Did anyone else notice the front fender repair? Compare 2:22 and 17:34 you didn't mention that Ivan!
@PineHollowAutoDiagnostics4 ай бұрын
Oh yeah good eye! Owner just recently ran into a black bear cub who was crossing the road 😳 I had to pop that back out with a prybar so the passenger door could open 😂
@brano2yt4 ай бұрын
Nice easter egg, i was about to comment the same
@braddofner4 ай бұрын
Ivan just wanted to see who was really paying attention...
@MrTonyPiscatelle4 ай бұрын
@@braddofner Yep saw that hidden repair also.
@Andy_Hinners4 ай бұрын
I missed that. My attention span maxes out at 15:00 minutes.
@melissathompson72294 ай бұрын
Ivan....the radio isnt the problem. Its the amplifier under the pasenger seat. All you have to do is order a Metra 70-5513 amp bypass harness. Just unplug both plugs going into the amplifier and this plugs in both sides and you're done
@RickyRisnandar4 ай бұрын
bonus point for pop up headlights 👍
@robertsmith29564 ай бұрын
That was my first bushing fix. The headlight control arms on rx7. The motor had a turn nob on back so you could manually rotate it to get access even if motor died.
@linuspoindexter1064 ай бұрын
Among the tools used: Horse hoof hasp, kitchen scissors, carpenter's clamp, hammer, and sharp picks. Love it!
@ericbell52724 ай бұрын
You forgot about the piece of hose for the gear shifter 😂
@linuspoindexter1064 ай бұрын
@@ericbell5272 And flat iron mini-prybar.
@suttoncoldfield93184 ай бұрын
Also spare fuel line
@bigfoot94454 ай бұрын
My 1st ever new car was a 1989 2.2L Intercooled Turbocharged Probe GT. That thing was a missile! Mine spooled up at fairly low rpms and had some serious torque steer that surprised me on my test drive. It had variable suspension and speed sensitive steering, just like an RX7 of the day. It got more stable the faster you drove it and you could feel the thing squat down at high speed. Topped out about 145. It flew and I loved that car. Ended upside down in it avoiding a wreck about 4 yrs later. Totaled. Very sad day but walked away with only a small cut on a finger from broken sunroof glass when crawling out. My brother with me at the time was unhurt. At certain angles the profile was similar to a Testarosa. Mine was all black. Still miss it.
@404notfound.....4 ай бұрын
We had a brand new mercury villager mini van back in the day that had the automatic seatbelts. Even the neighbors came over to look at the auto belt lol
@robertsmith29564 ай бұрын
Wife showed me picture of back window of mini van. "Condoms prevent minivans"
@GeminiSeven434 ай бұрын
Nothing like the old days and the wonderful ideas for safety. I remember if you try to get out of the car too quick the traveling seat belt would be at just the right place to smack you in the forehead. I can't imagine having to release and reattach that shoulder belt each time you drive the car but I guess he will get used to it. Another oddball and another car brought to you empty......GRRRRR!!!! Thanks so much for the time-capsule video Ivan
@WorthlessNickores3 ай бұрын
Oh I forgot to say you're the most amazing diagnostician I've ever seen. Brilliant genius!
@nv14934 ай бұрын
Good candid for aftermarket 3-point harnesses. Good on the owner to keep this running vs new disposable complicated junk.
@JoseSilveira-newhandleforYT4 ай бұрын
Nice "time machine", Ivan! And the repairs were only for normal wear and tear, which is gratifying. You are right - it's got character and soul, and they don't make them like that anymore.
@GregThompson-u6g4 ай бұрын
this fix or repair daily had a amazing outcome because of a great ending because of a great mechanic and decent body man
@adamtrombino1064 ай бұрын
I hate it when my shifter goes limp..Neat old car, and quite impressive at the time. That old 3.0 will outlive most owners.
@larryberry24364 ай бұрын
I recall the first Probe that I worked on. Went to pull codes with a red Snap-on brick. The VIN showed it as a Ford diesel truck. Hooked it up as a Mazda and was able to pull codes. Fun days.
