USA vs. Japan vs. Germany - Which 80s Car Were BUILT Best?

  Рет қаралды 19,157

Worthless Whips

Worthless Whips

Күн бұрын

If you are considering owning a 1980s car, we've owned lots of 80s cars, but which country makes the most reliable/easiest cars to work on? Hope this video helps out!
Patreons vote on the cars to buy for future episodes - / worthlesswhips
Or support us here - paypal.me/worthlesswhips
*Cameras/Mics*
Sony a73
amzn.to/37YMTXk
Sony Handycam
amzn.to/35OgHV2
Go Pro
amzn.to/38hAldV
Zoom H1 Handy Recorder
amzn.to/30iKtjG
Rode Smart Lav+
amzn.to/36UKdKe
DJI Mavic Air (our daily drone cheaper)
amzn.to/2RnRdc5
DJI Mavic 2 (Drone) the nice expensive one
amzn.to/2tXY57W
Manfrotto Befree Tripod
amzn.to/38aXvTa
Sony 24-70 f/4 lens for a73
amzn.to/2sxfST6
Disclaimer:
Due to factors beyond the control of Worthless Whips, we cannot guarantee against improper use or unauthorized modifications of this information. Worthless Whips assumes no liability for property damage or injury incurred as a result of any of the information contained in this video. Use this information at your own risk. Worthless Whips recommends safe practices when working on vehicles and or with tools seen or implied in this video. Due to factors beyond the control of Worthless Whips, no information contained in this video shall create any expressed or implied warranty or guarantee of any particular result. Any injury, damage, or loss that may result from improper use of these tools, equipment, or from the information contained in this video is the sole responsibility of the user and not Worthless Whips.

Пікірлер: 295
@WorthlessWhips
@WorthlessWhips 3 жыл бұрын
🚙 Patreons vote on the cars to buy for future episodes - www.patreon.com/worthlesswhips 🚗 Or support us here - paypal.me/worthlesswhips
@fastinradfordable
@fastinradfordable 3 жыл бұрын
Being familiar with South Africa how did you leave out rabbit pickups?!? I enjoyed your video. I have a 1981 rabbit pickup with a TDI swap from 10 years ago. About as reliable as 80s can get.
@jimbob-robob
@jimbob-robob 3 жыл бұрын
WINSTON! NOT PRIORITISING YOUR CAR AFTER 3 MONTHS IS NOT SHOWING BUSINESS CAPABILITIES OF "DOING A GOOD JOB". I don't think they ever really wanted it, but for some reason didn't want to say no to you and were hoping you would get fed up and take it away but when you're at bare metal you're too far in. The fact that they have Ferraris parked there BUT NO FUNKY OLD TRANS AM OR MUSCLE CARS SHOULD SPEAK VOLUMES OF WHERE THEIR BUSINESS MODEL IS! You show a degree of naïvety we all seem to get when cars are involved, that everyone else feels about it the way we do...
@jamesdustin4041
@jamesdustin4041 3 жыл бұрын
a tip: watch movies on flixzone. Been using them for watching all kinds of movies these days.
@ottocasen4903
@ottocasen4903 3 жыл бұрын
@James Dustin Yup, been using flixzone} for months myself =)
@randalljoe3402
@randalljoe3402 3 жыл бұрын
@James Dustin Yup, have been watching on flixzone} for months myself :D
@Derek-tk4wf
@Derek-tk4wf 3 жыл бұрын
'Malaise period' went roughly from 1971-1984. Where quality control across all American vehicles was noticeably substandard across the board.
@rwdplz1
@rwdplz1 3 жыл бұрын
Peak malaise was 75-78, horrendous ugly cars.
@Hwje1111
@Hwje1111 7 ай бұрын
The malaise era started in 1971? I thought it only started in 1973 due to the oil crisis. American cars in 1971 and 1972 were still considered good.
@jtwu8931
@jtwu8931 3 жыл бұрын
VW GTI, Mazda RX7, Nissan Z, BMW 3’s , Porsche 911 turbo widow maker. All ‘80s icons.
@marklittle8805
@marklittle8805 3 жыл бұрын
I had an 85 RX7...awesome little ride
@NeverMetTheGuy
@NeverMetTheGuy 3 жыл бұрын
I support this message.
@TFSIChristmas
@TFSIChristmas 2 жыл бұрын
Dont forget T2 VW Polo Golf sciroccos
@Budinky
@Budinky 3 жыл бұрын
Toyota Celica GT-4 1990 ST 185 wide body in black, stock, she just turned 30 years old 🥰🥰 10 years she’s been all mine
@photonvox
@photonvox 3 жыл бұрын
That intro 80s supercut made my heartache. I saw my life flash before my eyes. The first place i’d go if I had a DMC-12 with a flux capacitor and enough plutonium. Excellent editing SZA!
@Blackfatrat
@Blackfatrat 3 жыл бұрын
Volvo. Enough said. You should buy an old Volvo 142 240, 850 for something a bit more modern and fix it up, or something truly classic if you want something older than 80s.
