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I spotted an (insert obscure car name here) classic car today! (Archived)
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https://forums.edmunds.com/discussion/comment/5876540/#Comment_5876540
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Price no object? I suppose a Corniche, another guilty pleasure:
The 2+2 Pininfarina Ferraris were new then, polarizing style but I like them:
The Ferrari Boxers were also new then, always liked these:
Probably terrible to live with, but actually from 1976:
A lot of Euros would need to be grey market, much easier then. For MB I've heard the gassers can be finicky, and I know the diesels are slow, but they should be durable. Any of them sorted out would be a good car, maybe get a Euro, federalize it, then accidentally remove the emissions controls
For Japan, this Mazda Cosmo was sold here for a short time, always liked that weird pillar trim:
For domestics, maybe a nice Seville?
I also like Mustang II fastbacks, might as well get all the bric a brac:
Could be fun to cruise around in:
https://www.hemmings.com/classifieds/cars-for-sale/buick/electra-225/2361410.html#&gid=1&pid=35
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https://images.app.goo.gl/zYVASevrzL92QPvg9
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2015 Subaru Outback 3.6R / 2024 Kia Sportage Hybrid SX Prestige
About 4 years ago I clicked on a seller's ad for this 1976 PONTIAC FIREBIRD FORMULA 400 VIN: 2U87Z6N605913 was for sale at $9000. Normally it's not easy for me to like green, but this Formula Firebird looked really clean and well kept. Apparently sold long time ago.
Another 1976 Pontiac I always liked was the Grand Prix. Last year for the 455/200hp V8.
A friend in HS bought a new !976 Feather Duster - his first new car. He had buyer's remorse right away. Everybody else was buying V8 muscle and turned out that's really what he wanted too. He put it the Duster up for sale at $2,700 before graduation. Couple years later with the next gas crunch he may have wished he kept it.
I was driving a '71 Mustang in 1976. Little did I know that '76 would be my last chance to buy a brand new version of my driver's ed car: Ford Elite.
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Kind of a fun game with this extra time to think about it. Other years could be good too, maybe 1966 or 1986? Loads of good choices for either.
Tri Power GTO
GT350
2000CS
275 GTB
E-Type Series 1 FHC
Miura P400
1986?
635CSi
M635CSi(Gray Market)
900 Turbo 16 S
Countach
Camaro IROC Z28
Mark VII LSC
Mustang LX 5.0 Coupe
Mine: 1995 318ti Club Sport-2020 C43-1996 Speed Triple Challenge Cup Replica
Wife's: 2021 Sahara 4xe
Son's: 2018 330i xDrive
For MBs, a 230SL or 300SE are top notch rides, and you could still get fintails then even though the design was passe. I'd pick a 230S.
1986, anything in the MB range would be a fine car, that was when the brand was perhaps at its relative peak. I suppose a blue 560 SEC or an AMG car would be as good as it gets.
in the fantasy area, Porsche 911 Turbo.
2020 Acura RDX tech SH-AWD, 2023 Maverick hybrid Lariat luxury package.
2009 BMW 335i, 2003 Corvette cnv. (RIP 2001 Jaguar XK8 cnv and 1985 MB 380SE [the best of the lot])
GM's '73-77 Colonade intermediates got around that issue by making the rear edge of the front doors kick up a bit. I don't know if that trick would have worked on a '75-76 Electra though, as these were less curvy and more straight-rigged.
Continental Convertible
Fleetwood Brougham
Mustang GT350
GTO Convertible
Toronado
86
Grand National
Mark VII LSC
Dodge Shelby Charger
Trans Am GTA
Town Car Cartier
Mercedes 560 SEL
300 ZX Turbo
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2017 Cadillac ATS Performance Premium 3.6
'65 is a different story!
Love the Impala, love the Bonneville and Grand Prix! And the all-new Corvair, with waaayyy-upgraded suspension and styling.