@rarefruit23204 ай бұрын
Crazy how tech and has changed
@robertsmith29564 ай бұрын
Mom bought a stolen truck with a paint job. LOL
@mikeam38714 ай бұрын
I remember shorting pins on the obd2 connector and counting the check engine light flashing with an interval between flashes. You’d observe that action and correlate it to a trouble code.
@blackscotydog4 ай бұрын
That shifter looks a lot like a 1st gen Impreza....I have a 96 Impreza coupe the shifter was like a stick in can of molasses... I work in a machine shop so I made my own bushings out of UHMW polyethylene and stripper bolts for pins..........Worked like a hot dam....Yep.. Save The Manuals!! Old cars have heart and soul. Nice job a usual Ivan!
@KenMagee4 ай бұрын
I had 2 1990 Probes. A baby blue 5 speed and a Red automatic GT. I blew the engine on the 5 speed and the GT had a massive clog in the cat. I straight piped it because we didn't have inspections where I lived. After that I sold it to my buddy. Good times were had in both of them in the mid 90s.
@thk75134 ай бұрын
I forgot about the strangling automatic seatbelts. That was an idea that was thankfully short lived in the industry.
@gregwhite50584 ай бұрын
My wife has an '89 Probe GT. With the turbo and 5 speed it's got quite a bit of pep. Unfortunately she left it parked outside in the hot sun for many years so all that plastic in the interior is just really brittle. But mechanically at over 260,000 miles it still runs great with all the original drivetrain parts, including the original clutch!
@farmermiyagi13384 ай бұрын
It's 5am and I have coffee in my cup and PHAD on my computer. Nice start to my Sunday.
@robavis49064 ай бұрын
the good ole days. I was 18 back then. This country has def went downhill since in most aspects.
@rarefruit23204 ай бұрын
The Americas have been steadily going downhill since the 1600’s
@davidgrisco19394 ай бұрын
I agree with you Ivan, it's good that the owner is keeping a perfectly repairable vehicle on the road (although I'm not a Ford guy)
@robertsmith97564 ай бұрын
I worked at Troy Ford as a tech when these were new, I can remember prepping them. I was fresh out of MoTech Automotive Trade school and boy was I Green!!
@AP93114 ай бұрын
Wow, a real oldie!! Used to have Ford probe years years ago lol. Nice fix!! Great video!
@vpimike26464 ай бұрын
I'm glad you clarified that the models with the automatic transmissions were junk because I remember renting one of them when it was new and the transmission was horrible. It also seemed to have shoddy fit and finish issues as I recall.
@izzzzzz64 ай бұрын
Your getting all the sweet rides in this year!
@SedatedByLife4 ай бұрын
I've said it before and I'll say it again - i miss the '90's... some of the best body designs and built pretty darn well.
@GregoryGlessnerViolin4 ай бұрын
Old cars do have the character and soul that new ones lack!
@braddofner4 ай бұрын
Wow, what a flashback! My mother had this exact same car when I was 11 or 12. It was her first brand new car ever! I can remember being surprised it was a "Ford-Mazda" as I didn't know at 12 years old how the companies worked together.
@renj65314 ай бұрын
thats the only reason why its still running if it were a 100% ford it would be junk . ask your self how many early 2000s ford focuses do you see on the road ( my point being a newer car should be on the road)
@throttlebottle59064 ай бұрын
@@renj6531 that's all on the idiot owners not doing maintenance. as with most vehicles!(yeah, some are full out turds from the start).
@sixtyfiveford4 ай бұрын
Those seatbelts have an Allen in the center white portion so you can manually retract them. There are actually quarter size plugs you can remove that line up with these so you don't have to remove the panel either. Impossible to find represents for these or they're sister car the Ford escort (mazda protege). Great work as always.
@PineHollowAutoDiagnostics4 ай бұрын
Yup I saw that little plug and figured it was a manual bypass! Funny enough the motors worked perfectly fine but the cables were chewed up by the poorly-designed rails. We had a 1990 Honda Civic with auto belts and that little wagon had no belt problems until it rusted away...
@WorthlessNickores3 ай бұрын
I had a 1989 Ford Probe LX 2.2 Mazda engine with automatic transmission in 1995. It was like brand new witth the digital dash and entire movable adjustable cluster with steering wheel, great car. My next car after that was a 1989 Mazda 626 LX with stickshift and ran it to 277k miles. Cars used to last forever with literal minimal input.