@williamswenson5315
@williamswenson5315 3 жыл бұрын
How about a 544 with the B-18 engine? Not a speed wagon, but probably one of the most reliable cars ever built. Besides, anyone who sees it would think it was a 1940 Ford coupe.
@williamswenson5315
@williamswenson5315 3 жыл бұрын
@@johnlocke3819 Yeah, the 140 and 240 series made the car's reputation here in the US as one of the safest, most reliable cars on the road.
@nobodynoone2500
@nobodynoone2500 2 жыл бұрын
I'm sellin one now. great cars, but i'm goin all jdm.
@mikehueter3982
@mikehueter3982 3 жыл бұрын
My parents had a 1980 Datsun 510 hatchback. I hated that thing, but it would never die. It just kept on rusting, LOL. It looked like a 5 door hatch version of the Stanza you showed autocrossing.
@afoolandhismoneychannel
@afoolandhismoneychannel 3 жыл бұрын
Your Ford Laser was a Mercury Tracer here in North America.
@paulg.5075
@paulg.5075 3 жыл бұрын
That Ford Laser looks very much like the Mercury Tracer we got here. Essentially a Mazda 323 underneath, and was very reliable.
@michaelclark3192
@michaelclark3192 3 жыл бұрын
The Ford laser was exactly that, a Mazda 323 but slightly different styling and built in Ford factories in other countries rather than Japan for the Mazdas. We used to make Ford lasers in Australia from 1980 until about 2001. They were generally cheap low tech cars with carbies even in the 90s but they did make sporty versions like one of my favourite cars, the Ford Laser TX3 which had a Mazda BP 1.6 turbo engine and all wheel drive. I'd love to own one sometime.
@BuiltToRace_com
@BuiltToRace_com 3 жыл бұрын
Mercedes W126 V8 from '86 had Bosch KE Jet (mech with electronic adjustment) as opposed to K Jet (mech)
@Handidude
@Handidude 3 жыл бұрын
Totally agree on the 80's Toyota's. Mechanically ran like a sewing machine, so quiet. AC froze you out right to the end. Problem was the body rusted badly. Otherwise still outstanding.
@briansmith2163
@briansmith2163 3 жыл бұрын
Rabbits / Golfs. Super fun to work on. Fun to drive.
@briansmith2163
@briansmith2163 3 жыл бұрын
Winston needs a Plymouth Satellite Sebring that he can endlessly modify. Enormous, POWERFUL (as you wanna make it) RWD, Looks amazing. Still affordable.
@danhoyland142
@danhoyland142 3 жыл бұрын
This is such a great video title and a damn valid question. I haven’t watched the video yet but can’t wait to see how you sum this up. Kudos to you
@hynestimothy411
@hynestimothy411 3 жыл бұрын
Everbody knows the 80s set the Japanese car market on fire, innovation, reliability and design that lasts even today. So much for European and American cars, at least you knew you were getting home that night.
@pgr3290
@pgr3290 2 жыл бұрын
American cars were always terrible. Some Western European cars were donkeys, some were the mutts nuts. Japan wasn't so different though. A few great machines, a lot of ugly boring nonsense. The 1980s was the golden age of Mercedes, the W124 was incredibly high quality and superbly built, legendary. Then you had dream machines like the 190E and 450SL. Similarly BMW had a fantastic era aka the 535 and 635 or the E30. Several very good Audis from this period, particularly the Quattro and the 90 models with the gorgeous 5 cylinder engines. If this was 1986, the choice was between say a Mercedes W124, a Honda Legend or a Chevrolet Celebrity which were all top selling mid size segment at the time this isn't even a competition. The Mercedes is light years ahead on build, style, comfort etc and still sought after to this day.
@jeffzekas
@jeffzekas 3 жыл бұрын
Hey, you forgot the Yugo! ;-)
@321CatboxWA
@321CatboxWA 3 жыл бұрын
poor yugo
@johnsymonstcu
@johnsymonstcu 3 жыл бұрын
Fascinating video. Really enjoyed your views about the cars from the 70's and 80's. I am really looking forward to your upcoming Playboy video. The last one you did was fantastic. I just love those ads! Have a good week.
