@@brian56 yeah because that's not a 2000s thing right
@johnnymason24609 ай бұрын
They are absolutely right. The Aztek was from the 2000s, not the 1970s.
@czynski39 ай бұрын
Yes that balloon head move made me click BYE!
@robertpulliam99739 ай бұрын
What’s 30 years amongst friends?
@peaches88299 ай бұрын
Many of these cars had “poor performance” because they were never designed for performance, they were economical basic transportation, grocery getters
@Catbytes9 ай бұрын
I had a Chevette. I bought it because it was cheap and used way less gas than my GTOs. It never gave me any trouble.
@theclearsounds39119 ай бұрын
The poor performance was due to the government mandates for catalytic converters and other pollution reducing devices that were forced on auto makers before they were ready to be properly implemented. Most cars of that era suffered from this issue. The Chrysler Cordoba and Ford Grenada were hardly economical basic transportation.
@lancerevell59799 ай бұрын
@@theclearsounds3911Agreed. The only NEW car I ever bought was the 1979 Mercury Monarch, sister of the Granada. A total POS from day one. I finally traded it in on a 1975 Firebird, and was much happier, driving the 'Bird over 200,000 miles over eight years, literally wearing it out. 😊
@farmalmta9 ай бұрын
@@theclearsounds3911 Little known fact... the Grenada was a stretched Pinto, for all intents and purposes. Only the scorned Lincoln Versailles had actual decent car parts on it, like the famous Ford 9" rear axle and good brakes. The Big Three HATED little cars with such a passion because of lessened profitability under their bloated systems of doing business. Thus their revenge on their customers for demanding small economical cars was to give them nothing but cheap POS cars no matter what the size and cost.
@farmalmta9 ай бұрын
@@lancerevell5979 In 1976 my dad and I took a Grenada for a test drive... he shook his head and said, "I'll stick with the old '65 Ford Custom", which was a way better car he'd bought new in '65.
@lifelover23019 ай бұрын
The good thing about these cars is that they were not that hard to repair compared to the complicated cars of today !!
@jasonrodgers90639 ай бұрын
WAY true!!!
@tonyp28659 ай бұрын
Easier to crush, not worth fixing.
@ericsneary54309 ай бұрын
@@tonyp2865 LOL
@tonyp28659 ай бұрын
@@ericsneary5430
@kl0wnkiller9129 ай бұрын
While true, you also spent a LOT more time fixing them than newer cars. The 70s were a time when cars were still holding on to older technologies when people were wanting newer tech.
@Bluesmobile39 ай бұрын
The pinto did everything it was designed to do. It was quite reliable, also the mustang Ii was built on the same platform the pinto was. There are far too many mistakes in this video to list them all in one comment
@Toolaholic79 ай бұрын
It was not,the engine was a turd
@ramblerdave13399 ай бұрын
Indeed! All the AMC cars were disparaged far beyond what I experienced. They were as reliable as any one else's 70s cars were, and easy to work on. Some were, admittedly, visually challenged (not Aztec level though, although we were 30 years from finding out). And if they were underpowered, it meant you optioned it out wrong.
@bradzimmerman31719 ай бұрын
@@Toolaholic7oh is that why many good race drivers started out driving the “Pinto “ engine because it wasn’t-you are just wrong admit it
@robertmann72779 ай бұрын
Was it designed to blow up when hit???
@Toolaholic79 ай бұрын
@@bradzimmerman3171I am right,my dad has told me about them.He told me how bad they were
@stevelester62769 ай бұрын
Pintos were actually less involved in fires than volkswagon beetles . Look it up
@raymondo1629 ай бұрын
imagine the possibilities of a beetle, rear-ending a pinto ...........
@Doug-mc3dd9 ай бұрын
And Volkswagon Beetles turned over a lot easier than any Corvair would. But Ralph Nader hated GM and cars in general. GM was King and Nader wanted to bring them down. To this day Ralph Nader has never owned a car. FACT!
@ericknoblauch91959 ай бұрын
And in 1972 the Volkswagen Beetle took the title for the best selling car of all time away from Ford. The Beetle surpassed the Ford Model T in the total number produced. The Beetle continued in production in other countries, and was finally phased out in 2003. It started in production in 1938. The longest in production car platform ever. Very few changes were made, and no major restyling was done during it's run.
@gumpyoldbugger69449 ай бұрын
I had a Pinto wagon, pretty good car.....apart from the rust.....cars of those days started rusting out even before they were paid off......
@Doug-mc3dd9 ай бұрын
@@ericknoblauch9195 Yep cheap easy to get transportation. I had one for 6 months as I was between cars and got one to hold me over. Not the best built regarding quality but the were just basic transportation.
@waynedavis72459 ай бұрын
The Gremlin was nothing more than a shortened Hornet. I owned 4 of them. They were economy car and I didn't have any real problems with them. I drove them to work and the grocery store. That's what they were designed for. The only thing that they were bad for was getting loose on a wet road . That was because they were light in the back end .
@budgreen55596 ай бұрын
A gremlin with a 360 4bbl was a blast.
@alvarsdzenis47399 ай бұрын
Did anyone else notice in the last clip, that the "James Bond" Matador that jumps the river, is actually a 1974 AMC Hornet X Hatchback? lol
@lancerevell59799 ай бұрын
Yep, a well known continuity glitch. 😊
@buzzwaldron61959 ай бұрын
And at 04:04... LOL !!! This video doesn't realize that iron/aluminum engine was the Vega's BIGGEST FLAW !!!
@Lord_Goober8 ай бұрын
Yes and the movie was "Live And Let Die" not "Man With A Golden Gun"
@normanpatterson60128 ай бұрын
Hornet !!!!😅
@markchapmon86708 ай бұрын
@@buzzwaldron6195 And the serious lack of concern for rust preventitive coatings. They rusted horribly fast. If you overheated the engine, you were very likely to destroy the aluminum block. It was an attractive little hatchback that had styling that resembled the Camaro, but too many issues to make you want to keep it.
@coreybailey41739 ай бұрын
The Monte Carlo is a very expensive car now so I guess you really don't know what you're talking about their guy
@jeffrobodine85799 ай бұрын
One of GM's biggest sellers in the 1970's.
