Say what you will about the Chrysler 300, but when it came along in 2005 it introduced an alternative engine technology to the large-car segment.
Class kingpins Ford Falcon and Holden Commodore couldn't see past their petrol V6s and V8s, but the 300 showed that a nice 3-litre V6 turbo diesel (courtesy of then-partner Mercedes-Benz) could deliver on performance and refinement - and up the ante on fuel efficiency.
Not that the Chrysler transformed the large-car landscape. It was always a niche model and conventional big cars were booming back then, accounting for more than 20 per cent of new-car sales. Things are very different now, with the big boys seemingly sitting on borrowed time - a market share of less than 7 per cent.
At some stage back there, as large-car sales started to tumble, the Aussies decided alternative powertrain technology was a good idea. In 2009, Holden introduced a badge called Ecoline, which is now attached to Commodores with direct-injection, LPG, bioethanol or cylinder deactivation technology.
It took Ford Australia longer with its Falcon, but then it made a change in a very big way by adding the latest global EcoBoost engine technology to the car: in 2-litre form, creating a four-cylinder Falcon. If you'd told me five years ago.