@TrangleC
@TrangleC 3 жыл бұрын
When I started studying engineering, one of the first things the professors told us was: It is easy to design the biggest, the loudest, the fastest machine. Every garage tinkerer can do that. What makes a real engineer is to design exactly what the customer needs and make it profitable." The reason why I bring that up here is that I have seen a lot of misconceptions, misunderstandings and falsehoods when it comes to the reliability of cars. People tend to not understand why certain cars are reliable and others aren't. It isn't that engineers from a certain company or a certain country are capable of designing and building sturdy and reliable cars and others aren't. To be more precise, that can play a role, but you can not look at a car, see that it is unreliable and conclude that the people designing and building it suck. What you have to consider is the target audience the car was made for. Reliable cars are built for costomers who care a lot about reliability. That means customers with a budged. Customers who need the car to run for as long as possible. High end luxury cars like a BMW 7 Series or a Mercedes S Class for example, don't need to be reliable, because the people who buy them don't care about reliability. They buy a new one every 1-2 years anyways because they want the newest technological gimmicks and they want the bragging rights. And not only that the customer doesn't care, on top of that the corporation don't want the exclusive luxury brand to be harmed by tons of old, beat up, used cars with their logo driving around. They also don't want used models to cannibalize the sales numbers for their new releases. So planned obsolescence is very useful to those luxury brands. Ideally a luxury car kind of self destructs after 2 or 3 years. And because the people buying 100 000 Dollar cars don't care about reliability and life span, the manufacturers get away with designing them to self destruct. The people buying Toyotas and Volkswagens would never accept that, so those companies and brands have to make them reliable. And the built in obsolescence isn't even really the corporations ripping off their customers. To the people who buy a luxury car to brag, it even is a added benefit when that car doesn't live long, because those cars become less cool and desirable when there are tons of old ones driving around. Status symbols need to be exclusive. If everyone can have one, they become pointless. You can see that "who's the customer?" principle at work everywhere. For example in how Porsche is a exception to the "expensive cars are unreliable" principle. Porsches are pretty reliable and run a long time. Why? Again, the customer. Porsches are bought by car and driving enthusiasts. They are driven much and they are passed on to the kids as family heirlooms. That is why Porsche wouldn't get away with their cars self destructing after a few years, like BMW, Mercedes or Audi does. Of course, in the end it doesn't matter all that much whether cars fall apart because they are shoddily built, or whether they are supposed to. I just write this to refute this common, ignorant notion that Japanese engineers know how to build a reliable car and German or British ones don't. It has nothing to do with the nationality of the brand or the engineers, it is all about who the customer is and what that customer values and what not.
@chase7537
@chase7537 3 жыл бұрын
my dad had a similar Volkswagen to yours also in south africa
@edmcwilliams6524
@edmcwilliams6524 3 жыл бұрын
Thank You For The Great Video. Winston.
@Flastew
@Flastew 3 жыл бұрын
Really liked your list because it is honest by the cars you had dealt with, cool. I also liked the reasonings for what you found on each one. Love the channel. My brother and I are also into cars, especially earlier muscle cars. We are currently working on his 70 Mach1 to put back on the road. So good luck with the channel and look forward to more great content.
@serpentza
@serpentza 3 жыл бұрын
Love the 70 Mach1!
@thegrimyeaper
@thegrimyeaper 3 жыл бұрын
This car will take longer than the development time for Cyberpunk 2077.
@MarcRitzMD
@MarcRitzMD 3 жыл бұрын
I feel like you could have fixed up the TransAm by now considering how much time and nerves you have been investing in keeping those guys on track
@RedPillDosage
@RedPillDosage 3 жыл бұрын
1988 Toyota Celica All-trac Turbo here. Just thinking about my baby gets me going. I love my car. 3rd Gen 3S-GTE 12lbs boost 50 shot nitrous.
@born_again_torinos
@born_again_torinos 3 жыл бұрын
Here in Washington State, we have NO emission requirement at all. No testing, no smog stuff. You can pull it all off your car. You can do what ever you want to your car and don't need to ask anybody for permission. You can even take off all your doors and hood and drive around and not be pulled over. I have a friend who made a one of a kind car from scratch in his garage. No problem getting it licensed. Also, in 1984 Hot Rod magazine did an article featuring the Mitsubishi Dodge Turbo Colt. It was intercooled, turbo charged with two stick shifters, you went through four gears and then could move over to the other stick and have 4 more gears. You could smoke the tires in four gears. In the Hot Rod article the little colt was blowing away Hemi cudas, vettes and all the famous muscle cars of the 60s and 70s in the quarter mile drags. I owned two of them, the down side is they were one of the worst built cars I ever owned. Super flimsy and fell apart quickly. Shockingly quick, shockingly poor quality.
@DuffusMonkey
@DuffusMonkey 3 жыл бұрын
The worst part of late 70's early 80's American cars is that they were converting to metric but kept using old engine blocks with English threads. I remember replacing alternators with 2 nearly identical bolts. BUT the bolt going into the alternator bracket had a 13mm Head and the bolt a few inches away (That went into the block) had a 1/2 head. It was SO EASY to switch bolts and strip threads
@truthseekerdanny
@truthseekerdanny 3 жыл бұрын
I have two cars. When is a 2018 Hyundai , and the other is my 1993 Honda manual coupe (which is a 1990 to 1993 design that was developed in the late 80s). I love my 1993 Honda Accord. It's completely restored and has a few modifications. Very easy to work on and a pleasure to drive. Love every Saturday when I drive my Honda through the desert.
@NightingaleSong
@NightingaleSong 3 жыл бұрын
This is literally the best video you and C-Milk have ever done, on any of your channels.