@outinthesticks10358 ай бұрын
It was a pretty good car back then as well
@douglaswildey52949 ай бұрын
Poorly done not much research or thought.
@eventhorizon22188 ай бұрын
for sure
@honestone4908 ай бұрын
Wrong choice of pictures to the vehicles being talked about made this video comical. This reviewer stood either in more subway cars or buses instead of sitting in private passenger cars in his lifetime than what he's willing to admit.
@kellilangley38759 ай бұрын
I had a 1980 Pinto which had over 400,000 miles on it; my first car and the best car I ever owned! Other than burning through clutches (my fault) it was a great car!
@larryhullinger41419 ай бұрын
How many engines and transmissions did it go through? No way in he'll did a stock pinto go 400,000 miles
@StevenRogers-hw9dj9 ай бұрын
@@larryhullinger4141 Sorry, Slappy, but it's not terribly uncommon. Most Pintos would rust to pieces before the engine ever needed anything beyond normal maintenance.
@ROCKOLA799 ай бұрын
@@larryhullinger4141 I think he meant 40,000mi cause that was about their lifespan.
@cavecookie19 ай бұрын
I had a friend who had a wagon that he loved. The body finally just about fell off the car, so he traded someone a little leatherwork for another wagon with a very good body, slapped it on his good chassis, and back on the road. Don't know how many miles that one had, but it was 6 figures, too!
@magform9 ай бұрын
If you had a Pinto out West, they could last. My 79 Bobcat ( Mercury's Pinto), had well over 300,000 miles when I got rid of it. But it was still running in 2001, as was my 64 F-100. I could only take two vehicles when I left CA. I took a 87 Celebrity, over 300K when it failed, and 83 B300, which at 250K, traded off for an 89 B300.
@rdhudon74699 ай бұрын
When I was in high school in the '70's my girlfriend had a denim edition Gremlin . The upholstery was denim . I really liked that little car and she didn't have any problems with it . I like allot of the cars listed here . Lol
@russellfinch51019 ай бұрын
I had a girlfriend that bought a new pacer. They were both gone soon after. If she bought a new javelin things might have worked out better. I loved those cars.
@ginaclute9 ай бұрын
buddy had the gremlin x too,304 and it was a blast on snowy parking lots
@lancerevell59799 ай бұрын
Nothing wrong with the Gremlin. They were on the roads far longer than the Pintos and Vegas of the same period.
@stoveboltlvr37989 ай бұрын
I remember denim in cars. Dodge had a truck called the Jean Machine that had stitch graphics on it with denim seats.
@Ramon-k1x9 ай бұрын
The gremlin was a awesome car to do brodys for days and it was never broke down on my friend who had two of them.
@socksumi9 ай бұрын
Monte Carlo does not belong on this list. It was pretty much on par with most late 70s large GM cars who's power and performance were choked out by emissions gear.
@docbrown65509 ай бұрын
If you try to purchase one of these Monte Carlos now, even without an engine, they are pricey and well worth it, they were awesome cars. The Cordoba was a great car also, not sure what this person has on his mind making this video.
@Eddie.D3469 ай бұрын
The early Monte Carlos were/are awesome; luxury and performance, they gave a good solid feeling ride, and handled decent enough.......I think this is THE WORST video ever made about the subject, just really terrible
@docbrown65509 ай бұрын
@@Eddie.D346 We have had both the Monte Carlo and the Chrysler Cordoba, they were great cars, the owner of this channel needs to find another type of work, they don't know anything about vehicles other than hearsay from others that don't know anything about them either.
@thethrillofpattaya84049 ай бұрын
The '70-'77 Monte Carlo was a Bitchin car then and is a Bitchin car now!
@troy24789 ай бұрын
I had a '76. I loved it.
@packard56829 ай бұрын
Most of these cars were big sellers for their respective companies and those same manufacturers wish they could sell any vehicle in the numbers that they were selling in the 70s.
@henrymp62959 ай бұрын
Take a swig on each 'Flawed Engineering' down a malted beverage when hearing 'Lackluster.' If you wake up, it will be next week.
@raymondo1629 ай бұрын
d'as true dat is
@tinyb699 ай бұрын
This video had some seriously flawed engineering.
@chribm9 ай бұрын
My neighbor had a Pacer, he loved that ugly thing. I had a 79 Cordoba, it was a decent car, V8 318 and plenty of get up and go and carried my early family around just fine. It was easy to work on too.
@georgemontgomery94228 ай бұрын
I also had a 79 Cordoba with a 360. Wasn't anything to brag about but it wasn't a stone either.
@JimCrouch-cm6oj7 ай бұрын
Number 6 sparkplug in the pacer what a nightmare becauae of recess3s firewall
@davidlafleche11424 ай бұрын
@@chribm AMC made beautiful cars
@robertpolnicky7702Күн бұрын
I always liked pacers too even though I knew it was ugly.
@stratcat44509 ай бұрын
I had 3 chevettes. First one was quite used, but i put a ton of trouble free miles on it.The following 2 i bought new. Same experience, never took one back for warranty work, replaced a few batteries an at least 1 starter. These were all work cars, as a tri county service tech in metro Detroit. They all gained very high mileage in a few years but still reliable cars. I made a tidy extra income off those cars with the company reimbursement that put food on the table an clothes on my kids backs! Most of my co workerd always bought cars that they took a loss on due to the cost. I didn't look cool, didn't care an although far from a performance machine, it handled navigating all the various freeways in metro Detroit just fine.
@Toolaholic79 ай бұрын
My mom had one and dad hated it.He was always working on it calling it a shovette when it broke down
@fanggun42199 ай бұрын
My dad bought one new..told me something goes clunk around corners. I found a 13 mm impact socket in the pass. side door. 😅 Told him to sell it quick after they drove it through miles of ash from Mt Saint Helen's eruption. Alot of stops made to clean the air filter. 😮
@johnstuartsmith9 ай бұрын
@@fanggun4219 I worked at a California auto parts store when Mt St Helens erupted. Air filters were back-ordered for us for about a month because the people in the Pacific NorthWest needed the existing inventory then bought all the air filters the factories could put out.
@Catbytes9 ай бұрын
I had a Chevette. It was cheap and never had a problem with it.