Studebaker was mostly out of the U.S. market after mid-year '64, but even though, they did long-hood/short-deck when most of the Big Three was still doing the opposite.
https://classiccars.com/listings/view/998185/1949-willys-jeepster-for-sale-in-canton-ohio-44702
I remember hearing about the center high-mounted stop light coming for '86, which at the time struck me as ugly-ugly-ugly. One reason I made sure to order my car near the end of the '85 ordering period. Now, of course, I do think it does make you much-more visible. But I detested on cars like the Camaro, Firebird, and Corvette, the light was on top of the rear window, outside.
can I cheat a little and pick the 323 GTX? Was in Europe for 1986, but did not come to the US until 1988!
oh, there was also a 626 Turbo. I test drove one of those in that time frame. Just a bit pricey. red over red, I loved it.
2020 Acura RDX tech SH-AWD, 2023 Maverick hybrid Lariat luxury package.
2025 Ram 1500 Laramie 4x4 / 2023 Mercedes EQE 350 4Matic
First and foremost for me would be a '66 Corvair Corsa coupe, "Poor Man's Porsche" as some have called them:
http://www.oldcarmanualproject.com/brochures/Chev/1966/Corvair/1966CorvairBrochure/Corvair66_03.html
Then, a couple barges, not typically my type but to me the last of the truly great Imperials and the last of the truly great Cadillacs:
https://www.hemmings.com/blog/2018/11/07/hemmings-find-of-the-day-1966-imperial-lebaron/
For Cadillac, for me, it's the Fleetwood Brougham, or Eldorado convertible. Truly magnificent seating, real wood, instrument panel before everything had to be safety-padded most everywhere, etc.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/leftcoastclassics/2755546318
Probably lastly, I'd think seriously about buying a '66 Pontiac Star Chief Executive two-door hardtop, because it's so-rarely-seen in a field of Catalinas, Bonnevilles, and Grand Prixs, and it's the last of a line of Pontiacs with the "Star Chief" name. I'd be specific about colors and I'd have to have whatever they called their top-of-the-line wheelcovers that year.
2020 Acura RDX tech SH-AWD, 2023 Maverick hybrid Lariat luxury package.
Olds 442 convertible, 4sp...actually a new model, dark metallic blue, white interior
Imperial Crown Coupe, black, red leather.
Ford Galaxie XL 500 fastback. Red on red.
Nova SS convertible, 327, white, blue int
Sedan de Ville, w/new Turbo-hydramatic, Turquoise, turquoise leather
2021 VW Arteon SEL 4-motion, 2018 VW Passat SE w/tech, 2016 Audi Q5 Premium Plus w/tech
On the Mopar front, the compacts were too weirdly styled for my tastes. The midsized cars were a bit better. But strangely, while I find the weirdness of the '62 Dodge to be appealing, it's like the more mainstream they tried to make it, the less I liked it. I don't think the '63 or '64 models are as cool. The '64 Fury isn't bad looking in my opinion, although it makes me think of a '63 Impala shrunk to midsized dimensions, and redesigned by Ford. I never really cared for the '63-64 Chryslers, but actually have a bit of a soft spot for the Dodge 880.
With the Fords, I think the full-sized '64 Ford lineup is pretty cool. The Fairlane is okay. But with both the mid and full sized cars, I liked the '63 versions better.
I remember an issue of Consumer Reports from 1965, that was griping about how initial build quality was way down in 1965, across the board, compared to 1964. That might have been a symptom of it being a high volume year though, and the cars getting slapped together more quickly.
In my mind, from, say, 1964 to 1965, there is a real dividing line in U.S. culture, period.
Has anybody here been to Dealey Plaza? If there were more than one gunman, I can't think of where'd be a better place for that to have happened. I remember a fence that came up to my neck, and trees that hung down from the top, for about a half a block at the top of the Grassy Knoll.
I'd like to get back, as the Sixth Floor Museum is very cool and respectful IMHO. Wife wants to go see the Chip and Joanna Gaines' thingy "Magnolia" in nearby Waco I think it is...if she does that, I'll be at Dealey Plaza again for the first time in about 25 years.