@serpentza
@serpentza 3 жыл бұрын
Appreciate it
@randomquickness
@randomquickness 3 жыл бұрын
y'all need to get an e30 on the show, those are my fav from the 80's
@TheCreedBratton
@TheCreedBratton 3 жыл бұрын
Mine too, until you have to buy parts
@speedy1through943
@speedy1through943 3 жыл бұрын
That thing will make you cry lol
@kamikazee3071
@kamikazee3071 2 жыл бұрын
@@TheCreedBratton they aren’t even that expensive I got an e30 from a girl who has overheated it a few times. I replaced the timing belt, water hoses , water pump , thermostat, distributor rotor & plugs. It costed me around $500 but that engine has been trouble free for about a year
@TheCreedBratton
@TheCreedBratton 2 жыл бұрын
@@kamikazee3071 it depends on which engine you have
@guythatpaysforyourhandouts2478
@guythatpaysforyourhandouts2478 Жыл бұрын
@@TheCreedBratton I've had one since 85 I never have to buy parts for it.
@vhvostik
@vhvostik 3 жыл бұрын
Great video! I enjoyed listening to what you had to say, even though I'm not much of a mechanic. I am a die-hard Toyota fan though. My mom and I have only been driving Camrys since the 90's. They're easy to fix and the parts are inexpensive and, yes, they rarely break down.
@1234Testicle
@1234Testicle 3 жыл бұрын
This was spot on Sir.
@chrispig7748
@chrispig7748 3 жыл бұрын
Channel gets better and better
@kcraig51
@kcraig51 3 жыл бұрын
The Datsun Stanza footage was actually Winston driving! Awesome!
@drummer856
@drummer856 3 жыл бұрын
I love my 85 corvette, she ain’t as fast as the cars coming out now but with the clamshell hood everything is easy to get to and the fact that so many were sold it’s easy to find parts pretty cheap... great video btw
@Nedula007
@Nedula007 3 жыл бұрын
My first car was a 1986 Plymouth Reliant, in 2014. It was alright, struggled on steep hills. My 2000 Saturn with DOHC and standard transmission was a HUGE upgrade, even if it's not in mint condition.
@EffequalsMA
@EffequalsMA 3 жыл бұрын
At least where I am I ca strip all that emissions cheap off and then the eighties car become pretty solid. I'm working on my 86 Mustang coupe...Notcho Libre and it's a pretty butt simple car with all that crap off.
@thegrimyeaper
@thegrimyeaper 3 жыл бұрын
Oh my God, your emissions will surely kill us all. HOW DARE YOU?!
@jorgeandres404
@jorgeandres404 3 жыл бұрын
I enjoy your videos!
@whynotagain3639
@whynotagain3639 3 жыл бұрын
My Mum's boyfriend had a Toyota Celica Supra in the early 90's it was closest thing to Knight rider on the British roads, I loved it! Why don't they make a Supra Celica anymore?
@laowhy86
@laowhy86 3 жыл бұрын
It's my 2nd fave car I've ever owned.
@whynotagain3639
@whynotagain3639 3 жыл бұрын
@@laowhy86 I'm 40 but UK car insurance for 17-19 year old boys back in the late 90's was more than the car for anything over 1.4 litres, eventually once I could afford the insurance the rust from the salt on the roads in winter had snatched away my chance of ever owning one. They're a very rare site on UK roads now. 😓
@globalcitizen8321
@globalcitizen8321 3 жыл бұрын
I heard your voice and said to myself, I know this guy from some other channel... Anyhow, will keep the secret, but... You've got another subscriber. Nice to hear from you discussing another kind of topic !
@williamswenson5315
@williamswenson5315 3 жыл бұрын
My first car was the truly odd (to some) looking Volvo P-1800. It was that off-beat (to some) styling, the British racing green color, the two-point shoulder harness/seat belt, leather seats, 4-speed transmission with overdrive, gauges for everything, and with 40DCOE carbs and an aftermarket supercharger that captured a feeling akin to love. It just wasn't like anything else on the road. Yeah, I miss it; even all these years later. I currently drive a VW GTI and while it is a bit complicted, it's both a fun and reliable car to drive. In eight years, it would qualify for historic plates.
@remotecontroll1
@remotecontroll1 3 жыл бұрын
I enjoy this channel so much.
@DaemonlordX
@DaemonlordX 3 жыл бұрын
First two cars I owned in the early 2000s were a 1985 Holden Astra SLX Hatchback (Nissan Pulsar) and a 1990 Ford Laser KF Sedan (Mazda 323, engine had more valves). Both did well despite the harsh Australian environment. They both did break down periodically but parts were easy to find.
@joanned8172
@joanned8172 3 жыл бұрын
From personal experience some of the 80's land yacht American cars were very reliable and easy to maintain, they just were like driving a boat so not that fun, ones like Buick's, Oldsmobiles, Ford Crown Victorias and few others.
@emmettturner9452
@emmettturner9452 3 жыл бұрын
My 2011 Corolla is in the shop right now with bad wheel bearings for the third time in the last year. I also got new wheel bearings I my Tacoma earlier this year. Even with the last couple failures being under warranty from the earlier replacements, this is costing me thousands of dollars. I don't go off-road and I'm not coastal or anywhere that salts the roads.
