RCR in Australia. It's officially the BROWN Under!
@9a_23_tyrantqiu78 күн бұрын
💀
@linaskvedaras8 күн бұрын
Not his first rodeo there 😁
@f2detaboada7 күн бұрын
I mean, it's more winga dinga
@TheMeanmarine138 күн бұрын
It looks like a classic muscle car and a luxury car had a baby. I could stare at that car all day. Great episode. And props to the owner for keeping her so healthy
@robertkirchner79818 күн бұрын
In '75 every kid in the alternative high school knew that the kids who arrived in twelve year old Amazon wagons had better parents than we did.
@jinezawa70898 күн бұрын
There's some dude not far from me that has a white amazon wagon just.....sitting in his yard with flowers growing around it. You can see it from the steet and even in its deteriorating condition, I fell in love with it before I knew what exactly it even was. These are really good-looking cars
@funbunlol1018 күн бұрын
Hey I have a white amazon wagon sitting in my yard with flowers and grass growing around it
@jxun4l3ht108 күн бұрын
Sadly even in here in the nordic countries youll often see these rotting in the backyard rather than being restored
@eggbirdtherooster6 күн бұрын
I had a neighbor that bought this Volvo new in the 60’s and drove it still daily till the late 00,s. Unrestored, rusty and crispy af.. but it just went going strong! Something in stark contrast we can’t say about Volvo nowadays with their same beefed up 4 cylinder they put in every single model, wich has a terrible reputation and dozens of design flaws! Plenty of junkyards you can find where this relative young cars ended up these days..
@venstoma8 күн бұрын
My grandfather told me about how he bought a *military surplus* Volvo Amazon back in the 60's I always knew he had an Amazon, but where he got it from was a detail that had escaped me all these years
@_Blank___Space_8 күн бұрын
Owner is the most Aussie looking guy I've ever seen.
@AshleyPomeroy8 күн бұрын
He's like a younger, Australian Neil Young.
@RJania3638 күн бұрын
bro looks like Trent Falkenrath
@GTFORDMAN8 күн бұрын
Hi an Aussie here, in regards to "how will they know" Police cars over here are fitted with automatic license plate scanners that are specifically designed for revenue.....i mean "public safety" and unregistered cars are a highway patrols favorite food! specialty cars like modified cars and cars on club rego are a tasty snack that they sometimes like to indulge in, and cars that are on club rego, if you haven't filled out that log book and have it accurate to the last meter? you're toast! 2nd all cars that go on to the roads are required to under go a safety inspection yearly (at least they are in NSW) and they record your mileage as part of the inspection.
@pleepler8 күн бұрын
Don't break the law and you won't have any trouble. It sucks but you can't do anything about it. Lucky you have to only fill out a paper, could be worse - an electronic tachograph. With GPS
@justindake8 күн бұрын
How ain’t every car club and enthusiast group lobbying to change all that?
@Low7608 күн бұрын
Yeah. Did you notice it's Victoria? Our system is literally write the days down as you use it. No km limit.
@Low7608 күн бұрын
@@justindakeNSW used to be more restrictive but Victoria led the way to have a more user use system.
@milamber3198 күн бұрын
@@GTFORDMAN they don't do this in Victoria. The cars are inspected generally by the club itself (unless its modded then you need a engineers slip) and they don't care about KM. It just needs to be roadworthy. And in this case the roadworthy means it has to have all the safety features that were standard equipment for the car when it was manufactured be working. Hence they leave it to the club who knows the cars to sign off on them. But the club is then responsible to you and you to them. You don't want to cause your clubmates a problem by being a dick with your club plates on.
@TalenGryphon8 күн бұрын
As it wasn't mentioned in the video: That Redblock B20e is so rev happy because they have a 7000RPM redline. On a PUSHROD engine. Timing system is literally 2 years. This means the cam spins backward, doubling as a balance shaft. The later ones in the 140 and into the first year of the 240 were even available with Bosch's excellent mechanical injection system! For the record a B20 is what powered that red Volvo P1800 that racked up 3 Million miles before it's original owner passed
@compu858 күн бұрын
Wow.... letting the cam double as a balance shaft is brilliant!