@Land2020-w6w4 ай бұрын
Ivan, every video you do is like a breath of fresh air. So glad you appreciate when cars were made to last not like the modern junk. Dave in Guernsey, Channel Islands.
@billziegmond49434 ай бұрын
I love the view from your driveway. It reminds me of Western Kentucky. Farrier Hoof Rasp for the win on the dash. I waiting for you to use horseshoe nails as fasters. 🤣🤣🤣
@tylermacconnell2174 ай бұрын
The Probe was a shared platform with Mazda, hence the made in Japan parts. Not because Ford cared more about quality back then. This car was also originally planned to replace the Mustang. Glad it didn’t.
@gtemnykh4 ай бұрын
Exactly. Probe was based on the MX-6 coupe. The only American engineering in it is that cast iron Vulcan V6 (I’d rather have the Mazda 12 valve turbo 4cyl!)
@SomeRandomHuman7174 ай бұрын
Yep, came here to say that, too: Probe and Mazda MX-6 were sister cars. Not sure what the current status is, but in the later '70s thru at least late '90s IIRC Ford owned about a 25% stake in Mazda and there was a lot of sharing, from parts bins thru base platforms to entire vehicles being re-badged (Mazda B series mini pickups = Ford Courier pickups).
@Andy_Hinners4 ай бұрын
Proudly made in Flat Rock, MI
@alantrimble28814 ай бұрын
@@SomeRandomHuman717Each of the Big 3 had an ownership interest in a Japanese automaker beginning in the 1970s. GM owned a chunk of Isuzu, Ford owned a stake in Mazda, and Chrysler owned a piece of Mitsubishi. This allowed the American manufacturers to rebadge Japanese cars and trucks as their own. You already mentioned Ford’s Courier/Mazda B series. The Chevy LUV was an Isuzu. The Dodge D50 was a Mitsubishi Mighty Max. Chrysler/Plymouth/Dodge had the Colt, Arrow,Sapporo, Charger and more. All were just rebadged Mitsubishis.
@lovemym164 ай бұрын
Probes are Evil!
@mrjsv49354 ай бұрын
Still cool and "retrofuturistic" looking car. The real "future" just decided to go for the SUV's and Crossovers instead of sleek and aerodynamic cars like the Probe. I recall that underneath Ford Probe had Mazda 626 platform, and the gear shifter rod with "cv joint rubber boot" looking part brings memories from 323 as well. They had quite precise feeling manual gear shifter. Very interesting to see the automatic seatbelt mechanism too, never seen them disassembled before 👍
@Garth20114 ай бұрын
That Vulcan V6 has some umph for sure. Had one in a 1993 Tarus and there was plenty of power. Interesting list of repairs and no scanners, oscilloscopes, meters etc. on this one !
@eightycutty4 ай бұрын
I work at a dealership & we were just talking about Probes & how theres still a following for them. My sons 97 Escort has this same style shifter with the same issue. My daughter n law has an 89 T-bird with those buckles & I chuckle every time my son gets in. Hers still work & he gets whacked just about every time he gets in it lol
@csebastian714 ай бұрын
What a breath of fresh air after that XC90. Doing a manual swap on my 850 T5R this weekend!! Save manuals!!
@ohmbug104 ай бұрын
A guy I worked with took his wife on "vacation" in a red Probe their son had just purchased brand new. They went from Carrollton, Ohio to Florida and back in 3 days. What a vacation!😂
@Sandmansa4 ай бұрын
Wow! Surprisingly decent shape too, giving it's age. I've always hated those auto seatbelt systems. What a waste. But replacement tracks for them are fairly inexpensive.
@IamDerick4 ай бұрын
Had a similar problem with the seatbelts on a 94 Nissan Sentra. Final solution was installing a regular set out of another model. Same thing as yours the mounting holes where already there. Another case I had was a cracked gear in the drive unit, I cannot remember the make/model but lucky for the customer I was able to find one in a local wrecking yard. BTW I am a sucker for pop out style headlights. They rock. Cheers.