@dr.nigsopmcchortlefag9544
@dr.nigsopmcchortlefag9544 3 жыл бұрын
There was a Nissan Stanza here in the states.
@markh1085
@markh1085 3 жыл бұрын
Great video. It will be nice to see the body shop finally finish your car Winston. I have long wanted a US muscle car but to be honest in the uk countryside I live in it would not be practical. Great video as always .
@jancovanderwesthuizen8070
@jancovanderwesthuizen8070 3 жыл бұрын
daang winstons afrikaans sounds really good!! Pas gekoop en sat gery :D
@serpentza
@serpentza 3 жыл бұрын
Haha, I had to learn Afrikaans in school
@ewoudalliet1734
@ewoudalliet1734 3 жыл бұрын
In Flemish or Dutch that would be "pas gekocht en zat (or zot) gereden". Seems like Afrikaans discarded its strong verbs, because "kopen" and "rijden" both are.
@jancovanderwesthuizen8070
@jancovanderwesthuizen8070 3 жыл бұрын
@@ewoudalliet1734 ja Afrikaans verbs are all made regular now. We only have old Dutch forms in fixed expressions like welgedaan or old place names like Mooigelegen
@ewoudalliet1734
@ewoudalliet1734 3 жыл бұрын
@@jancovanderwesthuizen8070 Interessant, because you do join words together that would be separate in Dutch. Welgedaan does exist (at least in the Flemish dialect, both as verb and adjective, but with different meanings), but mooigelegen would always be written as "mooi gelegen", but maybe that's just because it's a place name. Verb conjugations in Afrikaans have always seemed a bit weird to me. To us, Afrikaans sounds like a simplified and funny (which probably is reciprocal) and somewhat code-like, yet understandable language. Especially as a Fleming. Like some people in the Netherlands would say "vuurhoutje" much like in Afrikaans, but most of them and none of us ever would. Yet we can perfectly derive the meaning as we know both words that make up that word, but we simply use different words (lucifer, allumette (from French), stekske, zwavelstok, sulfer etc.). But to us Flemings, Dutch people sound funny too.
@Titus-as-the-Roman
@Titus-as-the-Roman 3 жыл бұрын
P.S.- the most reliable car I ever had was a 1976 Datsun B-210. It was clunky, had no sound proofing and rode harsh, but it simply would not Die. I gave it to my wife, who was my girlfriend at the time, her 74 Ford Pinto had lost 2nd gear in the auto trans and the other gears was going out (auto trans at that time was one thing I would Not buy from a junkyard, was a pretty good mechanic but transmissions were from another planet), finally gave it to my Wife's sister who drove it several more years till she wrecked it.
@TaintedPath
@TaintedPath 3 жыл бұрын
We had the same thing in Australia in the 1980s with the Ford Laser being the same car as the Mazda 323 and the Ford Telstar being the same car as the Mazda 626. It made parts really cheap even though they were imported cars because there were so many of them.
@WyattsWildNature
@WyattsWildNature 3 жыл бұрын
My first was a 1980 Foxbody mustang, 4 cylinder, super easy to work on. The front and rear valves melted and snapped. Got a new head for 20 dollars at the junk yard in 1995. Pressure testing was like 50 dollars. Had it going in a week. Wish I kept that car. Would have been cool to swap in a new v8 coyote. Thinking of getting a sn95 I like when they are in Cobra form. We shall see, cheers
@Stoneheadification
@Stoneheadification 3 жыл бұрын
Winston is probably the only dude on the west coast that successfuly passed smog in an 1980s muscle car without breaking the bank. I would love to see the statistics of how many people attempted this and failed.
@hanszimmer8801
@hanszimmer8801 3 жыл бұрын
In my opinion the brands with the best build quality were Mercedes-Benz, Volvo, Saab, Audi, Honda and Subaru
@studibakre
@studibakre 3 жыл бұрын
I had an 89 dodge spirit.. (first car I bought myself at 16). definitely learn to repair cars when owning one of those. xD the best I had was my 1990 k1500 (still 80s since it had the old fuel pump style). that 4.3L was great. easy to repair, cheap, reliable. except for one thing.. you'll become a master at changing fuel pumps. I kept a spare in the truck and two more in the tool box.
@ImWillsZX
@ImWillsZX 3 жыл бұрын
I love that a z31 and women were a major part of this intro. :)
@Roborebonzo
@Roborebonzo 3 жыл бұрын
I had an '88 Honda prelude. One of the most fun and impressive cars I ever owned. Screaming fast stock. Weird rpm pattern, which worked great with the 5spd stick. From a dead stop though kicking it in 1st, i would redline before I got across the road, had to shift fast. Also zero torque at idle. But a great car, with my butt barely a foot off the ground and the nicest most comfortable bucket seats ever!
@WorthlessWhips
@WorthlessWhips 3 жыл бұрын
I had a 91 prelude and I know what you're talking about
@volebien
@volebien 3 жыл бұрын
damn. we had that Nissan Champ thingy back here in Mauritius, can't believe they are still being made.