@Low7608 күн бұрын
No. It cannot rev to 7000rpm dude. I've got double valve springs and over 265° of cam duration with .470' lift. The heads run out of flow under 5500rpm stock and even this one with a ported head isn't much better.
@Low7608 күн бұрын
It's a normal gear driven cam like every other 60s vehicle. No balance Shaft used as the cam. You're confused with the ohc motor?
@LN997-i8x7 күн бұрын
Irv Gordon's 1800s has a B18, not a B20. The B series is fantastic, but none of them have a 7000rpm redline from the factory.
@mikepittinaro30937 күн бұрын
Factory redline on the B18/B20 was 6500 or so. Still mighty impressive for a pushrod engine. But, they do have solid lifters. Over 5500 or so the engine does tend to make more noise than power, so that's about where I tend to shift at when driving spiritedly. Still, my modern Mazda, with DOHC and Skyactive rev limits at 6000, so for the day, it was really, really good.
@Big010218 күн бұрын
Australia out here treating vintage cars like DOT CDL... meanwhile we got Nissan Altimas and Chargers that held together by duct tape and zip ties
@TwoDollarGararge8 күн бұрын
Yeah, those are low credit shitbox mobiles😂.
@TwoDollarGararge8 күн бұрын
@Big01021 americans treat most newer vehicles as disposable shitboxes and are allergic to maintaince that cost money.
@saadpandit45418 күн бұрын
The Australia equivalent to those cars would be a Nissan Skyline (not the GT-R or GT-T).
@anonym30178 күн бұрын
and here's why. If you register it as a classic car you get a bunch of additional rules but way relaxed inspection intervals/standards and a cheaper rego. If you don't want to deal with those additional rules you can just register it like any other car. But then you have to do and pass normal vehicle inspections.
@TwoDollarGararge8 күн бұрын
@anonym3017 I prefer the American system . If the car is over a certain age , you just don't have an inspection at all. You want a death trap go for it, inspection is a joke in most states anyway.
@Rex_Stuph8 күн бұрын
Yeah, that's it. You have to sign the start point in your log book before you leave. Of course, you can have normal registration for classics here too, but costs more. Club/Special Interest just lets you have a week end toy registered cheaper. Back in the 90s when I worked at a brake place there was this guy with a late 20's 4 door convertible (I can't remember the make, everything from 28 to 32 looks the same) that was still on it's original registration that, who'd come in regularly to bug the mechanic about it pulling when crossing train tracks near the workshop to have the mechanic try to explain that rod operated brakes will do that as the suspension moves and not to brake while crossing the tracks.
@StevenJeNova8 күн бұрын
Love 'em! ♥️ I've had 2, made in 1968. Bullet-proof engine, the B 18. Back in the early 1990's we drove our Amazons with unleaded fuel every third fill-up. It did not care. All in all an absolute Tank! -25 C outside? It did not care. It worked. The car will take you round the world, if you want to. Just service it. Dead easy to work on, too.
@bruceguy27478 күн бұрын
Can't believe the Volvo S60R video is 11 years old... Congrats on making this a career
@TDUShelby8 күн бұрын
Gorgeous machine! The fact it looks a lot like a '50s American car, but with Euro/Aussie personality makes me wonder why I've never heard of it. This is going on the bucket list. What saddens me isn't the fact I likely will never get to drive one, but the fact this one in particular just wants to run, but the AU laws prevent it. It's depressing to see a car that's begging to have another go just have to sit and wait. Tangentially related to the above statement, Garbage Time getting the rescue car to start. (Can't remember the mode,) may as well be some kind of proof older cars can create a soul for itself. Watching that car, once abandoned, cough and then scream back to life is one of the most emotional things I've ever seen on KZbin. It sat dying and forgotten for so long, had given up, and was destined to become scrap, but then two Aussie blokes rescue it. They give it help, they cheer it on, and they make so much noise, the little thing finally just up and says "I can do it. I can run. I'M GOING TO RUN, I CAN DO IT!" And it does. It comes back, and friggin' EVERYONE is throwing a party. Good lord, a video about a rusty nugget is one of the most emotional things I've ever watched. Oh yeah, the Volvo. Friggin' sweet ride!
