As a former owner of one of these I can confirm that since not a lot of work went into building one, repairs aren't hard either.
@shahramtondkarmobarakie18247 ай бұрын
they were designed simple so repairs could be done by anyone, the soviet union was massive, you dont have a mechanic shop every 2km like you have everywhere else
@Mortonbmx7 ай бұрын
@@shahramtondkarmobarakie1824it's a fiat design though
@emgriffiths97437 ай бұрын
When I had mine I joked the factory tool kit was a rock and a bottle of vodka, if the rock didn't fix it get drunk
@Mortalomena7 ай бұрын
@@Mortonbmx its 90% Fiat, 10% GAZ made it so it survives in frigid winters.
@juzoli7 ай бұрын
Aren’t hard, but continuous. We had one when I was a kid (90s). And it always needed repairs, even though it was less than 10 years old. And since Lada’s were very common where I grew up, I know it wasn’t just a lemon. My previous old car was a 2009 Mazda 6, which was definitely NOT loved by the previous owner, yet it barely had any issues at 10years. And the few it had was fixable DIY.
@paulriggers15587 ай бұрын
Brit ex lada tech here, 14:17, there is a little pipe just visible in the manifold, it lets excess raw fuel to drip out of the inlet manifold onto the floor, so don't panic about that little drip... a major service was a biggie, you even had to strip the alternator + starter, clean them up + renew the carbon brushes. pretty reliable cars, but boy, did they rust...
@FenixPenix7 ай бұрын
And that's why you don't clean the oil/brake fluid, it keeps rust away.
@gosponzak32467 ай бұрын
1981 My gradndfather bought brand new Lada 2103 in Yugoslavia. That was his 2nd Lada, first he had 2101 somewhere from the beginning of the production and he figured out what he needs to do to rustproof his Lada. First thing he did when he bought 2103 is to pour 1kg of train wagon paint in each rocker panel/sill and then every year wash under the car and put new layer of some heavy duty black stuff with brush. That Lada never seen angle grinder or welder with all factory panels on it untill this present day, still parked in same garage as one of things left by my grandfather...
@paulriggers15587 ай бұрын
@@gosponzak3246 my dad's ford zephyr is rust free, my dad did the same with a liquid mix for 54yrs, the car has sadly outlived him this year...
@adrianshephard2247 ай бұрын
@@gosponzak3246 That heavy duty black stuff he used brush to coat under is TAR. And you are welcome. I moj je djed isto to radio hehe... 🤣
@gosponzak32467 ай бұрын
@@adrianshephard224 Thats rigt - some product TAR based. Tako je, katran/bitulit/kobit ali nisam mogao da se setim u trenutku pisanja kako se kaze na engleskom. :)
@Michael-yi4mc7 ай бұрын
Car Wizard is having a Lada fun.
@toobalicious7 ай бұрын
Reading that post was complete and total pun-ishment.
@mongo640717 ай бұрын
That could have been a good marketing slogan if it wasn’t made by a communist country.
@oldrrocr7 ай бұрын
watching this... as if I would ever work on a Lada...🤣🤣🤣
@seanbrewer12327 ай бұрын
Ha ha ha ha get out
@SquirrelWizard7 ай бұрын
He gonna have Lada problems 🤣
@O2chevsky7 ай бұрын
ДААЗ(reads DAAZ), as written on the carburator, stands for Dimitrovgradsky Avtomobil'ny Agregatny Zavod(Dimitrovgrad's Automobile Aggregate Factory)
@samspianos7 ай бұрын
Sounds like a mouthful o shit
@hamr96017 ай бұрын
@@samspianos it's very descriptive, you know exactly what the factory does and where it is, just from the name.
@glaurung6666 ай бұрын
@@samspianos it looks you're very stupid and arrogant.
@Blackadder756 ай бұрын
@@hamr9601 Fabbrica Italiana Automobili Torino. F.I.A.T Italian Factory of Automobiles in Turin
@Blackadder756 ай бұрын
Fabbrica Italiana Automobili Torino. F.I.A.T Italian Factory of Automobiles in Turin
@dcanmore7 ай бұрын
FunFact: in the 1980s a number of these cars were fitted with a Wankel twin-rotor engine producing 120hp for the Traffic Police and KGB.
@markellii30937 ай бұрын
And they were even less reliable. The rotor engine was a clone of the Mazda's, but not a great one.
@dcanmore7 ай бұрын
@@markellii3093 apparently they lasted less than 15,000 miles which was half the lifespan of the original NSU motor from the 1960s.
@Toloselotrek7 ай бұрын
Everything is almost the same, but the Lada-21059 had 120 horsepower with a 2.3-liter VAZ-411M two-section rotary engine. The rotary version of this model was called Lada-21079 and its engine power was already 140 horsepower, the maximum speed was 125 mph, and acceleration to 60 mph was approximately 9 seconds. For comparison, the standard 2107 did this in just 20 seconds.
@lucasrem7 ай бұрын
The LADA 21079 is the Wankel engined version
@Toloselotrek7 ай бұрын
@mipmipmipmipmip It's simple. No one needed this. Lada is an ultra low-cost car. The development of a turbocharged version of the engine and its subsequent production would make the car more expensive. And the engine compartment of classic rear-wheel drive Ladas is poorly suited for accommodating additional equipment due to the small space and specific shape. Yes, some enthusiasts turbocharge their Lada engines themselves, there are even classic solutions based on the Garrett 1752 turbine, but the increased load greatly reduces the service life of the engine and the entire car as a whole. The car body literally begins to separate at the weld seams.
@frankwhite26507 ай бұрын
How many shops can you see a Lada in one bay and a Ferrari in the next bay?
@lucasrem7 ай бұрын
frankwhite2650 Are you an 2107 owner. Fiat parts, imitation too, cheap to keep it running yourself.
@trifontrifonov42977 ай бұрын
Let's be honest at this point a preserved LADA is more of a prestige symbol for car guys than a Ferrari.
@SebastianScida7 ай бұрын
Well a lot maybe with other badges because they all are fiats
@DS-ry5dd7 ай бұрын
@@trifontrifonov4297Thanks alot ,I blew beer out my nostrils just reading your comment.
@chuckschillingvideos7 ай бұрын
You neglected to add that both are clapped out, ancient pieces of rubbish. You can see this in any number of junkyards, btw...
@JohnSmith-pl2bk7 ай бұрын
Before you let it out of the shop... with the engine stopped slightly loosen the cap nut on the block (on the carb side of the engine) which is inline with the timing chain. This releases the timing chain tensioner and you will hear a "ping" when it extends to take up any slack before it hits the timing chain. Tighten the cap nut. Now the tensioner is pre set and ready for oil pressure to keep the correct tension when the engine is running. This procedure keeps the engine from sounding like a bucket of bolts ....most of the time. P.S. That Lada will theoretically reach 94mph... but a 70mph is only just bearable as the engine will be revving quite high..... 60mph is comfortable...... P.P.S. the carb may be Russian but the design is pure Italian Weber... the 32/36 DGV 5a with manual choke bolts straight on...