@stratcat44509 ай бұрын
@@Catbytes I wish I had one now. Cheap, reliable and no computer chips to go out or succumb to some type of emp!
@verucasalt23919 ай бұрын
My first car was a 1977 Volaré. It was a 318 V8 4-speed and was a great car. My dad put chrome rims, white-letter tires and installed a kick-ass stereo. It was a great car, it was quick and fun to drive and overall was a great car. So there. 🤪
@adamtrombino1068 ай бұрын
They did have rust recalls for front fenders and the cowl area that were later resolved. In extreme use, front transverse torsion bars would break causing taxi and police agencies to shy away from them for 78-80. But the over all design lasted until 1989 in the M cars, and made Chrysler a ton of $. 83-85 Fifth Aves were strong sellers. They weren't anything more than restyled Volare' s with the same platform and same running gear, with all the fluff 1 could slather on. They weren't terrible cars at all.
@ghostfox35609 ай бұрын
You say "that nobody wants back", well... Hi. I'm Nobody. I want ALL of these body styles back. Granted, the designs can be tweaked to work better with safety standards, but I would LOVE to see these body styles return.
@gearmeister8 ай бұрын
Even the Dodge Vo-Larry? 😂
@aaronwilliams69899 ай бұрын
The Chrysler Cordoba was quite popular in the 1970s. It was the 1980s when it deflated and faded into oblivion. A lot of cars showed in this video are from the 1980s.
@jeffrobodine85799 ай бұрын
Chrysler's bankruptcy in the early 1980's led them to focus on the new K platform and not invest much engineering into it's aging rear wheel drive platform cars that would be phased out after 1988.
@aaronwilliams69899 ай бұрын
@jeffrobodine8579 That's absolutely true. But the Cordoba's new styling and lousy performance was the main reason it was dropped from Chrysler's lineup.
@aaronwilliams69899 ай бұрын
@@jeffrobodine8579 The new Crystal Cordoba of the early 80s was a sales flop.
@donjohnson38047 ай бұрын
Cordoba's lack of reliability honored me with 235,000 miles.
@orvilleherndon9 ай бұрын
I would happily buy several of these cars. They looked better than many of today's cars.
@georgehays49009 ай бұрын
I still miss Ricardo Montalbon (spelling?) trying to sell me rich Corinthian leather.
@TheSleepingonit9 ай бұрын
Fantasy Island
@s.morris40999 ай бұрын
I always liked the Cordoba... rented many of them when traveling in the 70s they were comfortable and responsive midsize cars.
@fdholley5 ай бұрын
I don't want any type of leather unless it's corinthian leather 😅 😂
@adamtrombino1068 ай бұрын
Oddly enough nearly all of these 'worse cars' on this list sold very well and for many yrs. Many of these cars sold over 1 million copies by the time production was through. The 'data' and pics of the featured cars is all over the place in this upload. But I do like the old commercials :)
@fanggun42199 ай бұрын
I had a 79 Granada 2 door with the 302 ...great car. 😊
@jeaniepatterson23849 ай бұрын
I’d love to have one now!
@troy24789 ай бұрын
A good friend of mine had a mid 70s Granada. It seemed like a great car. I know he really liked it.
@Karrpilot9 ай бұрын
We had one in drivers education class. No one wanted to drive it. We all wanted the Chevrolet Caprice.
@derrikpeterson53938 ай бұрын
My first car in 1998 was a 1982 monte Carlo with a V6 turbo. It burned 1/2 as much oil as it did gas but I liked it.
@kevinharrissr52558 ай бұрын
My girlfriend married me because I told her I have a vette. Imagine her disappointment when I went to pick her up in my chevette. She left me😢😢😢
@monghuni7988 ай бұрын
🤣🤣
@HenryAshy7 ай бұрын
If she married you because you told her you have vette and she broke up with you because you picked her up in a chevette you kinda avoided a red flag
@sailawaybob7 ай бұрын
LoL I referred to mine as a Vette too
@Seadweller451D6 ай бұрын
Don’t Give Up! Get a Plymouth Volare!
@ramblerdave13394 ай бұрын
My sister went out with a guy who said he had a Corvette, When he took her to his house to show her, it was completely disassembled, in his basement (It was a '53, though!). I guess I was more impressed than she was.
@MustangGuru9 ай бұрын
Took my drivers test in a Vega cam back manual transmission. Bought a cosworth Vega. Black with gold trim. Loved that little car.
@Rontonito9 ай бұрын
In 1992 my first car was a 1972 Matador. Do I want it back? Absolutely!
@TheSleepingonit9 ай бұрын
I want the 1971 Chevy Stepside I had in the 90s back
@troy24789 ай бұрын
My sister had one of those. It was okay, but hers was a 4 door and not very good looking. I don't remember us having any mechanical issues with it.
@williamwhite97678 ай бұрын
The AMC Pacer was a very quiet comfortable car to drive much like a luxury car. I test drove one and I like it.
@jimdavis68339 ай бұрын
I seldom give thumbs downs, but this one is well earned.
@commandertopgun9 ай бұрын
I UNDERSTAND BASE ON THE DATA, FROM THE 1970S, BUT I STILL DO LOVE THE MAJORITY OF THEM, BUT, I HAVE THE FUNDS TO RESTOMOD ANYONE TO TODAYS SAFETY STANDARDS, GREAT INFORMATIVE VIDEO ALL THE SAME, THANKS ( America Before )
@jimmyfleetwood11189 ай бұрын
Not sure I'd agree about the Cordoba--at least the 1st gen. A family member bought a 1976 new. Rock solid chassis. The handling, power, and brakes were above average, when compared to the other large cars we had access to. Even the mileage was fair, and even good, compared to the 1975 Buick we had. Drove it in to the 1990's with a minimum of problems.
@mikemiura77408 ай бұрын
Love your show and facts, I was an auto mechanic on those same cars way back then. My 1st car was a 68 amc Javelin. Not brand new but still awesome. I was young and sold it. Today I wish I had it back. 72, 74, Jav's are almost untouchable per $$$. It's a shame how I have let the past go. Thank you for your video
@edfry35319 ай бұрын
I had a 1972 Pinto and loved it. It was hit in the back end by a fool driving a NASA car. Didn't explode. I should have went after NASA, but I was young and was just glad that my wife and new born son were not harmed.