@Low7608 күн бұрын
It's my car. I chose the 45 days after years of 90 days being paid on the permit. I made it to 46 days, ONCE. In the 7 years I've owned it. I don't want to drive it daily in a world surrounded by 2.2tonne SUVs and twin cab utes. You can use it 45 days, so I can drive it twice a week in good weather as obviously I avoid the days with heavy rain. And the middle of summer.
@OliverPickard8 күн бұрын
Growing up my parents had 2 Amazon estates one after the other. They are indeed fantastic cars.
@donswier7 күн бұрын
Similar. My folks bought one in 1965 when I was born. It was literally our family's ONLY car (family of four, Washington State) until my brother & I were 7 & 8years old. Dad sold it after 15 years of commuting, towing ski boats & travel trailers and two boys chewing on the upholstery. My folks never owned an automatic tranny until their 60s. Solid, tough cars! 🇸🇪
@Sakhmeov8 күн бұрын
You had an almost perfect pronounciation on the second try of "Nils Bolund" there. Although I believe that the car's designer was actually Jan Wilsgaard, who was a US-born Norwegian. The reason it drives so nice is a combination of mostly the very well-designed front end with a pressed metal double wishbone setup all set up around a solid U-shaped beam, all designed with the parts to sort of push into and center themselves, a pretty perfect wheelbase to width, and the fact that the car weighs not even 1100kg dry.
@MichaelHarman-t7e8 күн бұрын
I have one of these, a '67 wagon that's almost completely stock. They're shockingly reliable and easy to live with. Stock suspension is ambling and a little willowy, best on lumpy back roads. It's like a lighter 240 with skinny tires and a bit less torque. But it'll go where you point it.
@phazttraxx19808 күн бұрын
Being an owner of 6 classic Volvos, I approve 👍🏾
@themoo123458 күн бұрын
Wow, the location RCR found to film in Australia is beautiful. Great job guys.
@Low7608 күн бұрын
12:33 literally yes. I have pushed hard and driven 47 days with that car one year. Great review.
@arevee94298 күн бұрын
Had one back in the 80's and my memory of it was exactly as described - it ran remarkably well for what it was. Mine was a trashed rust bucket, but mechanically, it was fantastic. Revvy engine, great brakes (mine had power brakes), good handling, and comfortable seats. I've also owned a 145 and 242 Volvos and both of those were good, but not as good as the 122.
@krmnych_backlog8 күн бұрын
All the love from Ukraine. For the channel and for the car❤
@kobrasergal8 күн бұрын
So sweet to see you got to drive an Amazon! My first own car was a red one from 1970. Dailied it four years, all seasons, before had to get something more modern for increased yearly kilometers. It's still in family though and I drive it when I get the chance. Cheers from Finland!
@janijoeli41 минут бұрын
"This is elegant and sexy; Like a widow who takes care of themselves, or a rockstar who doesn't." One of the quotes of this century. Change my mind.
@EffequalsMA8 күн бұрын
Me old 68 Mustang had the optional three point belts....basically two lap belts you buckled independently. The shoulder belt put the extender in the middle of your chest....it also had optional disc brakes in the front. Somebody was interested in safety back then. The hard belts meant you could not move in the car and the low headrests meant instant death whiplash in an accident.....