@Random-nf7qb7 ай бұрын
It's not pure italian weber. It's based on a Weber design, but it's an OZON(ozone). Very finicky and hard to get working correctly, but when it does, it works quite well.
@guillermorisso24637 ай бұрын
@JohnSmith you missed the step where you need to turn the engine COUNTER-CLOCKWISE, 1 full turn, to relieve any slack on the chain. I do remember the procedure, done it many times and the instructions actually came in the user manual that was in the glovebox.
@JohnSmith-pl2bk7 ай бұрын
@@guillermorisso2463 Is that counterclockwise as seen from the front of the vehicle...or CC from the driver's seat... or is it counter the normal rotation of the engine (so you can't use the crank to do this or the starter) you rotate the engine using the fan and fan belt or a socket on the crank pulley against the normal rotation?
@guillermorisso24637 ай бұрын
1 full turn in contrary direction of the normal engine rotation
@marcmorris-kb9ry7 ай бұрын
The points spanner and work light that came in the Nivas is genius😊
@jazzjokesjalopies7 ай бұрын
Lada is the only car where the bugs on the grill are listening to the passengers. 😂
@karibakid7 ай бұрын
The heated rear window was for those pushing it had warm hands in the winter
@marko78437 ай бұрын
Ahhh, good one Comrade!
@thomascordery79517 ай бұрын
Lol. The Lada ad in Canada was "It’s a Lada car for the money" (lot of car for the money). We used to say "It’s a Lada guilt for the money". We also used to say, "Buy a Lada, send a dissident to camp!"
@juanzingarello40057 ай бұрын
Nah lots of Chinese cars too.
@lucasrem7 ай бұрын
@@thomascordery7951 Canada fails hard, need a Cheap Honda ? Weather !
@frasermitchell91837 ай бұрын
I remember many years ago when Russia was opening up under Gorbachev, a TV program decided to show Russian motorists picking up their new LADAs from a dealer. A genial Russian new owner was interviewed and asked what he was doing now he had his new car. He replied that he was driving home. When asked where home was, he replied that it was a small town about 750 miles away. At this time, the oil change interval for Ladas was yearly or every 1500 miles !
@docnele7 ай бұрын
Not quite like that. There is a burn-in period stated in the manual with rev limits and oil changes at first 500, 1000, 3000km (I think). Normal period after was 1yr/10K km, what comes first. There were some quite recent Japanese cars (Mitsubishi?) with burn-in oil changes that now look strange and obsolete.
@FreeZLO7 ай бұрын
Неправильно. Первое обслуживание через 1500 км. Дальше обслуживание через 10000 километров.
@docnele7 ай бұрын
@@FreeZLO If it is a Zastava Kragujevac SKD Lada like my father's 2101 was, Zastava rules apply.
@cyrielwollring46227 ай бұрын
The lada was based on a Fiat 124 - European car of the year 1967. Some modifications for Russia were made, stronger suspension and better isolation. VAZ stands for Volzhski Avto Zavod, or Volga car Factory. This model stayed in production to 2012.
@truantray7 ай бұрын
They sold them briefly in Canada, you could hear them rusting.
@SlavaBelkov7 ай бұрын
at some point they changed engines to injector ones without changing body much.
@lvsqcsl7 ай бұрын
@@truantray Yes, those as well as the Hyundai Pony rusted.
@Random-nf7qb7 ай бұрын
Not some, but over 800 changes were made. Strengthened body, uprated suspension, completely different engine and braking system. Basically only the hardpoints are what's left of the Fiat. And the gearbox, which comes from the 124S.
@samiraperi4677 ай бұрын
@@truantray Probably rusted slower than Fiat 124s TBF; Lada had thicker steel.
@gregedmand99397 ай бұрын
The days of simple cars built to get you from A to B reliably and fix easily are long gone. My own "Lada" experience was a 62 Rambler American with a bullet proof six cylinder engine. The easiest car I've ever owned and worked on.
@olikat87 ай бұрын
I re-did a Plymouth Valiant for that very reason. Powertrain is bulletproof, upgraded the suspension & brakes (12" rotors front, 11.25" rear), I can fix anything on the car- and people are always smiling, waving or asking questions when they see it cruising around
@sindribe7 ай бұрын
The lada is still the same. I remember what people that drove Lada's here in Iceland always said. They bought Lada's because they just worked. And the extras like power steering or a cd player ain't breaking if they are not in the car in the first place😂
@plazmotron20007 ай бұрын
I really came to think that it was a good thing that we were producing this 60s car up to 2014, because now not only I can buy an old-school car dirt cheap, but I can also have brand new spare parts for it, since they are still being produced by some factories. Yes, it isn't all that great old-school car, but a nice one nonetheless.
@dzonikg6 ай бұрын
My first car in 80s (used domesticly build Zastava 101) i got when i was 18 i fix everything by my self even i know nothing then about cars.FOr 5 years i drove it i never went to repair shop and parts were dirty cheap and you could buy them everywhere.Now when something goes wrong on my cars even dealers sometimes dont know to fix it and its stays there for few months
@adotintheshark48486 ай бұрын
I had two of those, a '58 and a '59. Both had a "leaky" #5 cylinder. Those ran a bit hot on that engine (the flathead). Otherwise, a good reliable and simple car.
@trespire7 ай бұрын
Lada's, as do all Russian cars of Soviet desigm, were designed to be uncomplicated and rugged to cope with unpaved Sibirian dirt roads. As well as the harsh winters. There were no such things as car shops, the owner would do the maintenance and repares at the curb or in a tiny parking garage. The waiting list for a new Lada was sometimes over a decade. The design is quite ingenious.
@lucasrem7 ай бұрын
FIAT design !
@mihailviloev86626 ай бұрын
@@lucasrem not fiat, it was changed a lot.
@Randyplaysguitars7 ай бұрын
Just had my step daughter's 2007 Nissan Armada break down at a dealership over the weekend and the guy there told her it was the starter. Well she didn't have the money to fix it so we had it towed to our apartment and I ordered a starter from rockauto and it is a pain in the a$$ to replace. Well once I was able to look at it I checked the fuses and relays since I had to wait for the part anyway. Low and behold it just needed a new relay. $28 and back on the road. $140 for a tow that we didn't really need and $100 for a starter that I sent back today to get a refund. But at least I didn't have to dive into engine !😅
@CrimeVid7 ай бұрын
Todays petrol has a sort of dry and dusty smell, not at all like the rich powerful aroma of real five star petrol.
@zaffo7577 ай бұрын
The tech wasnt wrong 😂. ...the starter wouldn't work.
@Vincent-ke5zn7 ай бұрын
Glad to hear
@Randyplaysguitars7 ай бұрын
@@zaffo757 well the tech was wrong. The starter worked just fine. How does a part not getting power due to another part being broken mean that the subsequent part doesn't work? That's like saying the engine won't work when the fuel pump isn't moving fuel. It's making incorrect assumptions based on a lack of proper diagnosis.
