In 1969, had you wanted something a cut above the average rear-drive repmobile, you could have splashed out just shy of £1000 on British Leyland’s freshly launched Austin Maxi.
Or you could have spent a third as much again – Triumph 2000 money – on a Saab 99, at the time new to the UK and available only as a two-door 1709cc saloon.
Fast-forward 10 years, and for roughly the same price as a BMW 525 you could again find yourself behind the wheel of a Saab 99, this time a turbocharged hatchback pumping out 145bhp and capable of comprehensively blowing the Bavarian six-cylinder sports saloon into the weeds.
Much water had flowed through the fjords of Sweden in the interim, but the foregoing observation tells you a lot about Saab – and a lot about the 99, a model that became both emblem and lifeline for the Trollhättan firm.
The secure-handling 99 is sedate – Autocar managed 88mph and 0-60mph in 17.4 secs
When production of the final Saab 90 ended in 1987, nearly 600,000 of the 99 family had been made – to which must be added more than 900,000 of the 99-derived 900s, the last in 1993.