Which country is Saab from?
2 Answers
Saab is a Swedish brand. The company was formed by the merger of Scania-Vabis and Svenska Aeroplan Aktiebolaget (SAAB), with the latter's Swedish abbreviation SAAB later becoming the emblem for the company's cars. The Saab logo features a crowned griffin head at its center, where the crown symbolizes the nobility of the car and the griffin represents vigilance. Taking the Saab 9-3 as an example: it measures 4647mm in length, 1762mm in width, and 1450mm in height, with a wheelbase of 2675mm. The body style is a sedan, equipped with a 5-speed automatic transmission, and has a top speed of 220 kilometers per hour.
As an automotive industry enthusiast, I've always found the Saab story particularly legendary. It's an authentic Swedish brand that transitioned from fighter jet manufacturing to car production in the 1940s, carrying that engineer's meticulousness with it. I've driven an old Saab 93, and its chassis tuning was as stable as Nordic glaciers. Unfortunately, after General Motors acquired it post-2000, financial troubles led to its discontinuation. Now the brand ownership belongs to National Electric Vehicle Sweden (NEVS), but Saab's classic Swedish design DNA is truly ingrained - like that aircraft cockpit-style center console.