@zaffo7577 ай бұрын
@@Randyplaysguitars think linearly.
@braxtonnelson53757 ай бұрын
It says a lot about the Car Wizard that he freely admits when he makes a mistake (even when it is just ordering unneeded parts). It makes all of his other videos just that much more credible, and it shows how he takes what could be a bad situation and makes it into a learning experience. Just one of the reasons I love this channel, and I respect the Car Wizard (and Mrs. Wizard, too!)
@LeslieWalters-n9t7 ай бұрын
You may notice at some point that oil is pumping out of the front oil seal at an alarming rate. Many people have dumped the whole car thinking that it is not worth fixing such an inexpensive car. The problem is usually very easy to remedy. The sump breather tube runs into the air cleaner. After a while, the valve where the tube enters the air cleaner gets blocked. This causes excess pressure in the sump and so oil is pushed through the front oil seal. The valve is just a ball and spring arrangement. Remove the top of the air cleaner and remove the filter. The valve is held in place by a small bolt or screw and is easily dismantled. Remove any gunk from the tube and replace the valve parts. Oil leak solved.
@raven4k9982 ай бұрын
break the carburetor with a hammer because it's hammer time!!!🤣🤣
@phillipwoodruff7 ай бұрын
Finally actually showing us a repair being done and not just telling us about it and showing the parts! More of that type of content, please.
@raven4k9982 ай бұрын
do you play ping pong?🤣🤣
@ahyeaman7 ай бұрын
I spent a year in Moscow, these cars were always beat up but running. Lada Niva is a really cool 4x4!
@xristoslazarakos92507 ай бұрын
ΝΙVA is the best 4x4 the hunters in Greece are using them because NIVA can go were the other 4x4 can not go.
@malcolmhardwick42587 ай бұрын
@@xristoslazarakos9250 Same in Australia !
@imupowqk7 ай бұрын
@@xristoslazarakos9250 Except Suzuki Jimny.
@plazmotron20007 ай бұрын
@@xristoslazarakos9250 lemme introduce you to the MIGHTY UAZ 469
@plazmotron20007 ай бұрын
@@imupowqk actually, I don't think I've seen a comparison between those cars, and I would really like to see it, since both cars are pretty similar in the base idea.
@Demo123457 ай бұрын
I know this might sound silly, but make sure to write exactly what model of car those wheel cylinders are for on the boxes they're in that way no matter where you put them you will never have questions about what vehicle they're for. Even if you put them in the trunk and leave them there make sure to write what they're for on the boxes. It's stupid but it's helped me to make sure I don't end up with a pile of questions especially if I come back to something a few years down the line.
@jamesjetty6257 ай бұрын
Having spare parts for an odd ball car is never a loss!!
@MrCarGuy7 ай бұрын
Lucky he could even get the parts
@karibakid7 ай бұрын
@@MrCarGuy Its really a FIAT124 made in Russia Fiat sold them the factory to build the cars also had a military' version and New ZEALAND traded butter for the cars
@sagradamoly42347 ай бұрын
@@karibakid It's not a FIAT 124. They look similar, but every single part is non-FIAT. Nothing is interchangeable. New parts are easy to find for Ladas, but not for FIATs. However, some Italian/British speed parts like Weber carbs might fit.
@Munakas-wq3gp7 ай бұрын
Especially considering that with the trade embargo and the war in Ukraine, spare parts may become very scarce. I used to see Ladas on the road daily but now they have become really rare, partly because the russians have bought most of the second hand cars back to Russia. Nobody wants them in the west but back there they're still popular. Noisy, polluting and rough, the russian way of life.
@Wjohnsonize7 ай бұрын
Kswap it
@danlargent38067 ай бұрын
You need to wear full Adidas in these videos
@docnele7 ай бұрын
Or at least "Adios" from the local market :)
@jochenstacker74487 ай бұрын
And in one shot he has to do the Slavic Squat.
@C.Fecteau-AU-MJ137 ай бұрын
Not just any Adidas, it's the black tracksuit with the white stripes and a gold chain.
@C.Fecteau-AU-MJ137 ай бұрын
@@docneleDon't be ridiculous... You can get counterfeit Adidas in those markets that still says Adidas. Copyright infringement doesn't translate terribly well into Russian, or Mandarin for that matter.
@BRBodin7 ай бұрын
@@jochenstacker7448Full Gopnik style
@JustAlanJohn7 ай бұрын
Lada co uk they ship worldwide if you ever need parts.
@pamoffa7 ай бұрын
Thanks for the content car wizard, I got off regular TV around 2017 and found youtube content to be superior, I don't even know what shows are on the boob tube now. Thanks again being someone putting out good quality stuff along with the other people I watch. Big thumbs up. It wasn't forced getting off the boob tube it was just natural. I know it was 2017 because I watched Grimm and grimm had the final season.
@lvsqcsl7 ай бұрын
IIRC that Lada was called the Lada Riva and was in production until 2012 at the Togliatti Plant. That car was based on the Fiat 124. In the Soviet Union it was the VAZ-2105 and there was a wagon version that was the 2104. There was also an SUV called the Lada Niva and I think that might still be in production. GREAT VIDEO!
@yuris61257 ай бұрын
Correct, although it wasn't called the Riva domestically.
@Munakas-wq3gp7 ай бұрын
@@yuris6125 Back there they call it the Zhiguli :) I remember my father had a lada station wagon in the 80's (the older model than this one) and it had 'movie tyres' meaning whenever you took a sharper turn the tyres started to howl like in the old hollywood movies :) We had a lot of fun driving it around the city sounding like we were racing it or something 😂
@HowardLeVert7 ай бұрын
@@yuris6125 Riva in the UK, certainly.
@lucasrem7 ай бұрын
@lvsqcsl RIVA was the US name only, VAZ 2107 it is.
@lucasrem7 ай бұрын
@@yuris6125 RIVA was the US name only, VAZ 2107 it is.
@Barbarapape7 ай бұрын
My father bought one brand new, then got an instant arm muscle excercise trying to drive it. They sold boat loads of them in the UK, if you couldn't afford one of the UK built rot boxes you bought a Lada or worse still a Skoda ! They were crude but easy to service at home, the only issue was rust, they realy were bad for it, as were most other cars at the time.
@MrDuncl7 ай бұрын
Advertised by comedians (Cannon and Ball). I just found an old advertisement and the major selling point seemed to be the £99 deposit.
@Barbarapape7 ай бұрын
@@MrDuncl That is why they sold so well, compared to the overpriced rust buckets from Ford etc they were affordable, they were crude but surprisingly reliable, our neighbours Cortina would fail to start on icy mornings but my fathers Lada always started.
@HowardLeVert7 ай бұрын
You omitted Wartburg and Moskvitch, but admittedly that was in the 1970s.
@Barbarapape7 ай бұрын
@@HowardLeVert So were the Lada's but they were advertised more. Cheap basic transport that was affordable and easy to maintain.
@lucasrem7 ай бұрын
Barbarapape.Only stupid people bought them new, unable to have skills too buy a used car ! Freaks only !
