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Turbo Mag closing down?

 
TurboMatt TurboMatt
New User | Posts: 1 | Joined: 11/08
Posted: 11/19/08
04:41 AM

I was recently conversing with someone who has had their car featured in Turbo mag. I was trying to get information on having my car as a feature car. Anyway, this person told me that Turbo mag is done come Jan 1, 2009. I looked all over the website and my most recent mag and I see nothing that mentions this. Does anyone know if there is any truth to this?  

 
dr511scj_1 dr511scj_1
New User | Posts: 2 | Joined: 12/08
Posted: 12/04/08
08:41 AM

It wouldn't surprise me if it did.

I started reading Turbo with Volume 1, Issue 1 back in the mid '80s.  I have a copy of every issue of Turbo ever published (except one that the post office lost back in 1993).

The quality of the magazine has declined precipitously over the past fifteen years.  When Turbo started it had a balance of American and import cars, as well as D-I-Y hacks and all-out pro builds.

When the U.S. automakers abandoned OEM turbocharging in the early 1990s, Turbo started changing into a blingy Japanese tuner rag.  At some point, it even became hostile to power-adder V8s, notwithstanding huge advances in big-inch turbocharging and an explosion of "heads-up" V8 turbo cars in drag racing.

Turbo missed out on grassroots legends such as Mike Sitar They ignored the huge "turbomustangs" message board and on-line community. They never covered the sorts of budget hacks and hops common to Australia's Autospeed magazine. They ignored a whole generation of American high-tech performance cars.

Instead, they concentrated on trying to push Japanese products and bottomless-wallet professional builds.

If someone relies only on Turbo these days, they'd be mislead into thinking only four- and six-cylinder cars of 3.8 literes or less are ever turbocharged.

Sure, Turbo had to do what it took to survive and it needed to serve its advertisers (readers are the product magazines deliver to their real customers -- adverstisers).  But Turbo's myopic shift to an exclusive focus on the trendy "JDM" tuner "lifestyle" has left it very vulnerable.

The latest USPS report on subscribers, sales and readership shows that Turbo is not delivering very many eyeballs to their advertisers anymore.

TURBO DIDN'T EVEN BOTHER TO ACKNOWLEDGE OR CELEBRATE ITS 25th ANNIVERSARY!  That ought to be a sign that the current editors don't really have a clue.

The collapse of the Japanese tuning scene hurts the American imitators,too(In Japan there's been lots of bankruptcies, fewer big-buck builds, too much "youth market" action in the 660 cc micro-vehicle class).

One of the Turbo editorials this month attempted to downplay the collapse of the tuner scene, claiming that the "hard core" would keep advancing the sport. But it sounded a bit like whistling past the graveyard to this "OG" reader.  

Now with the American economy in the tank, weak books like Turbo are not well-equipped to weather the crisis.

A broader readership base might have saved Turbo. But spending 15 years running off almost all of the readers interested in "turbos and high-tech performance" as applied to (a) V8s,(b) cheap used cars, (c)American cars, and (d)in innovative home-builds is a formula for ruin.

Perhaps I fall outside of Turbo's coveted Wii/PlayStation demographic (after all I'm still ticked over that Pearl Harbor thing & post-WWII Japanese protectionism in their domestic auto market), but my subscription money spends just as well as the duckets of somebody born in 1990.

If Turbo folds, I just hope that they don't start sending me garbage like Super Street or Sport Compact Car to fill out my subscription . . . .  

 
Blackerninja Blackerninja
New User | Posts: 1 | Joined: 12/08
Posted: 12/04/08
06:11 PM

LOL, I wonder if he got the postcard yet.

Hope you like Modified Mag!  

 
dr511scj_1 dr511scj_1
New User | Posts: 2 | Joined: 12/08
Posted: 02/04/09
07:38 AM

I didn't get any postcard.

But Turbo Magazine must really have gone down the Source Interlink rathole.  I just received the March 2009 issue of Modified magazine, instead.

What a horrible ricer book!  Can I get a refund?

And Turbo Magazine didn't even print its obituary! Source Interlink has done nothing to my knowledge to advise its subscribers of Turbo Magazine's demise.

The irony is that Turbo Magazine is quitting just before a huge resurgence in OEM turbocharging.  

 
auto_enthu auto_enthu
New User | Posts: 1 | Joined: 11/09
Posted: 01/13/10
11:34 AM

It is now Jan. 2010 and it appears that the Mag./Web Site is still running, so is it safe to say that Turbo & High-Tech Performance magazine is here to stay?!  

 
DYonehara DYonehara
New User | Posts: 1 | Joined: 03/10
Posted: 03/23/10
02:12 PM

No.

Only archived issues of Turbo are currently being added to the site. Any "new" content being uploaded isn't actually anything you haven't seen before if you're a long time subscriber.

As stated before, anyone subscribed to Turbo is now receiving another 'tuner' magazine instead.  

 
505whp 505whp
New User | Posts: 5 | Joined: 01/11
Posted: 01/03/11
02:47 PM

I have some back issues from the "good old days" for sale, I hate to throw them away (aka recycle them).

http://forums.turbomagazine.com/70/8453786/turbo-magazine-new-notable/1988-1994-past-issues-for-sale/index.html