@VL1975
@VL1975 3 жыл бұрын
In the US, we call that 80's Mercedes, the Saddam car. lol (Or at least I call it that). Vehicle of dictators in Middle East.
@ShawnD1027
@ShawnD1027 3 жыл бұрын
LOL, that's just you who calls it that.
@VL1975
@VL1975 3 жыл бұрын
@Ete Petete Actually Hitler himself had the VW Bug made for the masses and himself.
@VL1975
@VL1975 3 жыл бұрын
@Ete Petete That's kinda the synopsis of what I wanted to say. lol
@disgustedvet9528
@disgustedvet9528 3 жыл бұрын
Had two 80s cars, a 1980 Buick Regal which I traded in on a 1986 Buick Grand National . Both cars were fool proof although the GN turbo needed semi-regular adjustments which were quite beyond my skill set . Now I drive used GMC SUVs , again pretty much trouble free and my son's do routine maintenance on them if needed . I stay away from Foreign brands like the plague as repairs if needed are incredibly expensive especially on German brands according to friends who own them . I haven't worked on my own cars ( other than oil changes etc. ) since the 60s and at 76 years of age have no plans to start wrenching .
@dj_paultuk7052
@dj_paultuk7052 3 жыл бұрын
Best 80's cars i ever had were the old Classic Saab 900 Turbos, both 8v and 16v versions. Super reliable and built like a tank. Very simple too. Also had a 88 Renault Alpine GTA V6 Turbo as a daily driver for several years. Nothing ever went wrong with it, and just regular servicing that i could do myself. Massively under rated car.
@paulg.5075
@paulg.5075 3 жыл бұрын
The 80's-90's Nissan Hardbody Pickups (Frontier) were super-reliable and easy to work on. My dad owned 3 of them and other than totalling one off, he drove the other two into the ground.
@mrgeorgejetson
@mrgeorgejetson 3 жыл бұрын
It wasn't only in SA that Mazda and Ford had that strange partnership. In America, you could buy an early-90s Ford Probe with a body by Ford but under the hood was a Mazda MX-6 engine. Sadly, regardless of the body and badging, there just wasn't an attractive version of that car to be had. But at least the thing ran, unlike most American cars of that time and ever since. Man, I just discovered these car-restoration videos of yours and I must say I'm totally hooked. This episode in particular, with its casually-delivered micro-history/contextualization of various 80s autos, is a winner for me, as well as a little trip down memory lane, being a '75 model, myself (and Winston, the Montreal of my youth was absolutely teeming with Camaros, Trans-Ams, Firebirds, etc. that you'd kill for--as well as a lot of Corvette C3s that you wouldn't kill for, I guess). Keep up the good work, and keep them episodes coming. I love the China stuff as well, having lived there until last year, but these car videos are an unexpected and welcome addition to your other videos.
@MuddyDuck...
@MuddyDuck... 3 жыл бұрын
Hope there is more progress and good news on your car soon 👍
@sambaker3233
@sambaker3233 3 жыл бұрын
I had that Exact Ford Lazer in New Zealand 1986. NZ Made. Then later I owned a Mazda Familia 1986 model. The interiors were exactly the same. Currently own a 2005 Accord Euro and a 2016 4.5 liter turbo diesel Toyota Hiace. Love the hiace. My parents always owned Toyotas. A Corolla and Corona. The 84 Corona was a rust bucket though.
@scaleworksRC
@scaleworksRC 3 жыл бұрын
Glad to see your baby finally get some attention. I'm sure it will be worth the wait.
@hannesRSA
@hannesRSA 3 жыл бұрын
That's a boat load of cars to have owned. I've owned 3 in 22 years.. Escort mk2, Nissan 1400 (stolen), Honda Jazz. Selling them now and they're still running fine.
@Titus-as-the-Roman
@Titus-as-the-Roman 3 жыл бұрын
At one time I had a 1987 Pontiac Fiero W/a 2.8 liter V6 and Auto trans (I wanted a manual trans but this one was affordable and looked pretty good). I never had much money so I was always buying Hoop-dies and having to fix them up. Of all cars I've owned through my life this was the only that I could not keep running correctly (other than those that was just too destroyed), it would run good for a while but was constantly going down with something different almost every time, I always had a puckered *utt hole every time I took it out. I started caring a whole box of various parts with me and a large tool box.
@OuterHeaven210
@OuterHeaven210 3 жыл бұрын
Man I LOVE the BMW M3 Evo. So classy! So powerful! All three produce great cars.
@extrameatsammich
@extrameatsammich 3 жыл бұрын
The South African Ford Laser was the Mercury Tracer or Mazda 323 in the US.
@forestgrump2168
@forestgrump2168 3 жыл бұрын
had a 1980 renault LE car that was LE awful. it had a 3 cyl engine. it was a pain to keep running. Had a 1980 ford pinto . it was fun and actually quick . then I go a 1986 buick skylark. it was a great car, but it had the CFI fuel injection, when it worked , it was fine , but it was difficult to work on.
@Varinki
@Varinki 3 жыл бұрын
I've had a pair of those Lasers and both of them have had a radiator problem and a failed ignition each. Other than that they have been fine.