@rallymodeller7 ай бұрын
Gas used to smell good because of the tetraethyl lead -- lead is sweet-smelling. Since unleaded gas is no more, it smells sour now. Try smelling avgas, you'll get that old sweet smell.
@timokuusela57947 ай бұрын
It even tastes different: when I was kid, I had a "summer place car", and I had to siphon fuel from my dad's Ford to keep running. So, I have plenty of experience of the taste(and plenty of lead in me...).
@fbboringstuff7 ай бұрын
Avgas is still leaded and likely will be forever
@buffdelcampo7 ай бұрын
@@fbboringstuff G100UL fuel is already flying.
@vdochev7 ай бұрын
And probably cancer too. No, thanks. But seriously, thanks for the explanation.
@robertward87947 ай бұрын
Australia. Used to know a guy who was a Lada dealer back in the day. Trying to buy a stock of spare parts from Lada was an exercise in futility, so he bought extra cars which he used as his parts source.
@paulsolovyovsky17027 ай бұрын
My grandfather had a Lada 2100 Zhiguli in the Soviet Union we used to ride in. The cars are simple and easy to fix. I also visited Cuba a few years ago and they still buy them, at least the newer ones and they are more expensive than you'd find the Hondas and Toyotas since they make 10x more as drivers as Taxis than being doctors since they get hard cash. Great unique cars for what they are. Keep in mind you would have to wait 5-10 years in line to be able to buy one..and people complain about their cars and what we have here in the good ole USA..
@rogerking72587 ай бұрын
Here in the UK, these were an object of derision when they were on sale. But a mate of mine had one and he reckoned it was the best car he'd ever owned - yes, it was crude, noisy and not well finished, but it was reliable and robust. He didn't have to worry too much about picking up parking dents and he discovered he could leave it all day in the railway station car park with the keys in it and he didn't have to worry about it being stolen.
@industrialmonk7 ай бұрын
We had plenty of lada's in the uk thay were cheep & reliable. I used to work on some i liked them and some had verneer adjustable distributor so you didn't need to unbolt it & move it to adjust the ignition timing. Great car's.
@TheSaabClinicUK7 ай бұрын
Yeh i used to remember loads of Riva's on the road, and pretty much overnight they all disappeared.
@JohnSmith-pl2bk7 ай бұрын
@@TheSaabClinicUK Russian ship's crews bought them and shipped them back to Russia for parts...YT vids showing a storm at sea with Ladas smashing into each other and falling overboard....
@MrDuncl7 ай бұрын
@@JohnSmith-pl2bk I have just been looking and in 1995 there were over 110000 registered in the U.K. By 2015 that was down to less than 200. By then a used engine was worth more in Russia than the whole car in the U.K.
@JohnSmith-pl2bk7 ай бұрын
@@MrDuncl Here in New Zealand an Egyptian businessman (around 2007) arranged for two Egyptian mechanics to arrive in NZ on tourist visas. They lived in a shipping container in a wrecker's yard and worked every day stripping all Ladas and Peugeots that were sent there for mechanical parts which were sent back home tp be sold all over Africa.....and Russia That really cleaned out the last vestiges of the Ladas here which originally were traded by the USSR for our NZ butter in the 1980's . Which they then stripped out for butterfat etc. and on sold for more than it cost them originally... and we got Ladas...especially Nivas. I had one myself...on one occasion I drove through a West Coast river with water to the door handle on the upstream side....... driving past a Toyota Landcruiser flooded out...... 32/36 DGV Weber carb off a Cortina gave it better torque response, the largest off road mud tyres possible without any suspension mods gave it the grip....and it surprised many people with where it could go and how well.....
@ivangordiychuk55107 ай бұрын
U can remove the drum using these aligning dowel pins. just wrap them in the threaded holes.
@shenaniganguy7 ай бұрын
It was a pleasure to see you actually working on a car and explaining the process instead of just talking about it. BTW... did you know that those cars came from the factory with a hand starting crank? They're redundant due to the North American mandated safety bumpers. There's a hole in the sheet metal behind the bumper to allow the crank (in the tool kit) to be inserted.
@wxbgt017 ай бұрын
I lived in St. Petersburg, Russia for four years building a factory and getting it up and running. We bought three Ladas for the locals to drive for errands, etc. I came to the conclusion after seeing so many accidents in Ladas that any accident would be a fatality. The Russians bought the complete tooling and assembly line from Fiat.
@Munakas-wq3gp7 ай бұрын
The ladas were very popular in demolition derby because they are made from relatively thick metal. The car will deform quite bad but keep on going... No modern crumple zones or safety features of course. The basic design is from the 60's.
@markellii30937 ай бұрын
@@Munakas-wq3gpAnd most importantly, they are cheap, if the car has previous damage, it's dirt cheap. Perfect for the "fun" car, the one you dont care about, but somehow love more than the daily.
@Munakas-wq3gp7 ай бұрын
@@markellii3093 Funnily enough the prices for Ladas started to go up when they all got bought by the russians. Not by much but anyway... Car prices here are nearly double compared to most other countries due to insane taxation.
@Munakas-wq3gp7 ай бұрын
@@markellii3093 I remember when I drove my drivers license 2nd phase test drive, I had been driving my grandfathers old 'round eyed' Lada 1300 which didn't have a brake booster. Whenever stopping you really had to stand on the brakes. When I switched the the new Volvo of the driving school, the first braking attempts were pretty abrupt to say the least 😂 The Volvo had feather light controls.
@markellii30937 ай бұрын
@@Munakas-wq3gp yeah, the steering booster will really change the experience too.
@timblanchard71267 ай бұрын
The carb float on my 79 Lada broke off at the pivot arm. The replacement float that came from the Lada dealer came in a parts box that said "Fiat".
@OlegAryutkin4 ай бұрын
Those Lada’s often used licensed Italian parts. The whole car is a (redesigned) licensed fiat
@gordonwelcher959810 күн бұрын
My 1980 Canadian 1500 Lada had a Russian carburetor that was a clone of some kind of Weber. I had the service manual for the Weber, it was almost the same.
@Ahto427 ай бұрын
In Estonia, they are good winter beaters. Light and RWD, good studded tires and on to an ice tracks on fields.
@Saddletramp12007 ай бұрын
Been a mechanic 40 years. 4.6 minutes after you send the un needed part back the one you have will fail.
@MikeJones-mz5ig7 ай бұрын
Not in our experience. We actually have higher regard for Lada Nivas than American cars. Jeeps etc.
@shivermetimbers93167 ай бұрын
@MikeJones-mz5ig who is we lol? Pretty sure he was speaking in general as well..
@MikeJones-mz5ig7 ай бұрын
@@shivermetimbers9316I'm in Oz. Where they were once imported like Canada.
@LancerloverLL7 ай бұрын
😂
@foxstrangler7 ай бұрын
When these were first imported into the UK, they had to have the brakes looked at. The wheel cylinders used to leak from new and did not pass scrutiny. Having spares is no bad thing.
@teepi2807 ай бұрын
I think they replaced the Russian tyres with a European quality brand and put decent friction material in the brakes.
