Home » Three Grille-Less Bottom-Breathers

Three Grille-Less Bottom-Breathers

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Grilles are so crucial to automotive design, for creating an identity for a car’s “face,” that I sometimes think they become sort of a crutch. Now, don’t get me wrong: there are some incredible grille designs out there, and they can do so much to define the look of a car, but what really impresses me is when designers choose to forego this hugely significant element of car design.

Let me be specific here: this is only relevant for front-engined cars, usually liquid-cooled. There are plenty of grille-less designs for rear-engined cars, but I want to focus on those cars that are otherwise conventional mechanically – front-engine, radiators, the whole deal – but whose designers have deliberately decided to shun conventional grilles and instead try something bold and different.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

So, this morning, let’s take a look at three grille-less designs and see what we think! Maybe celebrate a few of these daring designs. Before we do that, though, I think we need to establish some criteria.

Cs Nogrille Ds

So, for our purposes, a grille-less design is one that has no trace of a grille above the front bumper. Below the bumper, fine. But nothing above. That’s why the Citroën DS doesn’t count – its above-bumper grille is pretty minimal, but it’s there.

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A trickier situation is the first-generation Ford Taurus:

It doesn’t really have a grille, but it does have a sort of intake around the Ford badge that’s almost a tiny grille. I’m honestly kind of conflicted with this one – I still think it’s a grille-less design, but if I want to be a real hard-ass, I may say that while a cleverly-designed badge can admit air, no intakes outside of the badge area are allowed.

Maybe. Like I said, I’m not totally decided here.

Also, I don’t count cars that have no grille but have made the strange decision to add a fake grille instead, like my old Reliant Scimitar:

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Myscim

See that grille on the front? It’s fake. There’s fiberglass behind it. It could not exist and the car would be just fine.

So, we’re going to look at cars that have zero grille above the grille, and no attempt to make a fake grille. Sound good? Here we go!

Cs Nogrille Zephyr

This 1970 Ford Zephyr is an early example of this, and I think it’s especially bold considering the era. All the air intake is below the bumper, and the area between the headlights is just an interesting panel that angles inward and has a full-width trim stripe between the lights. I really like this look, it’s very clean and crisp, and sets the Zephyr apart from so many other similar-looking hard-edged sedans of the era.

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I wonder how much Corvair design influenced this look? I bet it had to have been a factor, to some degree?

Cs Nogrille B3passat

Let’s jump to the 1980s, and the B3 Volkswagen Passat. Of all companies, VW perhaps had more experience with grille-free front ends than almost anyone, thanks to their history with rear-engine, air-cooled engineering. Their water-cooled cars have always featured prominent black grilles up to this point, so this was a real departure.

The VW badge in the center allows air intake, but I think it’s localized enough to the badge itself that we can still count this as grille-less. I really love the clean look of this era of Passat – it feels modern and rational, like modernist architecture or a really well-designed room.

Of course, in 1993, VW backpedaled and stuck a grille on the front, which I think eliminated the essential charm of the car. This always happens with grille-less designs: pretty soon the companies lose their nerve, and shove unnecessary grilles on the cars.

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Cs Nogrille Q45In 1989, Infiniti burst on the scene as Nissan’s brand for Fancy People, and it did so with some real verve, thanks to a grille-free front end that featured a large badge with ornate filagree in the background, an enameling technique known as cloisonné.

I actually love this badge; I have one in my basesment that I pulled from a junkyard.

Cs Infinitibadge

Infiniti backpedaled as well on the grille-less look with the G45’s 1994 facelift, which added a fussy chrome grille that, again, killed whatever novel character the car had.

For all of these grille-free designs, I think we see cars that embrace cleanliness and a more careful approach to adornment. I love seeing the smooth faces of cars like this, and I suppose one of the advantages of living in this encroaching EV era is that there are more and more cars being designed sans grille.

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It’s not easy to design a car face without such a significant element, but that just makes it a bigger triumph when it works.

What do you think of these? I’m not alone here, am I? Am I?

 

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Hugh Crawford
Hugh Crawford
8 hours ago

Customers seem to wish their grills, or at least the car companies think adding one will boost sales, the first two years of Toronado looked so good then they put a dumb looking grill and bumper on it. The original Infiniti was so good looking, then it went to meh.