@Mr-Mag004 ай бұрын
Super job on repairs I always like those no parts required fixes! go Ivan!! Took out my 1992 BMW 525i 5 speed this year, she needed a water pump 🙂 tossed one in and now it purrs like a kitten with 319,000 miles on it 🤔 Gosh I Love this car! S3.23 rear end hehe well you get the idea 😱.
@chrisstoddard11444 ай бұрын
One of the first times I've seen you belt in for a test drive. 🙂
@the_truck_farmer4 ай бұрын
What a time capsule! Takes me back!
@RJon20064 ай бұрын
Got to love these Probes. Glad it didn’t replace the Mustang.
@khalidshaikh65114 ай бұрын
What a nice exhaust sound for a V6.
@alexanderzubar95934 ай бұрын
WOW! No scanner required for the repair. Much respect for the effort to keep this one on the road. No modules required!! It’ll still be repairable 20 years from now.
@albutterfield59654 ай бұрын
Another car leaves the shop with a smile 👍👍
@robertsmith29564 ай бұрын
and an empty gas tank. LOL Would have loved to see the last one leaving down the driveway.
@major__kong4 ай бұрын
That horse hoof file was funny. Reminded me of a time when I had to take a few thousandths off a shaft, but I don't have a lathe. Into a drill chuck it went with the trigger lock engaged. A few passes with some emery cloth did the trick. You just have to let it cool down because thermal expansion from friction from the emery cloth will make it seem like you didn't do anything.
@kevinwisler45474 ай бұрын
I remember being asked to repair the pop-up headlights for a family member. After trying to carefully remove some bolts and having them break, we decided not to proceed any further. Some of the bolts they used were incredibly soft.
@brianw89634 ай бұрын
Pretty cool looking old Forazda. I had a couple Rangers of that era, actually great little trucks. I think they were pretty much Mazdas, which is probably what made them good . Nice work Ivan. 👍👍🇺🇸
@jonclark12884 ай бұрын
Rangers were always made by Ford, not Mazda. The 94-09 Mazda B-series trucks were rebadged Rangers, also made by Ford.
@brianw89634 ай бұрын
@@jonclark1288 I’ll take your word for it. I had a 94 2wd 4cyl. 5 sp. for many years, great little truck, never a single issue, until the wife crashed it.
@gtemnykh4 ай бұрын
Yep those were all Ford and very sturdy. I had two both with the 8 spark plug 2.3 Lima and Mazda sourced 5spd manual. Sturdy solid simple trucks. Old school “twin-I beam” front ends didn’t ride great but you get used to it. Could hop curbs like no one’s business.
@JD987abc4 ай бұрын
Nice job on the repairs. I always thought the ford probe was one of the sexiest sports cars made in the US. Design reminded me of an F-16 fighter.
@mrwick48754 ай бұрын
Wow old school this morning. My at the time girlfriend was probed in the back of a probe were still together as of today over 30 years ago. She (now wife ) must of love my probing skills (no pun) intended
@farmermiyagi13384 ай бұрын
Wow! I had completely forgotten about the Ford Probe. XD
@tonyedwards57824 ай бұрын
Thanks for the flash back Ivan I am a retired Mazda Master tech and banged my head on that stupid seat belt and wished I could disable them. Long time since I seen Mazda parts in a Ford bag. Keep up the good work man it's so much fun to watch. Ha Ha
@stephengass60674 ай бұрын
I can't count the number of times when I was working on those cars were I stuck my head in to start them and almost hung myself haha I always checked after that if they had those my mom had an escourt wagon like that.
@robertsmith29564 ай бұрын
damn, makes me want to get some for those grabby cops. LOL
@davidpotter74844 ай бұрын
We had one of those on our car lot, when they were almost new. The double hood hump ones were pretty fast.
@Timahcs24 ай бұрын
When this happened with my Mitsubishi, I managed to get it back to it’s parked position and I unplugged the damn thing so I could attach the seat belt to it! My very favorite thing with this design was, when you are at a drive through and open the door to lean and reach out, the seat belt would move and drag your head down to the mirror! 😂😂😂😂😂. A kind of humiliation exercise brought to us by the Japanese! ❤️❤️❤️. Lmao!!