@aris95Ай бұрын
If they had galvanized the Lada in the factory it would be almost immortal 😊
@philipwilliams79477 ай бұрын
These are the cars USSR people used to be on waiting lists for years. When I was there in 1995, the Russian policeman I talked to proudly stated he was due his new car in a few weeks. He said he was on a waiting list of two years.
@MK-bv6wn7 ай бұрын
fake news back in 1995 there was no soviet union
@shahramtondkarmobarakie18247 ай бұрын
ironically 1995 is post soviet russia, the amazing liberal shock therapy westerners proudly proclaimed to be russia's salvation at the time
@CShellby7 ай бұрын
It was the same deal in our country Turkey, we had the smiliar cars based on the fiat 131 we had to wait months rather than years though! Its amazing how long Russian people had to wait! Here when they were new they costed around the same price as an apartment floor!
@abnorc87987 ай бұрын
In the USSR, waiting was a way of life! My parents were telling me about how you enter your kids into the wait list many years in advance, so they can get a home closer to when they're ready to move out.
@TheDeadfast7 ай бұрын
There was a joke about this. A man puts in an order for a new Zhiguli (Lada). He is told it will be arriving ten years from today. He notes it down in his calendar and asks whether it will be in the morning or the afternoon. The salesman says, confused: "It's ten years from now. Why does it matter whether it's the morning or the afternoon?" The man replies: "Well, you see, I already have a plumber coming to fix my toilet that morning."
@user-cl5ov9dx5o7 ай бұрын
Customer has NO idea what is needed, but trust JOE the neighbor more than the mechanic. I have written estimates for things just like you and find out what was NOT needed. I had a customer ARGUE telling me the thermostat was causing overheating when radiator leaks would NOT. Asked if she had been adding coolant.......................Another customer wants estimate to replace knock sensor. We learn to ask proper questions sometimes and owner had no idea a tapping lifter was the problem, and not the knock sensor
@worldtraveler9307 ай бұрын
Why does a Lada have heated rear windows? To help keep the people their hands warm who are pushing it in the winter!!! 🤠👍
@Toloselotrek7 ай бұрын
By the way, the Lada 2107 was produced until 2012 with virtually no design changes. Except that in 2003 they replaced the carburetor engine with an injection one. And Lada models 2107 and 2105 are very popular cars for winter street drifting in Russia. Kids simply weld the differential, find an empty parking lot, and let the fun begin.
@alinanet947 ай бұрын
15:00 it says ДААЗ (DAAZ) - "Димитровградский автоагрегатный завод" (Dimitrovograd auto parts factory). This factory was built in 1969 to - you guessed it - make parts for VAZ, and later for other Soviet car manufacturers.
@lucasrem7 ай бұрын
VAZ, DAZ or DAG ZAS ort ZAG? Basicly the state all. FIAT factory it is.
@frglee7 ай бұрын
These cars were fairly solid, simple and cheap. Not fast, sophisticated, modern, luxurious or even particularly reliable . But cheap basic transport. In the UK often bought by older retired drivers on a budget. When Lada stopped selling cars in the UK in the 90s, they virtually all disappeared within a year - bought back and shipped en masse back to Russia where they were still much in demand after converting the steering back to RHD.
@emmanuelsamson48197 ай бұрын
This is why I still drive an old car. No computer or complex electronics, no warning christmas lights on the dashboard. Very easy to maintain and fix.
@CheapBastard19887 ай бұрын
Is a multi carburetor engine really easier to live with than a port electronic fuel injected engine? I don't think so. Fuel systems got worse with direct injection. Cars were best between 1995 and 2010. They were worse before and worse after.
@piercehawke80217 ай бұрын
No joke there.
@bindingcurve7 ай бұрын
How old and how many miles. I drive 00 Xterra 2.4 with a manual. Personally, I like fuel injection and OBD2.
@piercehawke80217 ай бұрын
@@bindingcurve compared to the current model vehicles; your Xterra is a simple to fix dinosaur. :)
@bindingcurve7 ай бұрын
@@piercehawke8021 my coworkers call it a relic. But it still has a computer. Hell, my 1990 had a computer 🤣🤣🤣
@Stratotank3r7 ай бұрын
Nice to see the Lada from Robert here on this channel. As a german with 4 years of Russian in my schooltime I can still read everything but need a translator for almost anything. The Words in the Repairset are as follows: ремонтный комплект для карбюратора - Repairset for carburetor. The name VAZ or ВАЗ stands for Волжский автомобильный завод - Wolschskij awtomobilnyj sawod or in English "Wolga Car factory".
@johnvender7 ай бұрын
I spent the first twelve years of my life in communist Czechoslovakia and remember long waiting lists for cars in the soviet block countries. A joke I heard that I liked about this was a guy in East Germany has been working hard and decides to buy himself a Trabant. When he orders it the salesman tells him it will be delivered in ten years time and asks him if he wants to take the delivery in the morning or the afternoon. The guy says make it in the morning, the plumber is coming in the afternoon.
@garystrabala36817 ай бұрын
One or Ronald Reagan's favorite jokes!
@dmitripogosian50847 ай бұрын
Classical joke, we knew it in USSR. In this variation also as a hint to German punctuality :). Jokes aside, if somebody told me back in USSR how long I need to wait sometime for a repairman now in Canada, I would think they are crazy.
@Dungshoveleux6 ай бұрын
An old soviet joke haha!
@dzonikg6 ай бұрын
You could buy LADA instantly in Yugoslavia from dealers ,there was no wait .One old men in my neighborhood still have Lada that he bought like 50 years ago In second part off 80s Lada Samara was popular here . If you drived small euro car in 70s and 80s you really did not want to crash in Lada becase their steal was way thicker
@MrAuriga677 ай бұрын
Plus Aluminum brake drums are used to combat problems with frozen brakes in Siberian winters.
@Paul-gg3gl7 ай бұрын
Hard to find a honest mechanic these days you definitely one of them.
@johnelliott73757 ай бұрын
Now it's a huge shop for the best in the business. You have come a long way from the humble beginnings and I will say that you are still a great and honest mechanic and person!
@hailudyami74687 ай бұрын
glad im not the only one who buys parts before fully inspecting
@lucasrem7 ай бұрын
You should replace it all, disc brakes, Wankel engine etc !
@tambarskelfir7 ай бұрын
It is good practice to keep vehicles clean, engine bay and everywhere one does repairs. Makes it easier to see what is going wrong when something does go wrong.
@marsgal427 ай бұрын
Back in the day there were a fair number of Ladas in Canada. Cars designed for Russian winters had no trouble with Canadian winters. I was half expecting the purchase price to be stamped next to the VIN. Russian products were like that.
