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VAZ-2101, known in Western world as Lada-1200. What a nice car it was!
A Russian copy (almost) of the Car of 1965 (?), it had 1200-cc OHC four-banger,
not so bad for 1971 when it was introduced in Soviet market. A car I learned
to drive in; quite forgiving if the battery's OK. No power options. Very
little trim options. Oh well, if you've gotta stay in line for several
years to get some wheelie, you don't care much about the fancy stuff. Remember
we tried to keep them hubcaps shiny...
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Ford Granada II (similar shown)
Photo "on loan" from a website that doesn't seem to exist anymore. |
I kept my Zaporozhets for less than one year - was fortunate enough
to import a German Ford Granada. Man, was I happy to drive this one! It
only lasted three years, never failed me except for its very last trip,
when the oil pump shaft sheared and the pressure went South.
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BTW, did I mention what I paid for her? $250.00 |
Ford Granada II (similar shown) Photo "on loan" from a website that doesn't seem to exist anymore. |
Ford Transit II (similar shown)
Photo "on loan" from Ford Transit homepage |
In '92 my brother-in-law asked me to buy him a cargo van. Gave me $900. There is not so many cargo vans for this big buck; however, given a little more, a nice lad in Edinburgh, Scotland, gave up his primary business means - an 11-years old Ford Transit van. The picture at the left gives quite right impression - you just weld on the windows and paint it rust brown, and here you go. Nice features - solid axles f&r, with very flexy leaf springs in all four corners. Not a technological marvel, it was very agreeable, and fast. Top speed was about 90 mph, sharply limited by 2-liter four struggling against the wind. Naturally, the one that I brought had right-hand steering; I felt no difficulty or inconvenience of driving it in left-hand-steered country. The owner promptly crashed her into a tree at some 50 mph after just two months of driving (chasing a bee!), restored and sold me back for the same nine hundred bucks. Still, a deal, I'd say. |
She worked hard and died at the age of 14 from Russian winter syndrome - zero oil pressure... |
Ford Transit II (similar shown) Photo "on loan" from Ford Transit homepage |
1984 Chevrolet Caprice
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Now, time for Big Detroit Iron. We moved to Michigan in late November,
1994. My former advisor at Wayne State University made me an offer that
I could never refuse - an '84 Chevrolet Caprice with all the options and
153kmi on the clock, for 1 (one) U.S.$. The clerk in the Office of Secretary
of State (where people of Michigan pay for their plates) refused to believe
this price, so I had to pay sales tax on a declared $100! Oh well... It
was, and probably will be, the most comfortable cruiser I ever had. I especially
liked the silent power of well-muffled 305 cid small-block.
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Some little guys are overlooked in this quest for excellence. After
spending a week looking for a car for my wife (with options including a
humongous rusted through '78 Pontiac Bonneville and character-less wagon
like Dodge Aries), with a price cap set at six hundred bucks, I ran across
an '85 1/2 Ford Escort station wagon. All of a sudden I remembered a praising
article I once wrote about this particular car in some russian automotive
rag (without ever driving a car!), and decided to take it on. A little
critter that I've got sported dual-color paint, dark-blue below the line
under the door handles and white (or was it gray? or metallic?) above it.
The paint job was said to be an exercise of an apprentice in a body shop
somewhere in Washington State. Rust was very minor for a rust-belt ten
years old car; this wagon even sported a moonroof! After a few minor things
done, like tie-rod ends and brake parts, this thing ran flawlessly for
almost two years, never leaving me stranded on the road (read above for
comparison). It took some TLC to up-keep her - bucket seats, wheels, and
tires from a mid-80s Mustang, electric mirrors and some other stuff from
a prematurely junked '86 Escort, CB (sure I needed it!). This car set some
sort of a record for me - bought her in Feb.95 for $580, put about 30 kmi
on the clock, and sold her in Dec.96 for $500 (and felt sorry I did it!).
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1986 Ford Escort (similar shown)
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1993 Ford Aerostar - shown at Loveland Pass (11992 ft.) in Colorado
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First four-wheel drive Having a van or station wagon is an inherent attribute of american family
life. Up to some point we could get by with Big Boat and Little Wagon (above),
but in June '95 we've got first *batch* of visitors. Of course I could
put five adults and two kids in either car we had (and throw all the camping
gear on top), but it was getting kinda... inconvenient, that's the word.
All of a sudden I started looking for a full-size van; and found that fellow
instead. A :"top of the line" Ford Aerostar doesn't seem to sound like
too impressive, but it is nonetheless quite a machine. This extended cab
model had all the gizmos these midi-vans ever had - 4.0liter V6 (which
I would gladly have on my nearly three-ton jeep!), 4-speed shushbox, all
power options, dual A/C, rear ABS, and - Full-Time four-wheel drive! Not
to mention the dual-tone paint, again blue below and white above. This
floppy runner easily topped a 90-mph speedometer in a few trips to Toronto,
Ontario. In just three months her clock put on ten thousand miles more.
Sometime near the fifth month of my ownership, a transfer case chain started
slipping. Like a dying starter - it misses a beat today, tomorrow it's
dead. Had some fun removing a transfer case on the parking lot in Detroit
under some October rain. That thing quickly ate up about $800, despite
all my attempts to do most of the work. No doubt this van is a mechanics'
nightmare. Only four spark plugs out of six are within an "easy" reach
- from the front wheelwells. Two rear plugs can only be reached from underneath.
Even to add transmission fluid takes a special funnel - or a dose of ingenuity.
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Or another station wagon? Well, somehow I decided that we (a) needed another car when we moved to San Diego, and (b) it might as well be a jeep, and (c) considering the nasty climate of San Diego, a rear-wheel drive jeep with minimum options will fit the bill. So, I've got the stripper jeep - wanna see her? NO OPTIONS FROM THE FACTORY. Neverheless, she's a pretty nice ride - cannot call this four-banger gutless, nice good-shifting five-speed stick shift, incredibly agile in traffic - guess a Honda Civic would be more hassle to park (for lack of visibility), and proved herself pretty able in the desert in competent hands of my brother - she's got stuck when my big jeep required low range on top of four-wheel drive! She's only got some minor things done to her, like BMW Alpine tape player, some re-upholstery, almost complete Dynamat treatment, aluminum wheels with 29" tires (replaced 27" Michelins XW4s - which I wish I didn't do), and to get something from extended warrany - ChryCo replaced the entire exhaust system for rumbles and rattles (with a few nasty words said to a dealer's service department). I might even slap on a front axle from a junked jeep and a transfer case - and then she'll be a proud member of a 4x4 family. |
1995 Jeep Cherokee SE
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1979 Jeep Cherokee Chief
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Second Jeep First TRUE four-wheel drive, beginning of Go-Anywhere Living in Southern California poses some ultimate transportation challenges.
Read on: My Full-Size Jeep |