@mrbigvanlife71304 ай бұрын
That baby is a rebranded Mazda MX6 - hence the Japan parts - not because Ford used to have quality 😊
@farmermiyagi13384 ай бұрын
I have a mini-lathe that I bought years ago specifically for making shifter bushings. ;) Dodge and their crappy shifter bushings, and making you buy a whole cable set just for bad bushings.
@arcburn33644 ай бұрын
This reminds me of the time way back then when Roy D. Mercer called a salesman at one of our local Ford dealerships and threatened to whoop his ass because his wife was car shopping and she said the salesman offered to show her his Probe. A really funny crank call. Anyway good job Ivan.
@DaveReynolds-y3v4 ай бұрын
Ivan, great video. Really enjoyed it. Liked the way you fixed that shifter. Maybe you should write a book, Zen and the Art of Low Cost Maintenance?
@phprofYT4 ай бұрын
The automatic seat belt has to be near the top of the list of stupid "safety" ideas of the 20th century. Next to it would be GM's mounting of the top end of the shoulder belt to the upper corner on the seat. I drove one of these for several years. Never needed it in its official capacity but I always questioned the design choice.
@tomgeorge37264 ай бұрын
The very first Range Rovers did the same thing, top corner seat anchor instead of the B pillar, even got approved to be sold here in Australia, seatbelts just for the sake of regulation, not safety. Automatic seatbelt, what a joke, you still have to manually clip the lap belt.
@topher86344 ай бұрын
Then GM started putting the belt tensioner in the front doors. They called these "automatic" because you could leave them buckled, open the door and get in or out. I tried it when my family got a '90 Pontiac, to me it was just too awkward.
@lugnutgmc4 ай бұрын
GMT800 trucks up through at least 2007 had top shoulder harness retractor mounted in seats. Is that the same thing you're referring to?
@lvsqcsl4 ай бұрын
IIRC you did a "Halloween Special" on a second generation Probe some time back. (Man what a pile!) This car was produced at the Flat Rock, Michigan plant alongside the Mazda MX-6. I didn't realize this car had the same 3.0 liter "Vulcan" V-6 that came as an option in the Ford Taurus beginning in 1986 and later the Ford Tempo. That was a cast-iron engine and was offered alongside the 3.8 liter and for a time the 4 cylinder and was the only engine offered when the mid-sized Taurus was discontinued in 2007. Those motorized seat belts were passive restraints that we had before airbags. (Don't get out of the car until the seatbelt stops travelling forward; and don't ask me how I know that.) I am thinking Dodge/Plymouth Spirit/Acclaim had an airbag on one side and these mechanical seatbelts on the passenger side. As far as those remarks about '90's cars, Ivan, let us not forget that there is a '96 Mystique in your driveway and the 'ol Marquis is in mine. We are treated to '90's vehicles every time we turn the key. Ford was going to replace the Mustang with this car and thank GOD they didn't! GREAT VIDEO!
@michaelpairidis73824 ай бұрын
If the next video is a DMC DeLorean I’ll pee myself. The mix of vehicles you work on is interesting and entertaining. No discrimination of make or model. Like Rick James said ‘Give it to me baby’ 😂
@robertsmith29564 ай бұрын
At least you can get parts for the DeLorean.
@lvsqcsl4 ай бұрын
Car Wizard did a DeLorean recently. He demonstrated how the Flux Capacitor works.
@throttlebottle59064 ай бұрын
quick, someone with an DeLorean ship it to ivan for some repairs... lol
@sandybarnes8874 ай бұрын
You've been probed! Lol. Great to see these old cars loved and kept on the road. U r the best
@chrishill51664 ай бұрын
Sweet Ivan. Even King Charles hasn't got an entrance drive as long as yours
@stevelentz94584 ай бұрын
I owned one of these in the '90s. IIRC, this platform was shared with the Mazda MX6, hence the Japanese parts.
@tomtke73514 ай бұрын
Actually.... WHAT A COOL LITTLE CAR!