RustyBritmobile
RustyBritmobile
8 hours ago

It’s not easy to design a car face without such a significant element, but that just makes it a bigger triumph when it works.’

So, Triumph Spitfire Mk IV! (https://www.encycarpedia.com/triumph/70-spitfire-mk-iv-roadster)

Mike Harrell
Mike Harrell
8 hours ago

…a grille-less design is one that has no trace of a grille above the front bumper. Below the bumper, fine. But nothing above.

In that case the SAAB Sonett II and Sonett V4 both qualify:

https://live.staticflickr.com/7170/6483620671_2c0f0edb77_c.jpg

RustyBritmobile
RustyBritmobile
8 hours ago

Lotus Elan, Elan+2, and Lotus Europa for sure. The Elite may also count – it’s chrome bumper was interrupted by the grille, which was almost entirely below the bumper’s top edge. Lotus Eclat too, maybe – it’s grille was entirely within the big black plastic bumper.

Hugh Crawford
Hugh Crawford
8 hours ago

Funny, because the Europa’s front bumper was a Ford Anglia.front bumper turned upside down. The Angila really pushes hard on my “there are no ugly cars” beliefs. The rear bumper is the front bumper of a Ford Cortina Mk1

Martin Witkosky
Martin Witkosky
6 hours ago
Reply to  Hugh Crawford

All correct except the “upside down” part. Compare again an Anglia 105E to a Europa and you’ll see they’re the same orientation.

Hugh Crawford
Hugh Crawford
1 hour ago

Thanks for pointing that out and correcting me. Years ago, I was perusing a parts catalog and a cursory glance at an Angela and for some reason thought that the gap in the front bumper is for the grill not for the number plate. Now looking at it, I see that the notch is for the number plate, but I’ve never noticed because, well, there was a number plate in the way.

I can cross that off my personal list of life’s and Lotus‘s mysteries.

Studebaker Lowboy
Studebaker Lowboy
9 hours ago

The Studebaker Avanti immediately comes to mind. My old man had a silver 1962 R3 (Paxton supercharger with the cool pressure box over the carb) from very early on in the run. Those early cars didn’t even have a grille below the bumper. Just a wide open intake.

Studebaker Lowboy
Studebaker Lowboy
9 hours ago

The Studebaker Avanti immediately comes to mind. My old man had a Silver 1962 R3 (paxton supercharged with the cool pressure box over the carb) from very early in the run. Those first few didn’t even have a grille under the bumper – just an open intake.

Nlpnt
Nlpnt
9 hours ago

Honda Civics were bottom breathers for two generations, 1988-91 and 92-95, the last of the Bubble Era four-year design cycles before they bumped it out to five and put a grille back on the ’96-00 (which I didn’t like) and replaced the gimmicky split hatch with a normal one that had a bigger opening (which I did).

LTDScott
LTDScott
9 hours ago

The Crown Victoria got this for one year only in 1992. By 1993 Ford put a grille on it.

Scoutdude
Scoutdude
9 hours ago
Reply to  LTDScott

Yup and that 1993-4 looks so forced upon it. It wasn’t that Ford lost its nerve either, it was because customers said “where is the chrome grille?” Hence forcing it onto a panel that wasn’t designed to have a grille.

LTDScott
LTDScott
8 hours ago
Reply to  Scoutdude

Given that the average civilian Crown Vic consumer was, let’s say traditional, it makes sense that the ’92 redesign was a bit too radical.

Robby Roadster
Robby Roadster
9 hours ago

As soon as I saw the title I was hoping you’d have the B3 Passat in here, thanks Torch. They’re so neat looking, especially in silver colors. I need to stop shopping for one ..

Jack Trade
Jack Trade
9 hours ago

’87 Ford Mustang. Not only grill-less, but pony-less and featuring horizontal taillights!

Hoonicus
Hoonicus
9 hours ago

Corvette since 63, Mustang GT 87-93, Firebird 79-97
Top of head that wasn’t already mentioned.

Username, the Movie
Username, the Movie
9 hours ago
Reply to  Hoonicus

C5 was bottom breather, c6 base was a bit of front and bottom, but the wide body variants are all front breathers (bigger bumper opening in the front and the bottom part is blocked). I believe C7 is all front or front and bottom like the c6. C8 is a front and side breather?