@bradzimmerman31719 ай бұрын
Unlike the “boomer gM “square body pick up that exploded on contact that gM got away with,the Pinto problem was in the “Run-a-bout hatch back only,gM continued to build their rust prone truck from 1973 to 1987 they should be ashamed
@lancerevell59799 ай бұрын
My Sister's first car was a 1976 Pinto, Dad bought it for her brand new. She had no trouble until she got broadsided by a drunk and totalled. The gas tank placement wasn't the problem, as most cars of the period had the same style. The construction of the tank was more prone to bursting open.
@Loulovesspeed9 ай бұрын
@TRM364 - He likely is speaking of the disastrous Chevy/GM trucks made with the 'side saddle' fuel tanks, mounted outside of the frame rails with no protection from impact. Over 10M trucks were made that way and GM never upgraded or recalled them due to "cost reasons." Between 1973 and 2009, more than 2,000 deaths were attributed to this major design flaw. The D.O.T. called it the "worst auto crash fire defect in the history of the D.O.T!! Made the Pinto exploding fuel tank debacle look like nothing! Also, Ford corrected the problem while GM did nothing. One of the main reasons I detest Geriatric Motors to this day.
@VashthStampeede9 ай бұрын
@TRM364The retrofit recall Ford did on the early Pintos was to install a rubber boxing glove onto the trackbar bolt so it would punch a dent into the fuel tank instead of puncturing a hole in it.😂😮
@stevespatola7639 ай бұрын
Try LMC Truck for those classic car parts. Find them on the web. The squarebodys are very much in demand now.
@robertmann72779 ай бұрын
Where's the Yugo, you missed the boat on that one!!!
@Frank-r3y2i9 ай бұрын
Yugo mid 80s this video refers to 70s although this video is loaded with errors so yeah why not Yugos sucked.😊
@decay214509 ай бұрын
@@Frank-r3y2i A 31 year-old girl in a Yugo blew off the Mackinac Bridge in 1989 going to see her boyfriend, although the Mackinac Bridge Authority maintains it was operator error.
@larrysloan92969 ай бұрын
Not american
@codyluka83559 ай бұрын
Came out in the late 80s and not American. But yeah, horrible cars.
@stratcat44509 ай бұрын
AMC built underrated cars for an affordable price. I had several friends that had gremlins that were beat to hell an still ran better every day than fords an gms offerings.
@pb68slab189 ай бұрын
AMC motors were practically indestructible! Especially the 258 straight-six. Had one in my Jeep. Hard off-roading, pl.owing, towing, went almost 300k before the body rotted away.
@lancerevell59799 ай бұрын
I was a setious AMC guy in the 1970s and early 1980s. I owned three Javelins and a 1968 AMX 2-seater, a couple buddies had Hornets. All good cars. AMC was always very unappreciated.
@pb68slab189 ай бұрын
@@lancerevell5979 Tried like hell to find a 401 to put in my factory 304 CJ-7! Settled for a 360. Bored it .030" over, mild cam, Performer intake & carb. Jeep got stolen! Now Edelbrock has aluminum heads!
@codyluka83559 ай бұрын
AMCs were quite a bit more expensive to buy, the upper models like the Matador and Ambassador. Certainly very underrated.
@georgemontgomery94228 ай бұрын
Had a 71 Monte Carlo with a 454. It would literally peel out of sight. Both tires, no power braking, just let of the brake and stab the gas to the floor.
@bwtv1479 ай бұрын
That “unique”, “innovative” aluminum engine in the Chevy Vega was the car’s major design flaw. Most aluminum engines have iron or steel cylinder liners. Chevrolet engineers thought an aluminum / silicon alloy engine block wouldn’t need cylinder liners. They were proven wrong.
@Ramon-k1x9 ай бұрын
Yeah but you reinforced the frame and put a 350 Chevy and four speed you had a race car for strip of course.
@stefanl51839 ай бұрын
Yep! This was their biggest flaw. Also, if memory serves me right, I believe the cylinders in the block were siamiesed which made the problem even worse because uneven expansion made the cylinders become oval instead of round when the engine got hot. That resulted in uneven wear which quickly wore through the coating on the cylinder walls and totally ruined the engine. It was basically a throw away engine.
@matthewstorm51889 ай бұрын
The engine also had a cast iron head, which is just pure stupidity on an aluminum block.
@buzzwaldron61959 ай бұрын
Yeppers... 04:04 LOL !!! This video doesn't realize that iron/aluminum engine was the Vega's BIGGEST FLAW !!! Never let it get low on coolant and overheat!
@reilleylawrence72489 ай бұрын
Had a '78 Roadrunner ( Volare with Go Fast stickers) that was a great car and actually had good performance
@ericknoblauch91959 ай бұрын
😢The AMC gremlin in the 1970's went out of production but it lived on when AMC took out the small rear windows and put in large windows like the chevette had. They called it the AMC spirit. The spirit was a gremlin platform and drivetrain. It was the same car but only had larger rear left and right windows.
@Bobby-kp6ln8 ай бұрын
My first car was a 77 Mercury Monarch. 302, auto with bucket seats. Nice car
@rhrh20257 ай бұрын
The Pinto and Vega always looked like death traps. The Gremlin looked unsafe, but the people I know who had them, all said they were good vehicles. The Pontiac Aztec wasn't around in the 70s. I'm not a Chrysler person, so I can't comment on their products!
@edgardagosto19178 ай бұрын
At least those 1970,s cars came with an 8Track tape stereo
@Keir3339 ай бұрын
Still have many fond memories of my first car....a 1973 Pontiac Aztec! ;)
@decay214509 ай бұрын
The car is even fugly as a time traveler.
@buzzwaldron61959 ай бұрын
You mean Astre... 04:04 LOL !!! This video doesn't realize that iron/aluminum engine was the Vega's BIGGEST FLAW !!! Never let it get low on coolant and overheat! Pinto 1600 was more reliable than 2.0, 2.3, or 2.5L with no timing belt to keep breaking. Pontiac fixed the Vega-cousin Astre with that Iron Duke 4 engine with no timing belt or aluminum cylinders... not even a timing chain... just timing gears! Still have my ultra rare '77 Pontiac Astre FORMULA Safari (kammback) Station Wagon! 5 speed manual, posi, 28 MPG City/34 MPG Hwy...