@jake_of_the_jungle98404 күн бұрын
Yeah my 69 lemans has a lap belt and a belt that hangs off the ceiling that I never undo bc I’ll never get it back up the way it is. You can only use one at a time on my car so I just use the lap belt because it’s easier and looks better
@EffequalsMA4 күн бұрын
@@jake_of_the_jungle9840 The 68 Mustang I had came with two latches in the centre, one for lap and one for shoulder. Plus it was the first year with a collapsible column and padded dash, iirc.
@themadscientest8 күн бұрын
I need a "best of driving footage comp", no talking or explanation, just raw in-car sounds and you and the owners talking. Also perhaps someone could start making binaural sound videos in classic cars.
@theothertonydutch8 күн бұрын
Still see these around town, as well as the stationwagons. Pre 90's Volvols are just chef's kiss.
@aidansullivan5703Күн бұрын
Watching this next to my eternal project p1800. Your “not seeing this as a car” line from the vagabond series come to mind. This gives a good glimpse towards the end of the tunnel
@bobdebouwer78358 күн бұрын
These cars are very enjoyable because they take you back to the old times. It not only looks nice but it's nice to drive since all the materials are just different to today's cars. All the crome is real, the little windows, the big steering wheel etc.
@ТамараПетрова-п6р7 күн бұрын
Машины из стали и стекла. 👍
@outintheshop10055 күн бұрын
My brother and I are restoring a couple of amazons. His is a 67 and mine is a 68. I'm impressed by how solid they are built. The doors shut like a more modern car and the build quality for the time seems to be a lot higher than most cars of that era. I drive a 72 bmw 2002 as well, and its a very fun car to drive but doesn't have the same solid feel that the volvos have. I love all old cars and will gladly take their squeaks and rattles over anything new. Cars used to have charm and character and those designers were passionate car enthusiasts. Now cars have become appliances, designed for everything but aesthetics and aren't identifiable from make to make.
@thewall55408 күн бұрын
The price really differs from the price in Sweden for a new amazon in the sixties. In sweden a Amazon new cost around 19000 SEK when you add inflation it is between 150000 to 200000 SEK which is around 21000 to 28000 AUD. In Sweden the Amazon was not sold as a luxury car but a reliable people car. Many examples of the Amazon still exist in Sweden, some still even daily drives them.
@weegeemike7 күн бұрын
My dads old employee has a '66 i think. It was the first car he bought when he came to America from Mexico. Its his baby. He keeps it running like a top and has a really nice, factory color, repaint on it. Its a neat little car. He has other more midern vehicles but he drives the Volvo more than anything. Glad you guys found one of these. Pre-box Volvos are super rare and uncommon here in the US, so its cool to see one get some love. Jorge sure loves his, and has for 40 years.
@19ThreeLions977 күн бұрын
Crazy how good it looks...
@nilsdunder29468 күн бұрын
Your second pronunciation of Nils is correct. That happens to be my name, good job. The Volvo Amazon, makes me proud to be Swedish.😊
@AATGStudios7 күн бұрын
The first time I ever saw one of these, I was a new driver coming home on the Merritt parkway in CT. We "raced", the best we could on that little road. He won, finally jetting by at about 90. From then on I had a good deal of respect for old Volvos.
@mbellamy827 күн бұрын
Volvophile here, I sold my 164 to buy an engagement ring. Best trade I ever made. 13 years running and two beautiful kids later, we're still going strong.
@sodiebergh8 күн бұрын
Thanks!
@paz33773 күн бұрын
Ive been watching your videos for a while. My daughter and I just picked up a 67 122s on Saturday ❤
@steveg51228 күн бұрын
In New Jersey the Classic reg is enforced by yearly inspections on the odometer. It also is enforced by local cops notiicng your car is being used to drive a lot.
@Coldax-w4H8 күн бұрын
Yeah, never get the New Jersey QQ plates unless you only drive in parades.