Millermatic
Millermatic
10 hours ago

924, 944, 928…

Chris D
Chris D
10 hours ago

The unanswered question here is if the lack of a grille affected the radiator’s ability to keep things cool. If the grille is not necessary, then why put it on there? If it is necessary, why omit it, other than for style?

Dimitar
Dimitar
9 hours ago
Reply to  Chris D

Well many aesthetic decisions on a car are style defined. You can solve it in many ways, which direction you take depends on what you want to communicate.

Robby Roadster
Robby Roadster
9 hours ago
Reply to  Chris D

You’ve answered your own question, albeit backwards. Start to look through vehicles “grilles” and observe how much space is actually dedicated for airflow vs visual occupation and design impact.

10001010
10001010
10 hours ago

Two twins, one counts and the other doesn’t. The 1G DSMs are essentially identical except for minor trim differences. The Mitsubishi Eclipse has no grill above the bumper but a 5 piece lightbar treatment. The nearly identical Eagle Talon TSi on the otherhand pops a tiny tiny grill between the headlights mostly taken up with the Eagle logo. The grill doesn’t actually feed anything though and could be blocked a single wet kleenex but technically it grills I guess.

Username, the Movie
Username, the Movie
9 hours ago
Reply to  10001010

I loved that little grill on the Eagle, just looked better than the light bar, and with the giant intercoolers I ran, I welcomed any extra airflow (no matter how small) to the radiator

10001010
10001010
9 hours ago

I liked the styling on the Talon better than the Eclipse in general but the only thing that grill increased airflow to was the hood latch.

Username, the Movie
Username, the Movie
9 hours ago
Reply to  10001010

ah yes, but I had to modify my hood latch brace to accommodate the intercooler, and now that I remember more, I often removed the grill completely on my other less than perfect DSMs so I could reach in and brace the hood latch with my hand to latch the hood down. DSMs!

10001010
10001010
9 hours ago

Was the intercooler effective up there? That’s pretty close to the turbo and exhaust manifold. I never upgraded my stock side mount but always wondered about the front mounts.

Username, the Movie
Username, the Movie
7 hours ago
Reply to  10001010

I went through a few different iterations of front mounts, and they all worked better than the stock side mount, but I ended up with a very large Shearer Fab unit (cost more than the car did) and that kept intake air temps under control even will all the boost I was running. The problem then was getting any airflow to the radiator. I had to really go over kill with the radiator and fan to get it to stay cool in traffic. The Turbo and exhaust are definitely close the radiator on these cars so that didnt help with cooling/heatsoak either. I wrapped my tubular manifold to help a little.

Jason H.
Jason H.
10 hours ago

There is a theme here. 80’s and 90’s the trend was the opposite of today – make grills as small as possible.

The Mercury Sable had no openings above the bumper at all.

The 10th gen Thunderbird, 90’s Crown Vic, Tempo ….

Chevy was doing the same thing as Angrycat mentions below

GreatFallsGreen
GreatFallsGreen
10 hours ago
Reply to  Jason H.

I was browsing the Mercurys after NC Miata below mentioned the Topaz. I think the 1st gen Sable is dependent on the final decision on the Taurus: 86-88 has a narrow opening across the nose between light units and top of bumper, 89-91 narrowed it to just below the light bar. 2nd gen however did go fully flush.

Ranwhenparked
Ranwhenparked
10 hours ago

The 1st gen Chrysler Sebring coupe was a really weird example of this, bottom breather, but with a pretty big (and fairly realistic looking, from a distance) fake upper grille

Nic Periton
Nic Periton
10 hours ago

Surely the Studebaker Avanti should top the list? A design that sort of screams “look at me, I have no grille”. I suppose it is like the annoying pachyderm in the lounge.

Rich Hobbs
Rich Hobbs
10 hours ago
Reply to  Nic Periton

You get the worm! Mr. Early bird. The Avanti (Studebaker and Avanti II) did the low grill thing well. You must be east of me here on the left coast! Up at 6:30am and you still beat me! Good job! Looking to buy an Avanti or a 2. The 2 has Chevy drive train. Parts available everywhere! Thinking Studebaker parts are all special order! Be a cool Cars and Coffee ride. Y’all keep it under 80, ok?

Nic Periton
Nic Periton
7 hours ago
Reply to  Rich Hobbs

Two things that help, being English, yes we invented time, so I am hours ahead anyway, and owning a RHD Avanti. Both of which are sort of cheating.