@decay214509 ай бұрын
@@buzzwaldron6195 I drove an '86 Fiero, Iron Duke 5-spd. for years, mostly to work. Trouble-free and over 30 mpg.
@deborahphillips5008 ай бұрын
Got a used Dodge Aspen 4-door sedan model that I used primarily for a long work commute. Also got used for a bit over a year for traveling to science fiction conventions with a carload of friends. Positives: Tons of interior and trunk space - five, sometimes six, people and their weekend luggage could ride comfortably. It was also pretty economical on gas. Negatives: The slant-6 engine struggled with uphill highway driving, redlining to the max. At the crest, I took my foot off the gas and just steered as the engine cooled off. Also, Dodge hadn’t rustproofed it worth a damn that model year. After 3 years, all four fenders fell off, literally.
@RC-Flight9 ай бұрын
I had an orange gremlin and loved it! I once saw a gremlin with a chev small block 350 under the hood and the back wheel wells were tubbed out with wide mags wheels and stabilizer bars. It was at the drive in when I was 17.
@allenbush14539 ай бұрын
I had the 1976 Vega, hatch back, 2 doors. I kept up with the engine, transmission and rear end maintenance. All in all, it was a very good n awesome car!!! He'll I sucked up a Monzda 2+2 with a 305 v 8. On miniwawa in Clovis, between Barstow north to Bullard....
@peterdelestrez88809 ай бұрын
The Cordoba was a luxury car. The 70s models had strong acceleration and a good ride. The 80s models looked nice, but had poor acceleration. But the 70s models were big sellers for Chrysler. Everyone I knew who owned one, loved them.
@ronolund36049 ай бұрын
I bet that was primarily due to the "Rich corrithian leather"😂
@danw60149 ай бұрын
They were available with a big block until 1978.
@adamtrombino1068 ай бұрын
@@danw6014 400 cid until '79.
@adamtrombino1068 ай бұрын
The 75 and 76 had the #2 spot in sales behind the MC for personal luxury coupes. If you knew what box to check, you could special order a P code cop 400 4bbl V8 with all the HD goodies that police cars came with. Ford and GM offered nothing like it. Granted, the ELB system and rust were serious issues with the 75-79s, but this car was a serious cash cow for Chrysler at the time. The 80-83 sales and production never came close to even the 4 yr old 79s. There was 1 recall on the 75-79 for front wheel bearing failures, which turned out to be caused by improper torque settings on the production lines, not the parts themselves.
@danw60148 ай бұрын
@@adamtrombino106 any Chrysler product that had a big block in 79 was just using up inventory.
@philmonat93528 ай бұрын
Both the Gremlin, 671,475 sold and Pinto, 1.3M sold were reliable cars and a good 70's fit. Pinto downfall was purely pollical, An official total of 27 deaths was tied to the vehicle, to blame it on impact explosions due to the gas tank. (GM probably had a hand in it.)
@stephaniebooth61699 ай бұрын
The Mustang 2 was a very good car well built and were do get off on saying bad things about AMC Amercan Motors made very safe reliable cars that were not under powered at all.
@fehlrock8 ай бұрын
My cousin had a '74 Mustang II Giha. Wonderful car.
@broeheemed329 ай бұрын
"LOL" at the 'the mustang suffered decreased handing...'. The front steering and suspension components were legendary compared to most cars from that era, and were used on countless hot rods, restomods, kit cars. Aftermarket probably sold more of these parts that Ford ever put into the cars.
@thomasward45058 ай бұрын
The pinto design was very similar to other cars as far as the gas tank placement. The main problem was that Ford knew this and did not take care of it
@donkeppler74449 ай бұрын
The 400 equipped Cordoba more than kept up with anything in its class. You also included a picture of o 1978 LeBaron as a Cordoba.
@MIKELIN88 ай бұрын
I had a Chevette in the late 80s. It was awful. It constantly blew out the starter. I must have had it replaced 4 or 5 times. I got rid of it fairly quickly...but not quick enough. My first car was a Ford Granada. It was a tank. I got hit by other drivers twice, and didn't have any injuries. The rear axle had to be replaced once, though.
@Jon-d6i9 ай бұрын
I have to strongly disagree, with this video. These cars, had style, and character of their own, compared to what we have today . Simple, no computers, no touch screens, roll down windows, Chrome bumpers, and character and style of their own. YES, I would love see these affordable cars, back. AND, yes I would love to buy all of them, OVER any BORING YUPPIE MOBILE sold today.
@tomrob36548 ай бұрын
Cars of the 1970s, Pontiac Aztec? A quirky design but otherwise an innovative concept. Too bad It wasn't a '70's design.
@DeutschlandGuy9 ай бұрын
I can't even begin to list the inaccuracies and mistakes in this video, which is ironic giving its purpose of pointing out flaws in automobiles. Don't even bother watching this video.
@buzzwaldron61959 ай бұрын
Yes sir... 04:04 LOL !!! This video doesn't realize that iron/aluminum engine was the Vega's BIGGEST FLAW !!! Never let it get low on coolant and overheat!
@mikemartin29579 ай бұрын
@@buzzwaldron6195let me get this right; are you saying this engine has an alloy block & a CAST IRON HEAD? That's a grave error in design! Did GM farm the design & production of this engine to a RIVAL company?
@peterblood14869 ай бұрын
I had a Cordoba with a 400 ci v8. It had plenty of power and rode like a dream. They were decent cars til they downsized them.
@andreamassara5909 ай бұрын
12:18 - Chevrolet Aveo? Looks like a Renault 16. 13:42 - Bar its name, British Ford Granada has nothing in common with the American Granada. 14:50 - What is a Mercedes S-Class W116 doing here? 21:32 and 21:37 - It's a Plymouth Horizon/Dodge Omni, no Plymouth Cricket.
