring this information may access their Schedule K-3 at A limited number of unitholders (primarily foreign unitholders, unitholders computing a foreign tax credit on their tax return and certain corporate and/or partnership unitholders) may need the detailed information disclosed on Schedule K-3 for their specific reporting requirements. To the extent Schedule K-3 is applicable to your federal income tax return filing needs, we encourage you to review the information contained on this form and refer to the appropriate federal laws and guidance or consult with your tax advisor. To receive an electronic copy of your Schedule K-3 via email, unitholders may call Tax Package Support toll free at 833-618-2034. ABOUT WESTERN MIDSTREAM Western Midstream Partners, LP ("WES") is a master limited partnership formed to develop, acquire, own, and operate midstream assets. With midstream assets located in Texas, New Mexico, Colorado, Utah, and Wyoming, WES is engaged in the business of gathering, compressing, treating, processing, and transporting natural gas; gathering, stabilizing, and transporting condensate, natural-gas liquids, and crude oil; and gathering and disposing of produced water for its customers. In its capacity as a natural-gas processor, WES also buys and sells natural gas, natural-gas liquids, and condensate on behalf of itself and its customers under certain gas processing contracts. A substantial majority of WES's cash flows are protected from direct exposure to commodity price volatility through fee-based contracts. For more information about WES, please visit WESTERN MIDSTREAM CONTACTS Daniel JenkinsDirector, Investor Relations Investors@ Rhianna DischManager, Investor RelationsInvestors@ View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Western Midstream Partners, LP