@Jordanmilo8 күн бұрын
My parents had a 1965 Volvo 122S wagon in US. Bought new sticker was $2038, which corrected is about $20,000, equipped with AM “Volvo by Bendix” radio. For some reason, Volvo put the radio directly in front of the passenger, omitted the glovebox, and put the hand brake between the driver’s seat and the door-my mother always complained that it snagged her nylon stockings (and that the seats were too low to the floor). My mom got that car in the divorce; traded it in 1972 for a Peugeot 304 wagon after she was passed by one of her own wheels on the highway!
@eggbirdtherooster6 күн бұрын
I had a neighbor that bought this Volvo new in the 60’s and drove it still daily till the late 00,s. Unrestored, rusty and crispy af.. but it just went going strong! Something in stark contrast we can’t say about Volvo nowadays with their same beefed up 4 cylinder they put in every single model, wich has a terrible reputation and dozens of design flaws! Plenty of junkyards you can find where this relative young cars ended up these days..
@aquqad8 күн бұрын
Dude behind you being like wtf bro hurry up at 7:25 🤣
@briank.89258 күн бұрын
Probably their camera car.
@simonescalici53027 күн бұрын
i love "classic cars" and their orchestra of sounds, feelings, the fizz...!
@ghosttheoremproductions54698 күн бұрын
The P1800 (S and E) are the pinnacle of 60s/70s Volvo amazingness. Imagine a very similar experience but in a shorter/wider/lower chassis with styling straight from a wet dream.
@samrice10158 күн бұрын
being a teenager when the s60r came out It got me thinking that it was probably the modern-ish equivalent to something like this. the s60 was a sharp looking sedan especially in r trim at least IMO.
@nigeldelrocket5 күн бұрын
It's about time! I have four of these. My dream car.
@miguelandresdiaz53873 күн бұрын
I hope people start restoring these on mass. My family has 2 that are just sitting catching sun in El Paso, Texas. I think they’re beautiful and want to get started on fixing them soon.
@markbanash9218 күн бұрын
My uncle was a mechanical engineering student at Drexel back in the 1960s when he managed to scrape together enough cash to buy one of these because all of his MechE pals agreed it was an engineer's car.
@briansteffmagnussen90787 күн бұрын
Logbook... And i thought we had weird rules in Europe. This shifter can be upgraded with an electric overdrive. In scandinavia we call it the worlds fastest tractor. I once saw a Volvo Amasone from a Swedish banger race, Stock car or what ever they call it in the US. Britain: New Zealand:Australia etc. It used to be red, but the red was faded into a strange orange. It was dented on almost every square millimeter so it looked like an orange peel. And i wanted so much to put the glass back in the window frames, slap a license plate on it, and drive it as it was with all its battle scars.
@Low7605 күн бұрын
I have a Celica 5 speed for it but don't want to move the shifter position. The m41 is very rare in Australia now and I don't like clutched overdrive units.
@arespirit8 күн бұрын
Mine was a yellow 1966 122s 2 door coupe. Those volvo B18's were amazing except for ht fiber gear. Still my fav car I dont have any more, great review
@philipsmith39687 күн бұрын
My grandparents in Connecticut had a grey 4-door Volvo sedan from the early 1960's (possibly a 422). I remember riding in it in the 1970's, and I remember that seat-belt buckle (a bit like a carabiner). My mother got it in Copenhagen while touring Europe with a friend in 1962. After paying the import duties at the customs office in New York, Mom went to the dock, only to find that someone had stolen the gear shift knob. In spite of that, she was able to drive it to Middletown with no problem. Phil the Cat
@FoxiFyer8 күн бұрын
I got a Volvo ad on the video :P
@kentalanlee8 күн бұрын
Sometimes the algorithm delivers.
@lexmaximaguy87888 күн бұрын
Damn that's a beautiful car.
@nismofreak337 күн бұрын
Aussie here, the log book is easy. Fill in the month & year, then only fill the day in when you get pulled over, before the cop gets to your window lol. Also 1s turn into 7s, 3s into 8s, 7s into 9s etc.