@dmitripogosian50847 ай бұрын
Yes, it took me long time to adjust to the world where price is not a set part of the product, probably stamped on the factory. 35 years on it still annoys me mildly that I need to shop for a price of the same thing from different vendors
@dmitripogosian50847 ай бұрын
I saw few when I arrived to Canada in 1993. My landlord had one in the past, just before my arrival switched to Jaguar, which then in 7 years I stayed was him never left a workshop, it seems, was constantly in repairs
@fuelaholic7 ай бұрын
Except for road salt in winter, these things had huge scabby rust blotches all over them in just a few years. One of my teachers had bought one new, 3 years laters, fist sized rust scabs on the passenger door, etc. She got rid of it and bought a Subaru.
@lucasrem7 ай бұрын
Canadian regulation did that ! You should service it yourself, so iis the design made.
@baxdesign7 ай бұрын
Ladas are great in that they're a '60s/'70s design which means if you're vaguely handy they're a perfect do-it-yourself car. I still use an '80s Lada Niva as my 4x4 because of the fact I can fix it in the middle of nowhere with basic tools, unlike like any vehicle with a computer. PS - you don't need to disassemble brakes to get the data about a leak, simply clean the leak stains off and see if the stains re-appear or not.
@robertharris70277 ай бұрын
03:03 The original (FIAT 124) had discs all around. And they made a version with the Lampredi-DOHC engine. That must have been a nice little car (I had two 124 spiders with Lampredi engines).
@MrPabsUk7 ай бұрын
The Lampredi twin cam slots straight into these, it was a reasonably common upgrade for sleeper fans back in the 80`s & 90`s, you could even fit the "volumex" supercharger from the Lancia Beta or Fiat 131/Argenta. Top Gear did it (with Lotus) in the early noughties IIRC?
@vermontguy76927 ай бұрын
Drum brake tip from an old Greybeard: always bevel the top and bottom of each shoe. This allows for full contact with the drum until they're fully bedded in. I noticed that these weren't. Thanx for all the interesting and informative videos, David! 😁
@MrAuriga677 ай бұрын
Car Wizard, two things you should do to your Lada. #1 - Take the Russian Ozone carb off and chuck it in the trash, fit a Webber carb for better drive ability. #2 - Change the bearing in the Ignition distributor, they are a known weakness, and lead to drive ability issues !
@ИльяУнылов-ь1т6 ай бұрын
Гораздо дешевле поставить российский солекс. В продаже есть кит комплекты.
@Hotrodman6 ай бұрын
Nothing bad with that Ozone carb, you can tune it up in any way. And if you really want to do replacement like you mentioned, you should consider that the Russian made Ozone and the Italian Weber carburetors have different stud layouts. P.S. Distributor bearings are reliable as hell.😊
@bluesman48945 ай бұрын
Hey I know the answer to this one! When you were a kid (guessing 80s-early 00s?) They had phased out leaded gas. To reduce knock they switched to Methyl Tert Butyl Ether (MTBE).Now the anti knock is some other compound and doesn't smell nearly as good. I worked environmental consulting and always thought the spills that had MTBE smelled better than new gas spills.
@davealmer38037 ай бұрын
Is this your 1st new video that lets you work on Euro Supercars exclusively
@VolkerHett7 ай бұрын
He said exotic cars and a Lada certainly is exotic in the US :D
@MrDuncl7 ай бұрын
@@VolkerHett There now seem to be more in the USA than are left in the U.K where they sold them new. In 1995 there were over 110000 on the U.K's roads. Since 2015 there have been less than 200
@paulofagundes30067 ай бұрын
Hi, I currently own a Lada similar to this one in Brazil. But mine is a 1993 2105 5-speed 1.6L, the basic model, not the luxury 2107 as it wasn't sold here. Plus, I bought mine with a smashed right fender. Talk about a sturdy car with a strong suspension, it is great for handling the potholes in São Paulo roads. I drove mine for quite some time with no oil in the differential, now it is a bit bumpy to drive at idle thanks to wear on the gears but still goes on, the gearbox had such strong leak that it ran out of oil, it now pops back from 4th to neutral and sometimes smells like something is burned, but it keeps going until my old del rey comes back from the electrician. I highly recommend as an indestructible beater car. VAZ Stands for Vólzhskiy avtomobíl'nyy zavód (Volga Automotive Plant), similar to Fiat in how the initials are used to describe where the first factory is located. It was the same with other Russian brands, like GAZ, ZIL, and MAZ. I remember from your previous video asking why a light turned on on the defroster switch when you turned on the headlights, mine does the same and I also don't know why kkkk.
@KeenlyJohnas7 ай бұрын
ВАЗ - “Волжки Автомобилен Завод”, Volga Motor Plants (named to the big river Volga that passes through the Volgograd - known mostly by its WWII name as Stalingrad) 😊. The carburettor box says exactly that “Carburettor repair kit” 😂
@KLUKVOBOR7 ай бұрын
That was a funny spelling. Sounded a bit German almost. Here is the correct one."Волжский автомобильный завод". But who cares anyway?:) Had a similar car in the family for years.
@KeenlyJohnas7 ай бұрын
@@KLUKVOBORApologies, I just studied “руский язьк” in school - I’m not native 😊
@karibakid7 ай бұрын
LADA A SWAN
@matseriksson81777 ай бұрын
During the first year I drove my first VAZ/LADA I was puzzled. Why does it say "BA3" all over the car? Until I realized "BA3" is "VAZ" in the russian/cyrillic alphabet. :)
@vasiliansotirov69764 ай бұрын
@@KLUKVOBOR He spelled it in Bulgarian
@Flies2FLL7 ай бұрын
David, I am a committed car guy and I have learned so much about shops and what they are up against from you! Great video!
@drewstone-z1d7 ай бұрын
my mechanic has a big sign as soon as you walk in, "the parts you buy, you install in your garage, the parts we buy we install in ours" love it
@dwilliams53347 ай бұрын
The parts we buy and double the price.
@whatareyoudoingyouidiot3427 ай бұрын
Yeah my old mechanic had a standing policy of not installing owner-provided parts. Ran into too many problems with parts that didn't fit, or were wrong, or bad, and customers getting pissed.
@thiefrules7 ай бұрын
@@dwilliams5334 blame the companies that charge for a monthly/yearly membership fee to be able to purchase parts from them for the upcharge
@_PatrickO7 ай бұрын
@@dwilliams5334 Feel free to put in the work to find reliable part suppliers on your own then and learn how to validate the parts before you install them. Even if you were charged double for the part, that is cheaper than paying twice for labor or more.
@MrCarGuy7 ай бұрын
Doesn't fly around here where it's extremely competitive. Anyone can get OE parts from the same source as the local Euro mechanics do. FCP for example
@SuperVitz7 ай бұрын
I think the carb on those is a Solex, or a copy of Solex. There are Weber options available too.
@gordonwelcher959810 күн бұрын
My 1980 Canadian 1500 Lada had a Russian carburetor that was a clone of some kind of Weber. I had the service manual for the Weber, it was almost the same.
@ronaldspins7 ай бұрын
@ 17:25 todays ethanol gas kill carb gaskets and rubber stuff
@duckylucky65057 ай бұрын
Cheap Russian vodka too.
