Quick! Grab your calendar! Push the little primer bulb a few times to get some fuel into the carb, then yank that starter cord! Okay, try it again. One more time. There you go! Now that it’s running, what does the calendar say? March 32. And you know what that means – it’s the anniversary of The Autopian! Three years! Somehow, we’ve been doing this for the minimum number of years to make a Year Sandwich! And it’s all thanks to you!
To celebrate and represent this incredible milestone, we’ve picked a Third Year automotive mascot, the Saab Sonett III! You may recall that last year we picked the Ford Mustang II, so, following this logic, those of you who are excited for the BMW 2002 to be our anniversary mascot car will just need to wait for the year, let’s see, 4024. March 32, 4024, to be specific, so pencil that in.
Hot clams, it’s really been three years? When David and Beau and I decided that the world had been deprived long enough of a place for genuine car dorks to really come together and form a strong, supportive, and fun community, we started the Autopian, and the consensus from the world, automotive and otherwise, seemed to be that it simply couldn’t be done.

The Rosicrucians, teaming up for the first time with the Carpet and Rug Institute and the International Union of Notaries, put aside their longstanding differences to issue an extremely forcefully-worded statement condemning our new enterprise, and pledged to “see the destruction of the Autopian before this blighted abomination can pollute the computer networks of this troubled world.”
I’m happy to be here today, still doing what we do, polluting those networks with the love of cars, and the Rosicrucians, Ruggies, and Notaries can lump it.
Speaking of cars, let’s talk a bit about our third anniversary mascot car, the Saab Sonett III. This is the third iteration of Saab’s fantastic little sports car, the Sonett. The Sonett was first introduced as a swoopy little roadster in 1955, with a lean, lovely design by Sixten Sason, and the name, which I can never spell right, isn’t from the type of 14-line poetry, but rather a contraction of the Swedish phrase “Så nätt den är,” which means “it’s so neat.” Which it is!

The early Sonetts had Saab’s traditional DKW-derived two-stroke three-cylinder engine, but the Sonett II could be had with a V4 engine from the Ford Taunus, which eventually turned into the Sonett V4, which is above there, so very yellow.
The engine compartment of the Sonett II was only barely able to fit the V4 engine, and when new emission equipment was needed, there was simply no more room, so the opportunity was taken to re-design the whole car, keeping the same chassis, but making a whole new fiberglass body, which would become the Sonett III in 1970.

The Sonett III was designed by ex-Ghia designer Sergio Coggiola, who also designed another Swedish sporty car icon, the Volvo 262C:

The design of the Sonett III was very inspired by the ’70s wedge phenomenon, and had a more crisp-lined look than previous Sonetts, but retained the dramatic proportions and low-slung stance. There were now manual pop-up headlamps, and a glass hatch that opened to reveal a surprisingly large cargo area at the rear.

Mechanically, the Sonett III was quite close to the V4 that preceded it, and retained the unusual for that era – and, really, for any era of sports car – layout of a longitudinal front-wheel-drive setup.

Even cooler on the Sonnet III was something that is almost never mentioned in the same sentence as “cool”: the radiator overflow tank. I mean, look at it:

See what’s going on there? The radiator overflow tank isn’t just some plastic bottle shoved down into the corner of the engine bay somewhere, it’s inside that cross-brace! Yes, that stiffening brace is hollow and acts as the coolant overflow tank! It’s fantastic!

We’re proud to have the third Sonett be our third-year car mascot, but what I’m feeling more than pride, about tiny V4 Swedes or this very website, is gratitude, and that gratitude is directed squarely at you.
You, those who read our site, hopefully every day, and you who comment, with wit and insight and knowledge, and you who are paying members, helping us keep this bold experiment in loving cars and the people who love them, all of you, thank you, thank you, thank you.