@mentals5554 ай бұрын
I had a 91 GT Turbo for a short time. Sometimes it would boost a bit over 10 psi for some reason instead of the normal 7. Fun car
@duanebuck1934 ай бұрын
Another trick for shimming out a bolt if you have problems getting tubing to hold is heat shrink tubing. It makes a nice uniform spacer to thicken the side of the bolt and will last for years (it also works for cabinet latches that have gotten a little loose and don't hold the door closed like they should).
@clintharris18984 ай бұрын
The bushings were made in Japan because the Ford Probe shared the drivetrain with the Mazda 626.
@emmettturner94524 ай бұрын
“They got parts from Japan. You can’t beat that!” I dunno, considering the originals fully disintegrated. Hopefully these are an updated part in response to this issue. In 2009 I noticed that my new 2008 Kawasaki EX250J had two different part numbers for the same size (M5) expanding rubber well nut. The two exposed on the windscreen were the only ones with that part number, but the first time you take a side panel off you will find that all 14 of the others were rotten and split in less than a year. Kawasaki knew this was happening but, no doubt, they had a lot of inventory to get rid of. Eventually they updated the parts diagram to erase any sign that there was ever a different part number… instead of just listing a superseding part… but my old forum posts about it remain to this day complete with parts numbers to prove it. It’s not UV since they degrade no matter where they are, deep inside the bike. Kawasaki knew this but decided to only use the better ones where you could see them on the windscreen. They knew something was wrong with the others but instead of using the good ones everywhere they just created two part numbers to liquidate the bad inventory into customer bikes right under your nose. Heck, the dealer took the right panel off on the first service and I found those two had already been replaced with generic M5 rubber wellnuts. This delayed me noticing for almost a year since I also only took that panel off previously. When I realized that every single one with that part number was split in to except those, it suddenly clicked that they had already been replaced at my first service. They were in the under tail, tail fairings, upper fairing (headlight cowl), windscreen behind the dash cowl, etc… anywhere plastics might need to be held together.
@JohnIsett4 ай бұрын
Old Ford Probe actually pretty fast. In 1993, while driving Autobahn in rental BMW 316i (from Stuttgart to Frankfurt) I was passed by three cars. I was limited by governor to 200 kph (124 mph) and was first passed, much to my surprise, by Probe going about 135 mph. It wasn't the fastest on the road, but, hey, pretty good. (In a little bit I was passed by Mercedes going about 145 and then a little later by a Porsche going about 155 mph.) Remember, kids, speed kills. Whenever I am stopped by police I always ask if they have ever driven the Autobahn. The answer is always "no". So sad. Such a wonderful driving opportunity. (Oh, and I'll never forget the little Mitsubishi wagon I passed pedaling as fast as he could doing about 100 mph.) Great times!
@kurtvogler84174 ай бұрын
Been on the autobahn back in 1990. Great experience.
@robertsmith29564 ай бұрын
No longer it is all speed limits like here. average speed minus 30kph. I used to get off at the borders, and take the back roads. Cars that flew by me at 150 would come up behind me again at 150. LOL My passport is empty except for Germany where I got off the plane in Frankfurt. Wish I had shipped my colt back to us. didn't realize the euro model was not the same. Test drove the us one, and pulled right back into the dealer, no thanks.
@JohnIsett4 ай бұрын
@@robertsmith2956 yes, the little Mitsubishi was a “Colt”. Thanks for reminding me!
@ewanjarvie83694 ай бұрын
Great video Ivan. I'll need to order the bushes for my Mazda MX-6 (2.5 V6) and do the fix as you made it look so easy. Got a 07 Dodge Nitro with a hand brake issue - parts hard to come by in Scotland but lije keeping them on the road. Keep up the good work 👍
@Mister...H4 ай бұрын
I had 91' GL with 2.2 in 2008 through 2012. I paid 1,100 and put 100,000 miles on it. It was fun.
@HeyBirt4 ай бұрын
It seems that the 1990s to early 2000s were the golden years for reliable but not overcomplicated modern vehicles. It did not take 25~50 networked computer modules to make a reliable, fun to drive car.
@badgerdave224 ай бұрын
Ivan, you can really see the engineer come out in these types of videos... You WILL NOT give up until you figure out how it works (and how to find a creative way to fix it)! 😁
@bms91444 ай бұрын
I have a buddy who put over 800k on his Probe, which included a fair amount of rough dirt roads that would normally require a 4WD vehicle on his way to various mountains.