No such thing built by the factory. Chevy II's didn't get a V8 until '64, but it was the 283.
You could get the 327 in '65, but the convertible was gone.
2021 VW Arteon SEL 4-motion, 2018 VW Passat SE w/tech, 2016 Audi Q5 Premium Plus w/tech
2017 Cadillac ATS Performance Premium 3.6
Chevy never made a V8 Chevy II convertible.
When Chevelle came out in '64, there was no longer a Chevy II convertible or two-door hardtop. The hardtop was reintroduced later in the '64 model year.
In '63, last year for Chevy II convert, nothing bigger than a six was offered...even in the SS model.
My in-laws got a new '62 Nova convertible as a wedding gift from the groom's parents. The father had selected a Bel Air sedan but they showed him a Nova convert wasn't more expensive, LOL. It was a robin's egg blue/turquoise color I've heard.
Of that first-style, there are subtle little things I like about the '65 Chevy II the best.
I have a Stude friend who wrenched on all makes in the sixties. He despises Chevy II's. He's one of those guys who always says "If you had it up on a rack and looked underneath you'd see what I'm talking about". He also says that about a '65 Impala versus a '64--he prefers the '64. I sure as hell don't, LOL!
When I was a kid, a lady near my grandparents had the salmon-colored (I think Pontiac called it 'Sunfire Red') '64 GTO two-door post, with mag-looking wheelcovers--not sure if they were correct to the car or not. But that car always turned my head. I liked the subtle rear-end styling.
I guess another Pontiac I could like is the '64 Catalina 2+2 hardtop, in that same salmon color, white painted top, and their wheelcovers that mimicked chrome-reverse wheels. I don't like the Grand Prix that year, with the taillights moved out of the "boomerangs", and the Bonneville with its huge "space ship emblem" ahead of the front wheels.
I always liked the '62-67 Chevy II, in general. From a functional standpoint I prefer the Valiant and Dart/Lancer, as they had more legroom and earlier adoption of 3-speed automatics. But, I thought the Chevy II was much more stylish.
2021 VW Arteon SEL 4-motion, 2018 VW Passat SE w/tech, 2016 Audi Q5 Premium Plus w/tech
I don't think that Ford ever put a 390 FE block in the Highboy with NP205. The 360 FE was the biggest engine available for any 4x4 F series pickup until 1977.
I believe 1977 was the last year for the Highboy and Ford offered the 351M/400 V8 engines that year to replace the aging FE block engines.
But if including trucks on the "cars I like from 1976" then I'll add the '76 Bronco to my list.
Ranger package and first color choice would be chrome yellow! Or second choice mecca gold.
Mine: 1995 318ti Club Sport-2020 C43-1996 Speed Triple Challenge Cup Replica
Wife's: 2021 Sahara 4xe
Son's: 2018 330i xDrive
Mine: 1995 318ti Club Sport-2020 C43-1996 Speed Triple Challenge Cup Replica
Wife's: 2021 Sahara 4xe
Son's: 2018 330i xDrive
1964 had 7 different fintails in the lineup, IIRC. The biggest change from MY 1964 to 65 for MB was the change from wide whitewalls to narrow whitewalls on US spec cars. For something that would stand the test of time, one might pick a W111/112 coupe/cabrio or a W113 SL - both of these styles were made until MY 1971, and are both regarded as timeless. 1964 models pictured:
For fintails, the factory options list was small - automatic was probably the most significant feature. Power accessories weren't available. AC was dealer installed, along with radio.
I think these shipped to Shelby with silver painted wire wheels in 1964 but all I can find today are pics with chrome wires. But still sells today for crazy money sitting on any wheels - or none at all!
A 220S (dual carb) might have been just shy of 5K base, add maybe 500 for an SE (fuel injected). No external differences save for the trunklid model badge. The FI systems are pretty solid (my car is an SE), I'd have paid the extra for better driveability and performance.