@briansmith2163
@briansmith2163 3 жыл бұрын
Power to weight ratio. The 80's Era Rabbit / Golf GTI wins with GREAT suspension and running gear, and (with a Bentley Manual), ease of repair and maintenance. Parts are cheap and plentiful worldwide.
@reneemerkel6712
@reneemerkel6712 3 жыл бұрын
California has always had tougher regulations, than other states. I owned a 1992 and 1993 Ford Probe GT, and moved to California. Rumor at the time among mechanics or car enthusiasts was that those cars, when they came off the assembly line didn't meet the emissions requirements for California, and as a result there weren't too many on dealer lots in California. Don't know if that is true. I was living on the east coast, and had just bought the 1993 a few months before I moved. When I registered the 93 in California, I had to sign a paper saying that I didn't buy the car out of state to avoid paying sales tax. I couldn't believe CA state would think I'd go to the east coast to buy a car to avoid sales tax.
@vectorm4
@vectorm4 3 жыл бұрын
Bolt-on's are very popular here; that is true. To a small degree, that is OK. Meaning one or two bolt-on's can work. Much more than that and a re-design is needed.
@davidhasselhoff619
@davidhasselhoff619 3 жыл бұрын
We had the Nissan Stanza in the 80s. Decent car. All of the Datsun and early Nissan's were quite good. Ford and Mazda have had a long relationship. The Ford Escape SUV was a Mazda actually.
@solosoulet
@solosoulet 3 жыл бұрын
PHOLKSWACHEN !
@techoman8569
@techoman8569 3 жыл бұрын
haha yeap, funny how he pronounce it :P
@sytran666
@sytran666 3 жыл бұрын
Officially it's folksvaagen
@scoreboard666
@scoreboard666 3 жыл бұрын
Had a 86 300zx T was great
@anthonysalgado5118
@anthonysalgado5118 3 жыл бұрын
Here in Souf Efrica we kept the 80s and 70s cars going with wire and a pliers. Todays cars you need a degree to keep the cars going.
@mattg7372
@mattg7372 3 жыл бұрын
Ford used to own a big chunk of Mazda; they had a lot of crossover products / platforms here in North America too
@studibakre
@studibakre 3 жыл бұрын
and they were all junk.. I had a 1996 mazda 626. oil sensor on the bottom of the oil pan.. 🤦🏻
@mh87351
@mh87351 3 жыл бұрын
ford vehicles like the ford fusion take heavily from the Mazda parts bin the ford probe was basically a Mazda took little bit from ford as well with the Mazda b series trucks which where just rangers with Mazda badges in states
@philiprizek6384
@philiprizek6384 3 жыл бұрын
This may not work in California but if your catalytic converters are hollowed hollowed out or performing poorly if you have oxygen sensors behind them you can take two spark plug antifoulers drill one out stack them together and thread the rear O2 sensor back in and it will make the check engine light go off
@masterofpuppets2004
@masterofpuppets2004 3 жыл бұрын
chevy chevettes were common to last 400k plus miles. my girlfriend back in the 80s had one that lasted over 500k miles.
@matty6848
@matty6848 2 жыл бұрын
I remember when my dad sold our 1979 Ford escort then came home with a 6 month old Ford Orian Ghia Injection in just ten years the technology was night like night and day in just 10 years. Our old escort was a typical 70s design old fashioned from the 60s drum brakes all round, no power steering only seatbelts in the front, PVC faux leather interior, then came this new 80s Ford. Disc brakes, electric windows and mirrors, power steering, metallic paint, alloy wheels, role back sunroof, valour interior that was nice to sit in and comfortable. technology never moved so fast than it did in the 1980s. Now car tech doesn’t seem to move that fast. You get a car from 2011 to a new car of 2021 and the technology hasn’t seemed to have moved that much at all. Yes the 80s was the Birth of the drivers car. Just look the Mercedes 550S probably the best over engineered car in he world, when Mercedes built proper luxury cars not the cheap mass produced crap they build today that rely on that badge and technology from the past to sell the crappy cars they sell today… Mercedes are not the company or cars they built 30/40 years ago…
@kiningroseburg9288
@kiningroseburg9288 3 жыл бұрын
The Nissan Champ is not being made in SA anymore, it was replaced by the NP200
@dragondad7733
@dragondad7733 3 жыл бұрын
I have nothing badcto say about vw. Since 85 to 90 I owned 3. Jetta, passat and fox were all easy straight forward. The only reason I got rid of them was due to massive damage ( my own fault) smaller faster cars don't do well against trees and rolling off an embankment. Good times.
@apyllyon
@apyllyon 2 жыл бұрын
Last Alfasud models were sold as Nissan cherry in parts of Europe and japan during the failed Alfa-Nissan alliance of the 80s-90. Ford Laser was 323 in the Mazda line up Ford Mondeo of the 1990s shares components with the 626 facelift Stanza was known as Violet in the Europe, similar to bluebird with smaller inline 4 engine, slightly cheaper finish. That 200sx seen on the video has to Be Us/commonwealth ad because that car is Silvia in japan and EU.
