- Joined
- Sep 29, 2016
Escort?It's a little smaller and they were making fox bodies at the same time. Still FoMoCo, but much rarer. Keep guessing!
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Escort?It's a little smaller and they were making fox bodies at the same time. Still FoMoCo, but much rarer. Keep guessing!
Smaller!Escort?
Lynx?Smaller!
Pretty sure that's a 3rd gen Mercury Capri, which would definitely be a rare bird these days.It's a little smaller and they were making fox bodies at the same time. Still FoMoCo, but much rarer. Keep guessing!
Ding ding ding!Pretty sure that's a 3rd gen Mercury Capri, which would definitely be a rare bird these days.
I'd be most worried about the condition of the 'vert top - that's become the Achilles' heel of Solstice and Sky owners, and those are far newer cars.Ding ding ding!
Everything is nearly impossible to find but this thing was so low mileage I just had to cop it. Getting the knuckle separated was a blast todayView attachment 2746108
Wow how did I not see that. Those are funky little cars. Doesn't it share many engine components with the NA Miata and 323?Ding ding ding!
Everything is nearly impossible to find but this thing was so low mileage I just had to cop it. Getting the knuckle separated was a blast todayView attachment 2746108
New top is ordered! Putting it on next weekI'd be most worried about the condition of the 'vert top - that's become the Achilles' heel of Solstice and Sky owners, and those are far newer cars.
Same engine as the Miata but turbo'd and front wheel driveWow how did I not see that. Those are funky little cars. Doesn't it share many engine components with the NA Miata and 323?
That's no surprise. The Mazda 1.6 and 1.8 are known to have some coolant passage issues that lead to overheating. Head gasket warping isn't uncommon on those. Trans Am is a cooler car in my books because rwd and sleek looks.The girl I dated for most of my senior year in high school drove a brand new Mercury Capri. In the 9 months we dated it went through a transmission, a head gasket, an alternator and a harmonic balancer.
My then 20 year old Trans-Am with a 350 went through a radiator hose, but I replaced the radiator, water pump and all the hoses because it was easy, then in the middle of it I realized I had everything moved away from the carb so I rode my bike to the junkyard 12 miles away and found a nice 4 barrel on a totaled out RV that the guy charged me $50 and my old radiator and water pump for. I had it all done in under 7 hours with two buddy's dropping by to help turn wrenches and bullshit a bit
The next day she came by and told me I wasted my time working on my "unreliable car" and that she was mad that I couldn't go with her to see some play that the arts dept of our high school had put together for graduation week . I broke up with her and had half the chicks at my school scowling at me for the last week before graduation, but the other half were asking to ride in the Trans-Am.
That's my old man Capri story
That's no surprise. The Mazda 1.6 and 1.8 are known to have some coolant passage issues that lead to overheating. Head gasket warping isn't uncommon on those. Trans Am is a cooler car in my books because rwd and sleek looks.
The old timers will tell you old cars are easier to work on, but I think by getting a car from a different era you're just trading in for different kinds of hard to fix. Unless you're talking 90s-00s Japanese then you're in like sin. For example, I have a 70s car with four wheel drum brakes where I have to split the hub and repack the bearings everytime I want to adjust the brakes. If I get it wrong I have to restart the process. On a 90s+ car, everything is self adjusting, and I don't have to special order parts to rebuild brakes. I can also pop in a cheap obdII Bluetooth reader to get engine codes and refer to a service manual instead of reverse engineering a carburetor with a sticky accelerator pump. Researching parts on obscure cars is a whole 'nother can of worms.My god, the folks in this thread are OLD, lol.
Curious about all of your thoughts of the Chevy Nova. Me dad, uncle, and grandpa always talked about them because they were less-than-awesome cars, but CHEAP and EASY to repair (something about using cheaper metal/aluminum compared to major cars beforehand). Old cars that can be easily and cheaply repaired is something I envy immensely in current year...
My little 2002 Acura RL (almost old enough to buy a beer) has the dreaded P0401 OBDII error (EGR insufficient flow). It's been around for sometime and AZ didn't care, but Comiefornia failed my smog test after moving here (ONLY because CEL and nothing else -- smog and quality perfect otherwise!), so I'm off to a mechanic in my new stupid state (feeling kind of retarded right now tbh).
I know EGR insufficient flow can be fixed with cleaning gunk and maybe gasket replacement, but with mechanics these days? Replace all the shit! Look at this retard who can't fix cars in his apartment w/o tools and a garage (I'm forced to live in an apartment rn, sue me). I'm really afraid for the next two weeks...
Yeah, my older family always give me odd stories about cars in "the (good/not-good) old days". As a kid I always wanted a VW Bus for shits and giggles. I might get one someday, but the stupid cost and stick shift (dumb young American driver here, lol), is holding me back. Also, I like creature comforts too much...The old timers will tell you old cars are easier to work on, but I think by getting a car from a different era you're just trading in for different kinds of hard to fix. Unless you're talking 90s-00s Japanese then you're in like sin. For example, I have a 70s car with four wheel drum brakes where I have to split the hub and repack the bearings everytime I want to adjust the brakes. If I get it wrong I have to restart the process. On a 90s+ car, everything is self adjusting, and I don't have to special order parts to rebuild brakes. I can also pop in a cheap obdII Bluetooth reader to get engine codes and refer to a service manual instead of reverse engineering a carburetor with a sticky accelerator pump. Researching parts on obscure cars is a whole 'nother can of worms.
On your Acura you can find a full service manual online and follow a flow chart. The Honda manuals are super nice. I bet it's a PCV valve if it's never been cleaned. Should be a $5 part or a quick spray with carb cleaner or alcohol if you're cheap like me.
Also living in an area with emissions lol