Rich Hobbs
Rich Hobbs
4 hours ago
Reply to  Nic Periton

Too cool Nic. Is your Avanti a Studebaker or a 2? Must make quite a splash wherever you take it!

Nic Periton
Nic Periton
3 hours ago
Reply to  Rich Hobbs

It is a Studebaker, amusingly it does not attract much notice, it is one of those things that fly under the radar.
Which is funny, because it’s first owner was Bernard Lovell

Hugh Crawford
Hugh Crawford
7 minutes ago
Reply to  Nic Periton

under the radar … Bernard Lovell

That’s quite the punchline, what’s the story?

NCbrit
NCbrit
10 hours ago

The DS may not count, but the SM certainly does.

Jay Vette
Jay Vette
10 hours ago

Does the Volvo 480 count? It has a grille, complete with a Volvo badge and all, but it’s entirely below the bumper. https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/da/1988_Volvo_480ES.JPG/2560px-1988_Volvo_480ES.JPG

Henrik Hieta
Henrik Hieta
5 hours ago
Reply to  Jay Vette

I would say the best looking Volvo ever the 480… Fight me…. (C30 would be second best)

NC Miata NA
NC Miata NA
10 hours ago

I was going to say the Mercury Topaz had that weird expanse of acrylic that ran across the entire front, making the grille look like one giant oxidized headlight but an image search shows it did actually have a narrow opening above the bumper.

ExAutoJourno
ExAutoJourno
10 hours ago

Doesn’t the Merkur XR4 qualify as well?

IIRC, it has a mail slot in front, but no grille as such.

Last edited 10 hours ago by ExAutoJourno
NCbrit
NCbrit
10 hours ago
Reply to  ExAutoJourno

It has a slot above the bumper just like the Mk1 Ford Sierra.

TheDrunkenWrench
TheDrunkenWrench
10 hours ago

The Honda CRX is one of the more prominent examples that pops into my mind.

Brandon Forbes
Brandon Forbes
11 hours ago

5th gen (91-95 I think) Honda Civic also only has a grille down below the bumper. It works very well there.

Kevin Rhodes
Kevin Rhodes
11 hours ago

That gen Passat is one of my very favorite VWs of all time, especially in wagon form.

John Crouch
John Crouch
10 hours ago
Reply to  Kevin Rhodes

We had a red 5 speed Passat wagon just like Jason’s illustration. Great car fast, handled well, great proportions, nice engine. Miss that car

Kevin Rhodes
Kevin Rhodes
9 hours ago
Reply to  John Crouch

Very nice! They came out when I was in college, so no chance of buying one new, and I never quite managed to buy any of the big VWs used, I went Saab instead. Just a bunch of Golfs and Jettas, including new Golf TDIs and GTIs.

Angrycat Meowmeow
Angrycat Meowmeow
11 hours ago

Chevy was big on this in the 90’s. The Beretta, Cavalier and 4th gen Camaro all come to mind. Unless you count the intakes in the lower bumper?

GreatFallsGreen
GreatFallsGreen
10 hours ago

That got me thinking about the W-bodies, Lumina Z34 was similar to those but had slotted openings. Grand Prix sedans with the light bar (I think it was just fogs though) had a slim opening. Cutlass Supreme & GP 2-doors with the Guide headlights differed: looks like the Pontiac had the tiniest openings inset by the turn signals, but maybe fake/blocked off, while the Olds did not.

Spikedlemon
Spikedlemon
10 hours ago

Chevy’s panel gaps of that era were large enough to provide adequate cooling flow.

UnseenCat
UnseenCat
8 hours ago

And all had varying implementations of grille/no grille and styling around the intake across the under-bumper opening with different models and packages. It made for some interesting variations.

The Beretta’s sister model Corsica also got a grill-deleted version in the LTZ package with a filler panel across the grille area. Then when the LTZ version was dropped in favor of the Z52 package, the normal Corsica egg-crate upper grille reappeared, but the matching egg-crate insert for the bottom-breathing intake on normal model got deleted, which changed the otherwise stock under-bumper fascia into a look reminiscent of some contemporary Camaros’ air dams — because without the insert, the painted edges of the intake were revealed as a deeper “duct” reaching close to the radiator, not just a hole in the fascia which was what it looked like with the normal grille insert in place. Cheap upgrade by deleting a part.

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