@marcdantona23618 күн бұрын
Nice one! My '66 122S was one of the most fun cars I've ever owned. Think about a video just about the b16 (grandmother of the b20e shown here) One of the greatest ICEs of all time IMO!
@fennec18 күн бұрын
With the 45 and 90 day club rego. Once those days are exhausted you can just go buy another log book and pay the fees. The main cost is the TAC (Transport Accident Commission) fees (State road injury insurance).
@JH-lo9ut3 күн бұрын
The Volvo Amason has a huge fanbase in Sweden. They used to be very common and you could see beaters parked here and there up to quite recently. Surviving Amasons in good condition are going up in price for obvious reasons but this was for a long time the first choise for people who wanted to go into classic cars, because they were cheap, easy to find, easy to work on and there were almost unlimited parts available. Sweden has very allowing laws for classic cars. A car is utomatically considered "veteran" when it is 30 years old (this used to be 20 years). That means it is tax exempt, and you only have to do inspections every two years. At a certain age, the car is also exempt from inspections, as long as it passed it's last inspection. ( 40 or 50 years I think) There is no limit to how much you can drive the veichle, but you can get special deals with your insurance provider based on yearly mileage. Now, what's also pretty convenient is that you can take your veichle in and out of "active" registry, if you say, only drive during the summer. The rest of the year, the veichle is still in the registry but at a "dormant" status. This used to be done by mail, so you'd have to wait for a week before you could legally drive the veichle. Now, since a few years, this is done via an app so you can instantly activate or de-activate the veichle in the registry at any time, with no time restrictions. You just have to make sure that you have an active insurance to drive it legally. I drive a -91 Volvo 740 as my every day driver. This car is now considered a "veteran veichle" with all the benefits of tax exemption, lower insurance and bi-yearly inspections. It is a fairly thirsty car, but considering the low maintenance cost of an Immortal Volvo, it is a cheap car to own. The car costs me about €300 per month, that is fuel, oils, insurance and spare parts. I know, it is ridiculous.
@gnarshread7 күн бұрын
My father owned one when they were relatively new. To this day he still says that it was a fantastic car.
@Foxonian8 күн бұрын
In Mass. antique pates have to be renewed each year, you have to have a basic safety inspection and you can only drive your car on weekends or during the week if you have proof you are going to a car show. Plus the state police here strictly enforce these rules. One reason why most classic car owners in Mass. use regular registration for their cars.😊
@rickywinthrop8 күн бұрын
Bought our first VOLVO a few years back (2015 v60 t6 rdesign) to replace a 22 year old Subaru forester. Pretty wonderful car and my word is it fast (for what it is). Cool to see a little bit of the volvo lineage as I knew almost nothing about them when we bought it.
@alastairward27748 күн бұрын
Nice, thought that's what I saw in the background in the first Ozzie review.
@AgainWhoops8 күн бұрын
Hoping to see some videos about RCR’s overall thoughts about this trip to Australia.
@smncutler5 күн бұрын
The Volvo Amazon is damn near the greatest car ever made. I've owned three. Yes, they ARE *that good*. Engine, transmission, handling, the feel of the driver controls, the build quality. And they are a practical and reliable car to daily drive in the 21st century.
@lukerickert52038 күн бұрын
I had a 1968 122 wagon (220) it was a super cool and very practical, it had a bunch of suspension work and handled really very well. It was a bit surprised at the inch fasteners. I am not sure how much different the original SU carbs would have been, mine also had the Weber swap.
@jareknowak87127 күн бұрын
My buddy had one, 20 years ago in Sweden. It was also the 4 door, which was quite a rare bird, even in Sweden, bc the majority was a 2 door.
@DumbBunny53288 күн бұрын
1967 VW beetles also have seatbelt buckles like that. Needless to say, they’re often replaced. Mine has seatbelts out of a Porsche.