@mikemartin29579 ай бұрын
Yes the video is a bit mixed up! The British made MK1 Granada & Consul were a hugely successful model for Ford of Britain , offering unbeatable value for money in 1972 to 1976( production moved to Germany in late 76 to make way for Fiestas at Dagenham) & the great marketing in using a Consul GT in the hugely popular TV series 'The Sweeney' ! Chrysler made the grave error of withdrawing the Cricket, just at the time of a fuel crisis & as Toyota, Datsun & Mazda were gaining in huge sales. It's British equivalent the Hillman Avenger had reasonable sales& sporting success .
@troy24789 ай бұрын
I had a 76 Monte Carlo. I loved that car. I didn't have any problems. My mom liked it so much she bought an 82 Monte Carlo.
@aviatortrucker62859 ай бұрын
I loved my 1971 Ford Pinto. It was my very first car as it was a hand me down from my father. I drove that thing until 1981 when the engine threw a rod at about 230,000 miles. It was the 1.6 L with the one barrel carburetor that didn’t have an overhead cam or the rubber band timing belt. My father bought it brand new as one of the first of the Mahwah New Jersey assembly plant back in May 1970. After it was deemed as a rear end collision hazard, I placed a large “Flammable” diamond shaped sticker on the trunk. Later on around its 9 year mark, the fuel economy sucked as it was about 15mpg highway even with the 4 speed manual. This car was a rear wheel drive with 3.55 rear and a four-speed manual direct drive transmission. It turned about 3100 RPM at 60 mph. I think it was only about 110 hp. The other options for this vehicle later on was the 2.0 overhead cam and the 2.3 overhead cam. As far as the body was concerned, eventually, it did rust out at the floorboard, and I had to place a plywood board underneath the driver seat all the way up to the firewall.
@buzzwaldron61959 ай бұрын
Always avoided cars with timing belts... they were going to break and leave you stranded...
@aviatortrucker62859 ай бұрын
@@buzzwaldron6195 but unlike today those broke, they were un-interference types. So you never had any damage. Today’s timing belt engines are interference engines, and will smash valves if the belt breaks while you are driving.
@buzzwaldron61959 ай бұрын
@@aviatortrucker6285 - Actually it's usually the other way around, early engines are crash engines, later ones have clearance... early Ford Escort engines crashed, exaggerated by timing belt also driving water pump which seized at 25K miles breaking the timing belt...
@Karrpilot9 ай бұрын
I just don't know how the Ford Maverick didn't get on that list. The only car i ever had that the subframe rotted thru the floors.
@gkiltz09 ай бұрын
At least the Pinto for all it's flaws was more fun to drive and more reliable than the Vega and had higher peerformance than the Gremlin which had a higher-displacement engine/
@bradzimmerman31719 ай бұрын
Absolutely,if treated properly they were worth buying,considering the performance of other brands they did ok
@buzzwaldron61959 ай бұрын
Vega/Astre were better looking and more fun to drive! Pontiac fixed the Vega-cousin Astre with that Iron Duke 4 engine with no timing belt... not even a timing chain... just timing gears! Still have my ultra rare '77 Pontiac Astre FORMULA Safari (kammback) Station Wagon! 5 speed manual, posi, 28 MPG City/34 MPG Hwy...
@bobgambill64957 ай бұрын
My mom and dad had a monarch. It was always breaking the a arms. But I don't remember having any engine issues. It ran good for years.
@CarlSwanson-e7f9 ай бұрын
Back in 1980s most of the cars were easy to work on. Now you have to get even an oil change at the dealership.
@artierosesmithie91919 ай бұрын
Had the brown 1979 Chevette 2dr hatchback shown here at 11:09. Mine was 4 spd manual. Loved it, got great milage and the folding rear seat was nice, adding storage space when moving. Drove it daily in all weather, went where I wanted, traction was good in snows and ice, while more powerful cars got stuck I chugged along slowly but safely. Even the large rear vent windows were nice since mine did not have air. Wish I still had it. Lost it in the mid 80's. Was told by a mechanic that I should not use a 1984 Chevette 2 dr hatchback to tow a trailer. I towed a small seven foot u-haul trailer from Florida to New York State, ran like a champ, overheated in Va, changed out a thermostat for five bucks, did all the preventive maintenance myself, and then computers came along. Point is the car took all I gave it and survived the drive . had to sell it cheap for 300 didn't want to, needed cash. Never had my Pinto explode either, also the Pinto Hatchback took all I gave it and more.
@bobfeller6049 ай бұрын
The Monte Carlo with a 400 was a good performer.
@rymacreeks2k078 ай бұрын
Ah, the well known 1970s car, the...Pontiac Aztek?
@leifsaw9 ай бұрын
Had a 1973 Pinto with 295000 miles on it. Car never let me down.
@mzaccagnini71799 ай бұрын
I agreed with most of this except what you said about the Montycarlo. The Montycarlo was one of the best cars out there.I know because I've owned two of the 2nd gens and my brother has a 1st gen.and they are I my opinion the best cars ever made.
@426Hemisrule9 ай бұрын
The Pontiac Aztek was manufactured from 2001 to 2005, sot the reviewer is only off about 30 years. Also, what kind of idiot tries to make a comparison between a Chrysler Cordoba and an AMC Pacer? Also, keep in mind that many of the criticisms of lackluster performance in these mid-'70s cars were the result of the manufacturers trying to deal with attaining improved fuel economy after the Arab oil embargo and meeting higher emissions standards.
@JoeL-gf9wz8 ай бұрын
I had a 1975 Monte Carlo Landau. One of the best cars I owned.
@nicolasanderson9 ай бұрын
Every car from the mid 70’s on had poor performance. They all sucked compared to the 60’s then all the way to the 90’s when we finally started having power and performance come back on the scene.
@hemihead0019 ай бұрын
Sorry but the 80's had some hot cars .
@aulduronsmith55779 ай бұрын
I'll pass on anymore '80s cars. I don't even want a TA or Z-28.
@buzzwaldron61959 ай бұрын
Actually, Vega, Astre, Gran Prix, and Pinto brought good MPG back stating in 1976!
@joelnordstrom80498 ай бұрын
Excuse me!! Play 75 Ford LTD 4-door w a 351M400. great car
@rickradix61748 ай бұрын
Aztec was produced between 2000-2005.