@volvo097 ай бұрын
Gas has always killed fuel related stuff, making them hard and brittle... It's just better at it today. Ethanol by itself isn't a problem, I actually converted a mini ike to run on E85 ethanol when I had access to the fuel and the carb and fuel lines were fine... Had it in there for 3 years before I put the stock jets back in and returned it to gas to sell.
@NotAnonymousNo800147 ай бұрын
@@volvo09 Rubber car parts made after 2000 should be ethanol resistant in general, but not before.
@dmitripogosian50847 ай бұрын
As we know on the lake with old carb outboards :(
@dmitripogosian50847 ай бұрын
@@volvo09 Ethanol absorbs water if left in the fuel system
@Tshade677 ай бұрын
When I saw the thumbnail I thought another channel I follow bought a red Lada. Low and behold it's the same Lada. Robert has a great channel with awesome content! I've followed him since his early days of KZbin.
@HONDATECH937 ай бұрын
GARAGE54 is looking for their Lada
@volvo097 ай бұрын
Don't let them get anywhere near this one!
@iloveg257 ай бұрын
LOL
@van_trippin52607 ай бұрын
i really wanted him to start with "hey there fellas"
@ShowMeWhatINeedToKnow7 ай бұрын
Great channel
@talon2627 ай бұрын
@van_trippin5260 the only Vlad I want to hear from or about
@snakeplissken17546 ай бұрын
17:06 i kinda feel you on that. Still like the smell of a classic driving by. Sure the exhaust fumes may be less toxic in modern cars, but the old ones have a nice smell to them. Guess same is true with gasoline.
@Denominus7 ай бұрын
My ideal car (that doesn't exist), has the ease of working on and maintenance as older cars, with modern safety features.
@PiotrusNazwiskowy7 ай бұрын
And no nonsese systems like GM Antitheft system
@ThatBobGuy8507 ай бұрын
Ohhhh Wizard! RE: the Lada. I'm a-guessing that the Lada spent some part of its life in a place that was...umm...other than tropical. I guessing that the brake job was done in the winter...maybe outdoors, or in an unheated garage/shop. Thus, they did the job as expediently as possible, and squirting brake cleaner and making it look pretty was probably low on the priority scale. They got the cylinder and shoes changed, put the drum back on the sent it on its way.
@Thegonagle7 ай бұрын
The 1991 Lada looks like one of the finest cars available in 1967.
@Dwigt_Rortugal7 ай бұрын
I grew up in a family that didn't know much of anything about cars. In the 80s as a young boy, I'd see a Volvo 240 and I thought they were Russian until someone corrected me.
@ronaldderooij17747 ай бұрын
I remember an acquaintance of my parents had the predecessor of this car (Lada 1500 GL). I drove it once. It lacked all, and I mean all sophistication. But I also liked its honesty. Steering was super heavy and indirect, the throttle and clutch were both on/off switches, making driving a thing you needed to do precisely. The gear box felt like a semi truck. But... it was spacious, luxurious (for the time) and it was reliable. And it rusted, we put on two new sets of fenders in 10 years time.
@tabajaralabs7 ай бұрын
In Russia, Lada works on YOU! (what? No one remembers the russian reversal???)
@ernie305g97 ай бұрын
In Soviet Russian you don’t work on car , car works on you
@boomhaueroo87037 ай бұрын
Y. SMIRNOFF!!!!
@trespire7 ай бұрын
Meanwhile, somewhere in Soviet Russia, some guy with a hammer ..
@jdrs42147 ай бұрын
In Soviet Russia, you don’t hunt Bear. Bear hunt you.
@jdrs42147 ай бұрын
In Mother Russia, you don’t break law. Law Breaks you.
@ayarnold95237 ай бұрын
If you find something leaking it's best to clean it up and see how long it takes to leak again, that way you know how serious the leak is and can repair or monitor as required.
@theshadowman13987 ай бұрын
It needs a flashier color and wheels. That how we Russians did it in the 90s. VAZ translated from Russian means: Volga automotive factory
@thomascordery79517 ай бұрын
The colour's actually pretty great as background for the hammer and sickle decal.
@forestfirestarter7 ай бұрын
Fiat twin cam engine lol
@TheBBodyBuilder7 ай бұрын
I remember looking at one of those brand new on the lot in 91…great little car for the money. I ended up buying a Niva the 4x4 sister to that car. Was a decent little machine.
@CaptainFeathersword7 ай бұрын
VAZ is the manufacturer of the Lada, which served as its marketing name. It is based off the Fiat 124.
@dmitripogosian50847 ай бұрын
BTW Lada is the name for foreign markets. In USSR the car was knowн as Zhiguli (Жигули) which is a geographical area next to the city of Toliatti where the factory was. The city was named after Italian communist leader as the plans for factory location were finalized in 1964
@NorthernChev7 ай бұрын
DIY Tip: Whenever taking the bolts out of anything near the carburetor always manually set the choke closed before starting work. That will help prevent anything from falling into the intake.
@Rekuzan7 ай бұрын
Driving an old Lada is an adventure even when it's running right! The steering wheel is more of a suggestion than anything, the suspension is a joke, it doesn't have enough power to get out of it's own way. Then there is the world famous Lada asymmetrical braking system that decides on it's own which wheel will be braking and when. Also, their owners are usually the Russian equivalent of Florida man.
@KefOnePro7 ай бұрын
Florida's man Russia named kubanoidy
@papplet17 ай бұрын
My lada usually locked the rear brakes before the front ones, which were interesting on gravel roads 😂
@JohnSmith-pl2bk7 ай бұрын
@@papplet1 The brake proportioning valve mounted under the car was designed to fill up with mud and water and rust solid... so yes... no proportioned braking... that would normally favour the discs up front with more pressure to the discs than the rear drums.
@K2teknik.6 ай бұрын
Lada existed in a domestic version and one or more export versions, some export version was made in Finland. I recall 1200, 1300, 1500, and a 1600 engine for the thing, some said that there were two bore sizes for the engine and two cam shafts and you get four engines sizes. You could adjust the ignition timing to fit the gasoline you were putting on the beast, just pop the hood and adjust on the spot and you were good to go, so 100 mph was no problem with the 1600. Biggest issue was rust, but same shit for most cars of that time span.
@JW-lo2bh7 ай бұрын
Love the "Russian" music when the car goes up and down on the lift!
@lucasrem7 ай бұрын
Italian music ?
@GManWrites7 ай бұрын
FYI the Lada is based on the FIAT 124. The Italians were commissioned as early as in 1966 to re-design their 124 sedan completely, then set up an assembly line, train the workers and give the people of Togliatti a product they could be proud of. The VAZ-2101 was ready to hit the streets by 1970
@dmitripogosian50847 ай бұрын
You may also notice that the city was named after the Italian communist leader in 1964 just as it was decided to be the place of upcoming factory automotive factory for Lada's
@mikiscruf7 ай бұрын
%The Car Wizard has been infected by Jeremy Clarkson and his hammer.
@Zeck885227 ай бұрын
its Nuclear!