@FoDaddy7 күн бұрын
As an American, some of Australia's driving laws are baffling. P-Plates are silly, and apparently you can own a classic car, but the government will only allow you to drive it x number of days a year? What's the rational there? There has to be some benefit to the owner, whether it be skipping annual inspections, or the registration costs are consummately reduced or something.
@gumby10087 күн бұрын
Rego in Aus is really expensive, my Subaru is about $1k per year, club rego is about $200. If you have a daily and a weekend car club rego makes sense.
@hillbilly86217 күн бұрын
Club registration is a cheaper option for a car you might only take out on weekends in Summer. Nothing stopping the owner having normal registration on it.
@theEagleBeagle7 күн бұрын
whoooa. thats incredible how nice of shape they keep it in.
@jakewolfe11008 күн бұрын
My fathers first new car was a leftover 1967 Volvo 122s Wagon he bought in the spring of 68. He bought at Stillmans in Glenolden which is now in West Chester....
@ColinBrunnemer777 күн бұрын
What a beautiful car and those wheels suit it so well
@ollilehtonen67648 күн бұрын
The Amazon: Car design 101. One of the prettiest automobiles to ever roll off the assembly line.
@GuntanksInSpace7 күн бұрын
This Volvo gives me WINGA DINGA vibes. This was a strong review!
@RemnantCult8 күн бұрын
I love Aussie and Kiwi cars. It's like a close cousin to the cars created for North America. In other words, they feel familiar yet have a few key differences. A love for power is there for sure.
@stevemiller16267 күн бұрын
We have the 1800. Same car underneath and same engine. A very reliable car.
@northof-625 күн бұрын
I remember Amazon owners debating the pros & cons of radial tyres on their cars, back in '68.
@ImnotgoingSideways7 күн бұрын
8:54 Looking at the way he fanned out the ring connectors on that battery terminal... He speaks my language. =^-^=
@andersmalmgren652810 сағат бұрын
That taxi gives me "Crazy Taxi" vibes (Arcade game from the 90s)
@polypolyman7 күн бұрын
My uncle was in an accident in an older car like this, where, had he been wearing his seat belt, he would have been much more seriously injured. Basically, the whole car split between his seat and the seatbelt anchor. It’s a critical safety thing these days that the seatbelt catch bolts to the seat and not the floor
@donotatme8 күн бұрын
I always remember these from this Rally crash compilation DVD i had as a kid as the car that rolled down hills and smashed trees getting barely damaged
@oikkuoek8 күн бұрын
It would run better with double SU's and the period correct racing manifold. Even with a precision tuned exhaust, the ports are too small to flow mid range on Webers. The peak is more "vibrant" with Webers, but SU setup would bring up the middle part of the curve, giving more HP to the overall experience. Now that it has run on upstream flowing setup, it's in desperate need for a valve job. This mod would also bring down the lap times, due to the wider operating range. No need to pull it past the valve springs to keep it under power for the next gear.
@Low7608 күн бұрын
It's got double valve springs, the webers came with the motor so i didn't need to buy 1.75 su's with my much bigger than stock cam (i forgot the specs but have the cam card at home), and 38mm exhaust valves. The head is over ported too. I want to do a better one.
@Wileylikethehawk6 күн бұрын
My fav car as a kid was a P1800. My dad has a 544…. Always wanted an Amazon.
@andersmalmgren652810 сағат бұрын
My father had a Amazon in the early 80s. I was born 1980 so I barly remebred it. But I do remember that the fan belt broke on a roadtrip from Sweden to south spain (We are from sweden). And he replacing it. It could be because they have a photo of me helping out on said replacement but I really think I do have some memory of it, I couldnt be older than 4. That car was replaced with a Ford Granada v6, in 1985, I remeberd dad was so proud of the fuel injection in that car. But it could never beat the Amazon in style. The only car looking better from Volvo is the p1800
@Stingernukegod4 күн бұрын
Great looking car.🚗
@bluegoose036 күн бұрын
My late Dad’s 64 122S was $2300. He modded it and sold it to a dentist who raced it in SCCA.
