Housekeeping: TTAC Gets Game-Changing Design Language

Tim Healey
by Tim Healey

When you log in to this grand old site next week, it will look different. For the first time in … well, a long time.

I know, you’ve heard talk of a redesign before. I’ve even seen mockups! But for a variety of reasons, things never moved past the planning stage.

Now, however, our corporate parents are leveraging a partnership and TTAC will be getting fresh new duds.


You probably have questions.

Here’s what I know:

  • You’ll need to reset your password after the update in order to continue commenting.
  • Old comments WILL migrate over.
  • The site will remain operational during the migration.
  • I will be monitoring my inbox and the tips inbox for specific questions from you all.
  • The migration should be complete early next week. I’m being intentionally vague on timing because unplanned things happen, but I’d expect that even if we run into problems, the migration will be complete by mid-week at the latest.
  • Old articles will migrate over.
  • Some things will change, but the basic user experience shouldn’t change too much. Comments, tags, categories — all the little things you see should remain, in one form or another. Fast facts will remain part of car reviews, for example. The site will LOOK different, but by and large, it will navigate mostly the same.

Change can be both welcome and difficult at the same time. Putting aside the business concerns and opportunities that a redesign brings, I’ve been of two minds on this. Part of me thinks it’s far past time, just from an aesthetics standpoint, for TTAC to update. While the site has changed over time — some Wayback Machine sleuthing from before the time I was a semi-regular reader shows that the site has looked different in the past, but not all that dissimilar to its current form — it hasn’t truly had a radical change, to my knowledge.

On the other hand, the current site’s familiarity sometimes seems nice and comfortable.

That said, I’ve seen how the new site will look, and the design is cleaner and less cluttered. And more modern.

I’m struggling to find a good automotive comp. I think the change is more like the C8 Corvette than say, the retro-themed Mustang redesign from all those years ago. The shape is familiar, and the mission is the same, but the engine has moved in such a way that makes the car so much better.

It takes some getting used to, though. A mid-engined Corvette? No manual?! Yet the car is better than before. Albeit a lot different than the previous gen. Or all the previous gens that came before.

I hope that’s how you’ll think of TTAC the same way — with fond memories of the past, but understanding that the new vehicle is so much better.

Feel free to reach out to me with any questions.

[Image: TTAC/VerticalScope]

Tim Healey
Tim Healey

Tim Healey grew up around the auto-parts business and has always had a love for cars — his parents joke his first word was “‘Vette”. Despite this, he wanted to pursue a career in sports writing but he ended up falling semi-accidentally into the automotive-journalism industry, first at Consumer Guide Automotive and later at Web2Carz.com. He also worked as an industry analyst at Mintel Group and freelanced for About.com, CarFax, Vehix.com, High Gear Media, Torque News, FutureCar.com, Cars.com, among others, and of course Vertical Scope sites such as AutoGuide.com, Off-Road.com, and HybridCars.com. He’s an urbanite and as such, doesn’t need a daily driver, but if he had one, it would be compact, sporty, and have a manual transmission.

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  • Stodge Stodge on Jul 22, 2022

    I don't like that stories are shown at the end of the page I'm reading. Don't load content in the hopes that I will read it. I will load the content I want to read.

  • WealthyEccentric WealthyEccentric on Jul 24, 2022

    There are serious issues with the comments as currently rolled out (wrong number of comments, duplicate comments, comments from the wrong article if you scroll down). Also serious issues with navigation, especially if not logged in. See more. Seymour. See more. Testing what is testing. 🏁 I'm afraid I can't do that.

  • Bkojote But but but, the TTAC best and brightest who think the Dodge Durango is peak car told me this wouldn't happen.
  • Trey Funny how nobody is bemoaning the stratospheric rise in the prices of vehicles, and everything else, under the previous administration. Typical and expected.
  • Ajla ajla's Used Car of the DayA 2002 Lexus GS430. It is a one-owner car with a clean Carfax and just 80,000. Priced at $8,998 in Nevada.
  • Wjtinfwb Seems like the Transit Trail was stillborn day one. I've never seen one on the street, they never appeared on the Ford configurator and when I asked my dealer about it the blank look on their face told the whole stroy. Unlike their complete cluster with the Focus PowerShift, Ford should eat the 1900 or whatever vehicles they sold, buy them back, fit the proper tires and sell them as Buy-Backs at a discount. Maybe it costs Ford 4-5k per unit but that better than the bad pub the Focus fiasco was/is.
  • Liv138833242 I saw no mention of CARB in this article. So often the whims of whatever president and majority in Congress takes a back seat to what the California Air Resources Board does. And, in a smaller but more similar way, what the regulations say in Europe also drive economic decisions for the auto manufacturers. This has all has happened before, when Trump came in after Obama and changed the rules. The automakers' response: we need consistency in federal legislation because changes often take many years to fully implement. Basing future plans on the whims of one presidential team is folly. So they stayed within the guidelines of CARB even though Trump's team relaxed the federal rules.
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