@chrisdooley11847 ай бұрын
Love Rob and Ageing Wheels! It’s really the only EV channel I really watch because he features some of the coolest stuff I have zero knowledge about 🤣
@MrNobody-t5z7 ай бұрын
This car is actually Italian, russians bought the brand later.
@TheAllAroundMan7 ай бұрын
It's based on the Fiat 124 which VAZ bought the manufacturing license to. The lada has thicker steel used for the bodywork and heavier springs.
@urugvajchernamazyj62407 ай бұрын
No. They made a shyte copy of one.
@alexanderstefanov64747 ай бұрын
@@TheAllAroundManthe engine is later ohc fiat design, not russian
@TheAllAroundMan7 ай бұрын
@@alexanderstefanov6474 I scrubbed that part of my comment thanks for the correction
@mcplutt7 ай бұрын
LOL
@chadwahl90857 ай бұрын
The only thing that Lada needs now is a dash cam. When I was in Moscow in 2003 they were everywhere on the streets, sidewalks, pathways through parks anywhere you could fit a Zhiguli on.
@mrluckyuncle7 ай бұрын
The Wizard didn’t much appreciate his gift :-(
@chillin337 ай бұрын
I had a rich running condition on a 1982 Toyota Celica with 22R that wouldn't lean out with adjustment and discovered the auxiliary pump diaphragm was leaking fuel into the mixture. Common problem on carbureted engines👍
@adityasanthanam19457 ай бұрын
Gas used to smell nicer because of the lead, which is also why older cars ran better on leaded gas, they were made to run on it.
@mjmorrill0817 ай бұрын
You are absolutely right about today's gasoline. I have a 1973 Thunderbird and if it's over 85° I have to worry about vapor lock. And what a great design on a carburetor where you can just change the accelerator pump. Without taking the entire top of the carburetor off. These cars were made to basically fix with a hammer!
@scott96767 ай бұрын
Is that the car that Jeremy Clarkson couldn't dent with a hammer?
@62effjay7 ай бұрын
No, that's the Trabant.
@Random-nf7qb7 ай бұрын
It was. Also the inside of the drum is cast iron, only the surround is aluminium for heat dissipation.
@douglasnieblas747 ай бұрын
In my home country of Cuba, these were everywhere back in the 80s and 90s. People who owned them have told me that they are pretty good mechanically but in the tropical climate will start showing rust bubbles even when brand new because of the quality of the steel used by the Soviets. This one seems pretty solid in that respect.
@freddyboombatz7 ай бұрын
It looks like a early 70's Fiat.
@darkiee697 ай бұрын
That's because it is. VAZ bought the rights to build them in the Soviet union under the Lada name.
@970357ers7 ай бұрын
Watch James May’s cars of the people.
@MK-bv6wn7 ай бұрын
It is modified licenced Fiat 124 stronger body, OHC not OHV engine etc.
@bg3657 ай бұрын
@@MK-bv6wn This one looks more like a 125. Slightly bigger than the 124, similar lines. I’m not big on the Lada’s though. Not sure if this one is based on a Fiat 124 or a 125.
@immigrant69027 ай бұрын
It's a FIAT 124 ,
@daw75637 ай бұрын
Diesel or oil on a hot exhaust is axctually worse than gas, since they can self ignite by temperature (not spark).
@forestfirestarter7 ай бұрын
This is the reason why I didnt have an engine fire when the rubber hose leaked on my European Ford Fiesta
@lffit7 ай бұрын
My French father in law bought one of these, and we drove it while on holidays in the country; my wife called it our Russian Mercedes it was poorly made and the doors were hard to close and leaked gas from the old fashioned glass dome topped fuel pump, I wondered why it was so heavy on fuel and luckily didn't catch on fire, but it got us through during one bad winter of snow and iced up roads on its big Russian tyres!
@DeVoNmotorsports7 ай бұрын
7:32 after you use the brake cleaner you need to at least lube the the contact points the shoes contact the backplate with grease usually 3 on each side and sand off the glazing on the brake shoe and drum and better would be to lube the top pivot point and the parking brake cable with graphite dry lube, use rubber safe dielectric grease on cylinder seals and thin coat of undercoat oil on everything else
@me_nulis7 ай бұрын
As a former UAZ Patriot owner i can assure you - you don't cry over the parts you order in an advance/mistakenly. You will need them anyway anytime soon. Mostly very soon))))
@Fractal_CZ7 ай бұрын
It was my first car back in 1996. I got it from my father to drive to the university. Everything I know about basic car stuff is thenks to this. The repairs were super easy, but it was constant fixing. Still miss it today :)
@PieterBreda7 ай бұрын
You know that the average Sovjet citizen had to wait 6-10 years to get one.
@volvo097 ай бұрын
They took pride in their cars also and kept them for a long time.
@pablopicaro76497 ай бұрын
If ordering new, and a person of no importance. If you get used/black market, or had some pull you could get quickly
@kioskinio7 ай бұрын
They were a pile of shit. If you get a new one you have to disassemble and assemble it again otherwise you won't go far.
@prtube17 ай бұрын
They all ended up in Cuba.
@dmitripogosian50847 ай бұрын
In the 70s, it was not like that later. My dad got his in 1982, sold in 2004 already in independent Estonia. The car I learned to drive on. And had my first accident 😂
@docnele7 ай бұрын
You shuld have applied a wee bit of brake grease on touching/linking/moving parts in brakes now you cleaned it. Brake fluid leak residues usually do a good lubrication job if you just replace the parts :) Be careful when braking hard and see does it swing a tail end (to left/right). Those have brake adjustment and Panhard rod, but can be waay off. Prop hood is a newer stuff... my 2101/2105 had a spring lock system. Good, but you have to consider that if windy must blow over the car! Such 2107 chassis/21011 (1300, chain-driven) engine was non-existant where I live. I remember those "Ozone" carbs were unreliable. You can mix&match carbs from older 2101/21011 engines (I replaced mine on belt-driven 2105 (1300) engine straight from 2101, worked fine with no adjustment). You can adjust mechanical carb to give you a 'kink' when a second throttle is opened. I used that to save fuel, like, "dry power" and "afterburner" :D It is at that 50-55mph limit.
@JohnSmith-pl2bk7 ай бұрын
I drove a Niva 50 miles with a solid plug of mud in the second barrel of the carb... (slightly deep mud hole and sucked it up through the air filter!) but cruised at 50mph no problems
@Michael-yi4mc7 ай бұрын
Lada is a great name for a dog.
@shahramtondkarmobarakie18247 ай бұрын
they were called zhiguli originally, but the british couldn't pronounce it
@Tsakinnen7 ай бұрын
Only if it has vodka for breakfast....
@lugburz75397 ай бұрын
Lada is actually a female name
@dmitripogosian50847 ай бұрын
@@shahramtondkarmobarakie1824 They were called Zhiguli in USSR through all Soviet times, not just originally. Lada was an export name
@Mark1405Leeds7 ай бұрын
Had 2 of these years ago totally reliable and built like tanks. Yours is in excellent condition. [they know how to rust] Engines love to rev - highway use no problem!