@randallrobertson42029 ай бұрын
It was a Cordoba , not a sports Car they're not supposed to handle like it's on rails..
@adamtrombino1068 ай бұрын
But it did handle better than any GM and Ford personal luxury coupe from 75-77, with a tighter turning radius and better brakes even in its most std form. You could opt for hd suspension, shocks, brakes, and 2 HD engines. Again Ford and GM offered nothing like that in those yrs.
@nomanjones48039 ай бұрын
I would take any of those cars compared to the junk of today.
@josephmclennan12299 ай бұрын
Pintos are good little cheap cars . The Vega was junk
@bobbybrown9319 ай бұрын
If you had a Vega you had to plan to swap engines they were pure trash unless sleeved.
@Toolaholic79 ай бұрын
The pinto engines were trash
@74Husky9 ай бұрын
@@Toolaholic7 You needed the standard transmission. A Pinto with an automatic was awful. The early Pintos with the 1600 cc engines were poor performers. When Ford started installing the larger engines they were much better.
@Toolaholic79 ай бұрын
@@74Husky Still were a pile of trash
@williamj.mchale69239 ай бұрын
@@Toolaholic7 NOT TRUE! The 2.3 and 2.5 liter four soldiered on under the hoods of Ford Ranger pickup trucks through 2001. Also used in Mustangs and Thunderbirds in turbocharged versions. Simple, reliable, and TOUGH!
@richardbutton11799 ай бұрын
"Lack of performance" blame emissions for that not the car makers
@johang74989 ай бұрын
I'm not even going to begin mentioning all the wrong images shown, all the superficial assumptions based on hearsay and the assessment of these models based on wrong expectations (monte carlo was always a personal luxury coupé, rather than a sports car for example and who would have guessed that a cheap economy car didn't perform like a muscle car?). The inclusion of the Pontiac aztek on a list of cars from the 1970s pretty much sums it all up. I just want to mention that most of these cars were commercially very succesfull because they were very right for their (emissions-choked) time (Ford sold over 3 million pintos in 10 years to name one) and ... are way more stylish than most of todays SUVs.
@RottenAnimal8 ай бұрын
I had a 74 AMC Hornet. In the winter I would ice fish on lake Simcoe, north of Toronto. I would drive on the frozen lake as fast as I could until the car stared to drift to one side. Then I'd turn the steering wheel all the way toward the side it was drifting then floor it. I'd be doing 80 or 90 MPH spinning like a top across the lake. One time, my cousin was sleeping off his hang over in the back while the car was spinning down the lake.
@LouisSaalbach9 ай бұрын
That is an AMC Hornet, not a Matador in the Bond film clip. Oops 🤪!
@StevenRogers-hw9dj9 ай бұрын
This channel proves that any clod can have a KZbin account.
@harbingerofkharma7 ай бұрын
the Matador was the car Christopher Lee turned into an airplane and flew out of the barn escaping Bond and the Hillbilly Sheriff. And that corkscrew jump the Hornet did was REAL!
@mpetersen67 ай бұрын
@@harbingerofkharma One of the best car stunts ever filmed and they ruined it with the stupid slide whistle.
@MisterMikeTexas9 ай бұрын
For an "undesirable choice", the Monte Carlo did quite good. I sure saw I lot of em! Chevy did something right.
@kingrex19319 ай бұрын
The Pontiac Aztec wasn't made in the 1970s and they were actually good cars for what they were: crossover SUVs. Even the looks aren't that bad compared to many other vehicles that came out after them in this class. It was just ahead of its time.
@kbuh5059 ай бұрын
No offense to you but I thought that was the ugliest car made. It made the Edsel look nice.
@kingrex19319 ай бұрын
@@kbuh505 Take a look at the Nissan Juke, Nissan Cube Honda Element or the Tesla Cybertruck. I'm not saying that the Aztek is a good looking car, but there are plenty of cars that look just as bad or worse than it does.
@kbuh5059 ай бұрын
@@kingrex1931 I’ll give you the Tesla truck. That is up there as far as bad looks.
@anthonytursak519 ай бұрын
The Monte Carlo was a huge success!!
@seanhoward55629 ай бұрын
I had a 1978 Monte Carlo. It wasn't too bad, but when the catalytic converter kept getting plugged up, I gave it away.
@SuperDean19579 ай бұрын
I had one also. To date the worst car I ever had in my life. Luckily the National speed limit was 55 mph. It couldn't do 60..
@jasonrodgers90639 ай бұрын
So, cut off the catalytic and put in a straight pipe! That's what I did with my 1977 Camaro! Emission tests required from the Gestapo state govt? I got a P.O. box in a neighboring jurisdiction, registered it THERE!
@jeffrobodine85799 ай бұрын
@@SuperDean1957I had a 1979 Monte Carlo with a 155 horsepower 305 CID 4 barrel V-8 and that thing flew. You must have had the 267 CID 2 barrel V-8 with only 115 horsepower.
@jeaniepatterson23849 ай бұрын
Pinto was a great car. They fixed the problem with the gas tank. That 2.3 was very reliable. Loved mine.
@johnmccree89419 ай бұрын
Also had a pinto wagon.
@bobbybrown9319 ай бұрын
What did you expect out of cheap cars w max govt interference
@drivingmyoldcar19749 ай бұрын
I've owned a 1974 Monte Carlo Lando, fully optioned, since 1984 and still use it *TODAY* as my daily driver. I do not disagree with the less-than stellar performance of the detuned engine thanks to government regs, but I respectfully disagree with everything else. DeLorean redesigned the Monte Carlo for 1973 to address handling issues by changing the steering geometry and adding sway-bars. Several years back, some guy in a Firebird tried to race me around some curves… he was surprised I out ran him. When I bought the car, it had nearly 100,000 miles on it and there were electrical issues which were caused by a previous owner or some inept mechanic. I restored the wiring to factory correct and haven't had any issues since. To address the lack of power, I built a performance engine. That engine didn't produce enough vacuum for the cruise control or for the brake booster while parking in a parking lot. I solved that by installing a vacuum pump and an auxiliary vacuum storage canister. I currently have north of 500k miles and everything in the car still works. The 1970s was a tough time for all US car makers thanks to government regulations. The 5-mph bumper requirement presented all sorts of styling limitations and complying with the emissions standards was, as history shows, challenging to say the least. All the emission equipment (A.I.R, E.G.R, fuel vapor canister, etc.) used vacuum. Each of these things was essentially a controlled vacuum leak managed by the carburetor. It was a delicate balancing act of herculean proportions. All it would take to throw everything off would be a loose vacuum hose or a ruptured diaphragm. It's easy to see where the perception of unreliability came from. As for desirability, there's hardly a week that goes by when someone doesn't ask me if I want to sell it.