We hit a huge milestone yesterday, reaching over four million pageviews (as measured by Chartbeat, 7.5 million as measured by Google) in a month, and of course, we couldn’t have done that without all of you, viewing all of those pages. The whole point of the Autopian has always been to create and foster a community of people who care deeply about cars and the way cars bring people together, and I believe we have done – and are doing – just that.
So thank you all so very much, thank you for enduring our madness and sloppiness and over-eagerness for these three years, and let’s keep this thing going as long as we can, getting better and better every year! We’ll try our best!
If you’re not a member and would like to become one, click this link to save 13.33% on any annual membership, or go here and use the code threeisamagicnumber.
Top photo: Saab Brochure via Vintage Saab Manuals






I bought a Sonnet II v4 on BaT last summer and drove it back to Oregon from Denver in 100+ degree heat. Most fun I’ve ever had on a roadtrip, despite an alternator meltdown and losing my brake lights at some point on the trip. Mine is a stripped down, souped-up race car that ran in a regional vintage class for many years. It’s sharper and ruder in every way than the III, but it handles amazingly despite the nose mounted engine and is a hoot to drive. The amount of attention it gets is the only thing I hate about it.
Wow! 3 years! Congratulations!!!!!!!! ♥(ˆ⌣ˆԅ)
I heard, that to celebrate this 3rd anniversary, DT baked a cake using 2 hubcaps from a ’59 Rambler as cake pans? is that true? 😉
I heard Tracy got Trenchfoot on three extremities to celebrate the 3rd anniversary. Who knows?
It’s clear the whole point of The Autopian is the community. The “3nd” anniversary isn’t so clear.
Ha! I was a lead on a charity golf event that was on its third year and the hat vendor screwed up the proof and put “3ND annual” on the hats. They ended up being free
I meant 3th
Also I fixed it!
Woohoo! Happy to be a member, and even happier to see the Autopian not only continuing, but growing and improving!
Or just wait for the year 2002 to come back around again after the singularity jumbles all the timelines together. 😉
I shudder to think what percentage of those are me. 😛
When I bought my 240Z, I had actually gone to look at a Sonett III, but it was in pretty bad shape. I still like them and would have one over a Z today, low-power engine, kit car looks, weak transmission, and all. I find them so much more interesting and the Z’s horrible aerodynamics annoyed me—it felt like I had a billboard bolted to the front of the car on the highway. Saab probably had better feel, too, though I didn’t get to drive one, that’s just based on the poor feel of the Z that was disappointing even in a time when feel wasn’t nearly so difficult to find.
That’s not quite it. The Sonett II was available only with the two-stroke engine. When the V4 was introduced the car became the Sonett V4 with almost no other changes aside from the new off-center hood bulge.
Having owned a ’69 Sonett V4 and having reviewed a fair amount of the associated literature, I’m pretty sure the subsequent naming confusion arose because SAAB sometimes lumped the two of them together for parts and maintenance purposes under the description “Sonett II/V4” because nearly everything on them is the same but this doesn’t mean there ever was a car actually called the Sonett II/V4 any more than saying “Ford Pinto/Mercury Bobcat” means there was ever a car actually called that.
I’ve heard this multiple times now. But no one ever talks about why. I can’t think of any good reason why this isn’t just a plastic bottle. It’s a very Autopian solution, but was Saab really that forward looking?
Anyone know?
It’s not actually an overflow tank. It is instead a remote filler location for the cooling system which places the cap at the high point, as the radiator itself isn’t very tall. There is no overflow tank, just a hose from the remote filler that spills excess coolant onto the ground, as was common practice at the time.
On the Sonett II the remote filler is a small tank that is attached to the cross-brace. Note that the radiator itself also has a cap:
https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/50531195437_7e042e938c_z.jpg
On the Sonett V4 and III this is simplified not only by combining the remote filler and the cross-brace but also by eliminating the cap on the radiator:
https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/52350851351_bf8d80db24_c.jpg
Oh damn! I thought it was for overflow! Thank you for this!
This gracious maturity is why you are the beloved benevolent sovereign ruler of Jasonia. Other leaders should take note.
You’re welcome. By the way, that same cross-brace/tank also incorporates a pivot point for the throttle linkage, making it even more multi-functional:
https://live.staticflickr.com/4078/35587440571_9abdb8c438_c.jpg
I appreciate this, thanks.
Congrats Torch on The Autopian 3rd anniversary. Please continue to be entertaining and fresh and anti-political unlike your competitors over at Jalopnik, that I no longer visit.
“the Rosicrucians, Ruggies, and Notaries can lump it.”
Oh Jason! Now you’ve done it! Sure the Rosicrucians and Notaries are generally passive, but the Ruggies! Nothing sets them off like telling them to lump it. They’re obsessed with eradicating lumps. and likely to come after you with a power stretcher. Then your days of fitting smartly in micro cars will be over.
Happy Happy Joy Joy
Wow, I can’t believe it’s already March 32! Congrats team, three years is certainly more than one or two!
Let’s all raise our glasses of shower spaghetti and toast this wonderful website.
I haven’t enjoyed this level of community since the early 2000’s Saturnfans forums.
3 years already?
Bunch of great weirdos here: I feel at home.
always wear my Autopian hat walking the dog—I’ll sport the Tailight Sushi shirt as well this evening. Or maybe the Pao.
Happy March 32nd and Happy Autopianniversary!
Since I’m not clever enough to write a sonnet – Here’s a Birthday ABBA GIF for you:
happy-birthday-abba.gif
Real ones know all the anniversary cars are available and cataloged out to April 4522.
Congratulations! I’ve been a member since about the day after they started subscriptions and upgraded from Vinyl to Velour after that first year because the value is there and this bunch truly deserves the support. It’s money well spent.
In a stupid lunatic world this place is a safe haven with the right kind of eccentric weirdness, passion for a shared interest, quality writers, and management that understands there’s more to building something great than wringing the last tenth of a cent out of every interaction. To the last point (just to mess with David’s head) we see vampires sucking the very life out of media and venerated sites closing or left as mere shells of their former selves; that simply can’t be a successful business strategy. Kudos to your team for having the courage to be in this for the long haul. Also, thanks to the staff for being open and accountable when problems happen – we can see the vision and the efforts to do the right thing and that means a lot.
Also, thanks to the staff and my fellow Autopians for keeping the commentariat as a place where people want to hang out and truly relate with each other instead of being the usual internet cesspool. There are so many of you out there I’d love to meet. Keep it cool, nerdy, and fun!
First of all, Happy Anniversary!
Secondly, Saab somehow had some of the best wheel designs ever, but also some of the ugliest. They definitely marched to the beat of their own drum!
“Saab Sonett by Sixten Sason” is an alliterative pile of confusion.
Assuredly alliterative. Also, Autopian anniversary article, as always, amazing and awesome. (And annual?)
Sounds like a Swedish death metal song title by Sixten Sason.
Happy Anniversary
Happy Anniversary
Happy Anniversarrrrryyyyyyyy
Happy Anniversary
Congrats on 3 years! It was too early to remember what day it is when I got up, so I’ll consider it kismet that I grabbed my Autopian shirt to wear.
I was hoping this meant you guys picked up a Saab Sonnet project car…
But yes, great things here. I send most of my friends links to this site, because it’s the best car website on the internet.
Pre Kinja Jalop was good.
This is better.
Congrats you guys, and to all the members commenting here. It’s rare to come to a website and feel like you’re among friends.
Hear, hear! Thanks to the Autopian team for generating great content and to the Autopiani (stealing that from a previous comment) for being the least toxic group of people in the automotive enthusiast community.
[tear trickles down cheek]
The traditional third anniversary gift is leather and I was gonna get you a cool jacket or something, but I didn’t know what style you liked or your size so I bought you a leather jacket kit. It likes to eat grass; I hope you have a big yard.
My favorite Matchbox car as a kid was a Saab Sonnet – most likely found in the clearance bin because my parents were frugal like that. Congrats on making it out of the terrible twos, Autopian.
LOL. I have been looking for one for close to 50 years now.
We had a new 1970 Sonnet for a few years.
I am so jealous you have one.
Had. Like so many boys of that era, I tried to blow it up with fireworks.
Fireworks!
AKA, the best way for boys to play.
We also taped bottle rockets to our cars.
It was so cool when they would get airborne.
I was just going to post that one of my favorite Matchboxes was the Sonnet. It also was the only one I repainted with my Testor’s model paints.
Happy 3 years to the Autopian! Out of the pull-ups and into the big kid underwear now.