@Jephph13bREW5 күн бұрын
I feel like old volvo's in general seem to feel way more modern than they should be. I've driven a lot of old cars from the 70's and 80's and currently own an 82 Volvo 240 and I'm always surprised by how modern it feels for something that was a product of the 70s that evolved from something from the 60's. Plus those redblock just have a certain charm to them.
@TheFuriousScribbles8 күн бұрын
I recall reading that the stylist for the Volvo Amazon saw American Kaiser sedans being unloaded at the docks and was took inspiration from them. I don't know if that's necessarily true, but I could believe it.
@rockinchimp8 күн бұрын
For a while now I have always wanted a 123GT version of this.
@fiatche7 күн бұрын
In Missouri on Historic tags you're supposed to keep a log book and be limited to only 2000mi a year... and literally no one does that. It's just a nod and a wink situation. Our registrations are also permanent on historic vehicles, and there are no additional/annual inspections after the initial ID/OD when first registering the vehicle.
@SirScarface698 күн бұрын
I have my 122s I bought from the beach. It's a great car! Has the seat belts!
@garthharpole63693 күн бұрын
The car I went to prom in and I still look for em on marketplace every day.
@dcanmore8 күн бұрын
In 1967 the 122S cost $3000 in the States, inflation adjusted that is now $30,500 today.
@Subeebles2 күн бұрын
5:21 😂😅 Love how you guys do
@JL-sm6cg7 күн бұрын
In Nevada, their classic car plate requirements are as follows; you don't have to "smog" the vehicle every year, but you're only allowed 5000 miles every year. I know this because a met a guy at a pool party who owned a car with those plates, and when he gets close to 5000 for the year, he disconnects the instrument panel until the next year or he renews the plate. Yet, the only thing Nevada's DMV cracked down on was people buying "buckets", doing nothing with them, but getting the classic car plate because of those requirements and because it's cheaper to register them that way, I believe.
@Segafishy7 күн бұрын
My Humber Sceptre got 85hp in 1963, the single Solex Carb version was a chunk less but the twin zenith Carbs option made that from 1592cc or 97.1 cu in, forget what the Compression was though, that said some bored engineers jammed a Chrysler V8 in one after Rootes was purchased by the Chyrsler group and I pray they boosted the brakes otherwise that must've been a Brown trouser special.
@daneish968 күн бұрын
Corolla at 7:25 getting mad😂😂😂
@chrisc15538 күн бұрын
I love these things you can buy em cheap where I am in california great car for a daily
@joakimsoderberg80463 күн бұрын
In Sweden when a car turns 30yrs old its a Classic and you dont need to pay tax for it. Inspection is every second year and the insurance is cheaper (there is insurance for classic cars). Insurance for classics usually have some limitations but its up to you what you choose.
@ErickC7 күн бұрын
Fuck me I love the sound of a plain carbureted four cylinder with econobox exhaust. It's always reminded me of the sound of those old Cooper F1 cars.
@1989Goodspeed7 күн бұрын
This car has its own theme song!!! "En Gammal Amazon" by Svenne Rubins. A song so bad it becomes good. This is also the yare we lost P.G. Gyllenhammar, the Volvo equivalent of Lee Iacocca.
@CreatureOutOfTime8 күн бұрын
A Ferrari logo, but its a moose. Both metal and hilarious. Who came up with that?
@Low7608 күн бұрын
Dave Barton
@alindberg80018 күн бұрын
Quite common in the volvo community 😅 no idea about the origin
@yuh3772 күн бұрын
Pretty much every older Volvo adorns that logo in Sweden, Finland and Norway. Basically a tuner thing
@Eric________8 күн бұрын
I misunderstood the title and thought you got this car off of Amazon.