@BEdwardStover9 ай бұрын
2001 was in the 19702?????????????????????????????????????????? Pontiac Aztek was made from 2001 to 2005.
@sf-dn8rh8 ай бұрын
A car that should be here, the 79 to 82 Datsun 210, rust, electrical issues and bad manufacturing of the a series engine, plus the recalls
@monghuni7988 ай бұрын
My 3rd car was an '82 Datsun 210 2-door. I bought it in '84 with VERY low mileage. A cop pulled me over advising a taillight was out. It was full of water! No ticket, but had to drain it replaced all bulbs, then added an epoxy sealant around the lens. Fixed it.
@MeadowFarmer9 ай бұрын
The Mustang II was a very nice car, but it wasn't a performance car and didn't deserve the Mustang name. The 71, 72, and 73, mustangs certainly couldn't be considered as "pony" cars either.
@troy24789 ай бұрын
Nothing from the mid 70s performed. Even the Corvette had less than 200 hp by the end of the decade. I think all of those cars looked good, they just need to be restored with better engines.
@MeadowFarmer9 ай бұрын
@@troy2478 The Trans AM is probably the only iconic mid to late 70s muscle car, though even that was greatly underpowered compared to 1960s cars. Smog was a big problem so starting in 1970 they decreased the compression ratio and put the spark plugs at an angle. This reduced the flame temperature during ignition which reduced nitrous oxides that caused the smog. in 1972 they had to reduce the compression more to comply with unleaded gas. By 1975 all cars were required to have catalytic converters and burn unleaded gas. They had bypass valves that would scavenge a little exhaust to mix with the intake which would further decrease emissions and rob power. They also had air pumps to further reduce emissions. Modern cars have fuel injection, multiple oxygen sensors, precise ignition timing, and cam timing. These controls increase horse power and fuel economy, and able to keep the ignition temperature low enough to prevent most NOX.
@4knanapapa9 ай бұрын
My dad had a 1976 Monty Carlo bought new, and after over 40 years of car ownership he said it was the best road car he ever owned.
@ToxicMasculinity-t5q9 ай бұрын
When i was a kid in the 70s, my dad always said "If a dog pisses on the tire of a Chrysler product it wont start for a week!"
@RustyBuzzard-pv2ce9 ай бұрын
Mine runs like a top today. Is your 45 year-old car still running ?
@ToxicMasculinity-t5q9 ай бұрын
@@RustyBuzzard-pv2ce Well whoopie fucking doo....
@buzzwaldron61959 ай бұрын
Chrysler product owners know to carry a spare ignition ballast resister in their pocket for when the previous one burns out...
@mikemartin29579 ай бұрын
@@buzzwaldron6195Chrysler insisted the ballast burns out because the wrong ignition coil is fitted; I discovered that Mitsubishi coils with higher primary ohms were in some cases fitted instead of the usual Mopar coils.
@buzzwaldron61959 ай бұрын
@@mikemartin2957 - I would expect higher coil resistance to be easier on the ballast resister... in any event, most older drivers know of the very common Chrysler ballast resister problem...
@ronalddunn2912 ай бұрын
Now Do a video about the cars today and let everyone see where the scale ends! 😆
@impalaman97079 ай бұрын
Like a vet who takes in a sick unwanted deformed dog and nurses it back to health and keeps it for a pet, I've seen some of these cars mentioned being owned by AUTO MECHANICS, who feel sorry for those cars and tinker with them on a regular basis to keep them going and drive them as their daily driver to and from their shop and keeping them alive for DECADES!
@markthomas39048 ай бұрын
The 1973-1979 Monte Carlos were the hottest and most desirable cars of the decade, along with the Pontiac Grand Prix and Oldsmobile Cutlass. It’s astounding and irresponsible to include it in this list.
@monghuni7988 ай бұрын
I LOVED my '73 Olds Cutlass "S" coupe, with it's 350 Rocket V8! What a car!
@ChetJang9 ай бұрын
Pinto's stayed on the road for many years, and that 2-liter motor was relatively reliable. The Chevy Vega's had aluminum engines that wore out quickly; they disappeared from the roads in just a few years. The Mustang II was basically a Pinto. Many cars from that time period were junk. It took a few years and cars from Japan to improve cars. I have noticed that Mustang II suspensions were popular in kit cars for some reason.
@buzzwaldron61959 ай бұрын
Pinto 1600 was more reliable with no timing belt to keep breaking. Pontiac fixed the Vega-cousin Astre with that Iron Duke 4 engine with no timing belt... not even a timing chain... just timing gears! Still have my ultra rare '77 Pontiac Astre FORMULA Safari (kammback) Station Wagon! 5 speed manual, posi, 28 MPG City/34 MPG Hwy...
@ChetJang9 ай бұрын
@@buzzwaldron6195 The 2-liter Pinto engine was extremely reliable. Literally, 40 years later, they were still on the road running fine. They are only now disappearing, worn, finally completely out and totally antiquated. The Iron Duke engine was too little too late. Vegas were popular but disappeared from US roads in just a few years. I worked on Ford 2 liters, which are basically very well-made motors. Vegas died at 40K miles and had to be sleeved.
@markdubois48829 ай бұрын
The Cordoba with the 400 cid 4-bbl has some go for a mid 70s car.
@RacerX5319 ай бұрын
Pontiac Aztec was not a 1970's vehicle, nor was it a 1980's vehicle, still not even a 1990's vehicle. It was introduced in 2000.
@whitetallon87848 ай бұрын
Glad I wasn't the only one that caught this. And take it with a grain of salt... but the Wikipedia page says 2001-2005 production years.