@danhoyland142
@danhoyland142 3 жыл бұрын
Hey just seeing the update on the trans am. Do not get a repop fender. Got a rust free fender from a parts car, that will save you a bunch of $$ and you will have better gap fitment.
@serpentza
@serpentza 3 жыл бұрын
You have a fender? How do I get hold of you?
@danhoyland142
@danhoyland142 3 жыл бұрын
I’m sorry that was a typo. I meant “ get” a used fender. They are relatively easy to find since they made so many of these cars and I believe the 70 to 81 fenders are all the same. Wouldn’t doubt it if Facebook messenger or craiglist near you has a few on them right now. Sorry for the confusion.
@stephenobrien1597
@stephenobrien1597 3 жыл бұрын
If you ever have to change the fuel pump on a 3rd gen Camaro or Trans Am you will lower that to 1/10. Have to drop the exhaust and most of the rear suspension to get the tank out.
@serpentza
@serpentza 3 жыл бұрын
Or just cut that awful hole
@spider1800
@spider1800 3 жыл бұрын
As usual great video. However, John Candy was Canadian
@philiprizek6384
@philiprizek6384 3 жыл бұрын
I bought a four-wheel drive F-150 extended cab Ford truck for $100 and it's a 1996 or '98 it's got rust holes I got lead and large brass soldering irons and I'm going to start patching holes with the two out of state license plates that came with now I'm going to find a nice classy spot on the side of the truck with no rust holes and I'm going to let a beech nut lid right there on the driver should be all 100% painless body repair there will be no paint left on the area of the which I work on
@freenarnia6913
@freenarnia6913 3 жыл бұрын
Hey Winston, could you review an VW Phaeton and give us your opinion on its maintenance, reliability and driving experience?
@juststeve5542
@juststeve5542 3 жыл бұрын
Ah, he owned an 70s/80s Alfa, this explains how he came to know how to work on cars! As an owner of many Lancias I understand completely and salute a fellow masochist! (But my god they're so much fun when they're working!). And yes, I'm the one that's going to call you out for 3:55, that's a pair of DCOE Webber carbs, not SUs!
@williamswenson5315
@williamswenson5315 3 жыл бұрын
Yup. I had a pair of Weber DCOE's that replaced the SU's on my '67 P-1800.
@bossracing3387
@bossracing3387 3 жыл бұрын
i had a 80s stanza wagon , in philly
@jrfairclough4291
@jrfairclough4291 Жыл бұрын
I'm sure by now you're through the hardest, and biggest cash layout, on your Trans Am that it's too late for this time, but should you ever decide to do this again with a Trans Am, you should consider a shop like Trans Am Worldwide out of Tallahassee Florida for your restoration. If your t stops still aren't right, consider reaching out to them, as I'm 100% certain that they can fix them to where they would be better than new in this case. I have seen their work, and they are perfectionists who have a true passion for the 2nd gen Trans Ams. They could actually install the Hurst T-Tops, which were the absolute best of them all!
@jwoodswce
@jwoodswce 3 жыл бұрын
I wonder if the patch work nature of environmental controls instead of redesign was because the timeline of regulatory compliance was too short. Congress says do this arbitrary standard that the foreign cars already meet and do it day after tomorrow.
@thefinalroman
@thefinalroman 3 жыл бұрын
Nissan Stanza was in the US it had 8 spark plugs and was between the Sentra and Maxima
@compugod91
@compugod91 3 жыл бұрын
yeah seems like after the oil crisis American cars just became crap. (with the exception of pickup trucks that still stands)
@hunterellis8986
@hunterellis8986 3 жыл бұрын
I see that you borrowed some scenes from that Waiting for a Star to Fall 80's tribute video.
@kimreese3530
@kimreese3530 3 жыл бұрын
I had a Mazda RX7 with a rotary engine. Was that a one off or did they put that engine in other cars?
@mostlypeacefulrowan8747
@mostlypeacefulrowan8747 3 жыл бұрын
pretty sure i saw a rotary rx7 on top gear 10 years ago
@KanoValentine
@KanoValentine 3 жыл бұрын
Didn't the Swedes had something called the Volvo?
@artygunnar
@artygunnar 3 жыл бұрын
Saab?
@entropyfan5714
@entropyfan5714 3 жыл бұрын
Those 80's Volvos were not easy or cheap to work on, but pretty reliable so it balanced out. Pretty much had to be either a stick or a turbo, otherwise they were terribly slow.
@philiprizek6384
@philiprizek6384 3 жыл бұрын
I got an 84 chevette or an 85 three-speed automatic two-door I would sure love to know how I could get the 90-horsepower that was advertised out of that 1.6 l overhead cam engine
@robertcurrie1160
@robertcurrie1160 3 жыл бұрын
VW Golf GTi a brilliant car then me & my friends had a XR3i which was fast but bloody murder it had a Boy Racer reputation which ment police stopping you all the time but my favourite car has always been a Mini it's fun, reliable & very good on fuel 👍
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