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I spotted an (insert obscure car name here) classic car today! (Archived)
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West Germany's VW Beetle was the best selling subcompact in the world at that time. While it's build quality was high it offered potentially evil handling w it's swing axles and extreme rear engine placement.
By contrast, East Germany's Trabant offered benign handling with it's front-engine fwd set up, backed up by plastic bodywork and some had diesel power .
Sedans offering fwd were unusual in '62, limited to Mini variants, Citroens and Saabs.
2001 BMW 330ci/E46, 2008 BMW 335i conv/E93
Oh, Nash Metropolitan is way up there, too.
2001 BMW 330ci/E46, 2008 BMW 335i conv/E93
Hillmans were okay. Dull uninteresting cars but they ran. They were used as taxicabs in many former British colonies. So I'd let Hillman off the hook.
Austin Marina is a good candidate for worst-ness.
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2001 BMW 330ci/E46, 2008 BMW 335i conv/E93
I think the Austin Marina sort of epitomized in total the wretched state of the British auto industry at that time.
I saw a gorgeous dark blue BMW Bavaria today in the pouring rain, period looking whitewalls and all. At least it looked gorgeous in the rain.
Buy a 735i or 635i and a much happier man (or woman).
I like the old 6 series coupes too, but they are just a little modern for an old car for me.
But the next old car will be a 300SE LWB fintail, unless something really cool and cheap comes my way first. Storage space is an issue for me, so I can't accumulate oldies.
It was a fun little car for less than half what a six cylinder would have cost me... It was amazing how good the handling and steering feel was for a car of that age... I owned it from '85-'90.
regards,
kyfdx
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If I was looking for a driver, I'd concentrate on late '70s, early '80s 528i... Those are pretty nice, and still super cheap, though maybe not as attractive as a Bavaria. And plenty of power.. A friend of mine had an '81, back in the mid-80s... One of my favorite cars.
regards,
kyfdx
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But then, I like Fiat Topolinos.
The only thing I DON'T like about the Grand National carries over to all Regals and '78-81 Centurys. I just don't like the instrument display. Most of 'em just had a strip speedo with numbers that were too big, and a fuel gauge. The tach was a tiny thing, stuck on as an afterthought. At least Chevy, Pontiac, and Olds designed the dash display to accept full gauges properly!
Now a few similar cars, I DON'T like. For example, the '80-82 T-bird and Cougar XR-7 coupes. Now THOSE are a bit more awkward in proportioning. I think a lot of it comes because they're based on sedans, not coupes, which would have a more rakish windshield. And the '83 T-bird, while modern and aerodynamic, just looks too much like an upside-down bathtub. For '87-88 they put a bit more wedge into it, reducing the bathtub look. Although the Cougar started to become a caricature of itself by that time.
I also thought the '80-83 Cordoba/Mirada were beautiful cars. Sleek and low-slung which was a result of a low body coupled with a long overall length. Unfortunately, the end result was a car the size of a Caprice, but with the interior room of a Monte Carlo. Stylish, but not too space-efficient!
Some of the design iterations of that body style were awkward, but this particular one just came together nicely.
2020 Acura RDX tech SH-AWD, 2023 Maverick hybrid Lariat luxury package.
For the most part, as long as those cars stayed away from the wire wheels and landau roofs, I think they were pretty attractive. But even then, I think they carried the vinyl well. My '82 Cutlass had a landau roof. It was jadestone, matching the rest of the car, so it didn't stick out.
Among the ones I've ID'ed (it's hard sometimes, because they twist a few details around)
'58 Chevy
'68 Impala 'vert
'63 Impala 'vert
'93 Caprice
'92 or so Roadmaster
'81-87 Regal, with 20" or so rims
'91 or so Cavalier coupe
'80's Monte Carlo but...get this...it's a 4-door!
late 80's GMC Sierra pickup
Chevy II wagon
'80's full-sized Blazer
'75-78 Eldorado
and probably a bunch I'm forgetting right now.
Your beloved 5th Ave is even featured prominently in it!
I had a college buddy who drove an early 80's Grand Prix ... brown, can't remember if it had a vinyl top or not. Drove it from Phoenix to SoCal on break one year ... I seem to remember that it had a pretty nice ride on the interstate, but zero lateral support in the front seats.
While I was in college, I went through a phase where I thought I wanted an American luxo-cruiser (Regal, etc.). I remember looking at the new for '83 T-Bird and thinking what a radically styled car it was in comparison.
Alas, when I graduated from college and got my first job, I ended up buying a year old '85 Accord LX hatchback for $8600. I remember looking at both the Grand Am (new for '85) and Mustang (with a 4-cylinder!). My dad wanted me to buy a Toyota Corolla (the real boxy ones that they offered in '85), with an automatic!
Ah, nostalgia.
I do remember that my Mom was considering getting a Grand Am when she was in the market for a new car in '86. She ultimately settled for an end-of-the-year '86 Monte, though. I'm glad, because ultimately that car got handed down to me! I doubt it a Grand Am would've made it to 179K miles like that Monte did when she gave it to me. And even if it did, I'm sure I would've gotten a lot more messed up in it than I would have in the Monte when I got t-boned!
I liked that Monte too, because in that era you could still really personalize a car with individual options, instead of having to spring for complete packages. It was just a base sport coupe, not an SS or even an LS. Had the "mouse fur" cloth burgundy interior that actually held up quite well over the years. But while it was a stripper, it still had the 305 4-bbl, and a nice upscale gray-over-silver 2-tone. While Montes were pretty common, it was still pretty rare to encounter a clone of myself on the roads. A stark contrast by today, when sometimes I'll spot 4 or 5 other silver 2nd-gen Intrepids in a single day!
Funny, now the guy owns the local BMW franchise, and my dad still went to him for "help" on getting used cars, and would refer friends and family to him as well. My dad always thought he was getting such a good deal, when in reality his friend simply turned him over to a salesman (or perhaps mgr, don't really know) to be "taken care of".
When my dad bought their last car, he did it pretty much via the internet. Got an '03 Hyundai Sonata GLS with the V6. Car is now 18 months old and might have 5K on it.
I just saw a later (83-85?) Olds Omega (X-body, cousin of Chevy Citation) sedan in really nice condition. Can't imagine why you'd want to keep one on the road.
Not so rare except for body style, saw a second-generation (I think '89 or '90 by the grille) VW Jetta two-door, red, with the nice teardrop alloys.
I saw the latest Rolls sedan this morning....I still think it looks pretty ugly,but at least not quite so bad as in video and pictures....'way too chromey and blocky...
I remember when the cars were new, a family friend has a Jetta diesel 2 door. Those must be much less common.
Or I wonder if it could've been a car that had parts from several different cars swapped together? I think the Cordoba and Magnum actually had different sheetmetal, but some things were probably interchangable. And sometimes, just to be annoying, people swap badges. Back in late July I looked at a 1980 Cordoba LS (the cheaper model with the crosshair grille) for sale. It had "CMX" badges on the side, which normally denoted the Mirada that had the carriage roof!