@williamwhite97674 ай бұрын
The 4 cylinder engines that came in some of the Probes had great durability. I've heard of them going over 300k miles.
@gtemnykh4 ай бұрын
Mazda 2.2 12 valve. They live pretty good even with a turbo bolted up so the naturally aspirated ones even moreso.
@maxkendal51524 ай бұрын
No green crusties, just a little old age. That car looked incredibly rust free for its 33 years.
@thirzapeevey23954 ай бұрын
I hated those attack belts. We had a '90 Tempo that my mom bought new, and we bought it from her later. Ours did that as well after a while, and replacing the belt was really expensive. They weren't government regulation, the selling point was you got a discount on your insurance if you had them, because they knew you would be wearing your seat belt at all times. I think I'd have to find a way to just bolt in simple seat belts. It looks like that car shared a lot of parts with my '90 Ranger and '98 Ranger. Both of them made a groaning sound at a certain point of the travel of the steering wheel from new, and I always figured it was plastic rubbing. Okay, you are making me miss those old trucks and car. I miss my stick shift vehicles. They were much more fun to drive, and they were much more controllable.
@190055joe4 ай бұрын
Just a quick tip most cars are equipped with collapsible steering column and over time they tend to move on their nylon guides due to pushing during braking etc best fix is pull back the steering wheel and extend column to its original location.
@billmalec4 ай бұрын
Rented a Probe for the weekend neck in the day. I liked it. Kinda sporty, nice car. It was nice.
@charleshenshaw90994 ай бұрын
When the Probe first came out, there was a guy at that loved those cars.
@JimmyMakingitwork4 ай бұрын
Man we get some old cars at our shop, so I feel your pain, haha. Finding parts is getting harder and harder. Need a welder and some scrap to make parts, :).
@mikechiodetti44824 ай бұрын
Ford had the Ranger (I had an 87 2.9V6 5 speed) with the 2.0L, 2.5L 4cylinder engines, then the 2.9L, 3.0L and 4.0L V6 engines. As I read about the older Rangers being built on the assembly line, the Ranger went one way the Mazda "B" models went the other way. (Mazda B2000, B2500, B3000, B4000). Then there was the Chevy LUV. Got off track there. Anyway, nice fix Ivan.
@Paramount5314 ай бұрын
A "Maz-stang!"
@nhzxboi4 ай бұрын
OOOooof. Those things were water leaks on wheels. It was sooo amazing how the water would wick through the wiring harness from the hatch to the front....talk about green crusties. They were fun enough but very leaky.
@pootthatbak25784 ай бұрын
My 91 spare tire would constantly be under water under the hatchback
@xanderlander89894 ай бұрын
Headlights go up! Headlights go down!
@MrTonyPiscatelle4 ай бұрын
I didn't notice where you addressed the suspension . The shifter repair reminds me of when I was a young man, I made similar shim/bushing repairs with hose and it wasn't 2 weeks later and I was repairing it again. My experience tells me the hose will give out very soon. I use to rent these Probes when I was traveling the country for my job. They were fun to drive but not my favorite ride.
@travissheehan60824 ай бұрын
I think he just changed the steering wheel to get rid of the binding
@dendkmac4 ай бұрын
Ford Probe!! I have not went to bed yet will watch this first!!
@toshayonguard42534 ай бұрын
Hard spot in steering you better check the steering shaft for tight or dried out u-joint’s.
@a_w_bukhari75794 ай бұрын
I see you liked it, Ivan! Neat
@scepternetworks4 ай бұрын
The radio issue... Could be weak ground not able to supply enough current for higher volumes so the amp is cutting out.
@louoldschool70474 ай бұрын
I used to build these cars at the flat rock, mi. assembly plant
@PileOfEmptyTapes4 ай бұрын
I bet the radio has overcurrent monitoring like my old Sansa Clip+ does. There may be a fried speaker (melted voice coils tend to go semi-shorted) or a short in the wiring somewhere.
@bobbg90414 ай бұрын
Look under the passenger seat if it has a black box its a factory amp, The bypass loop is up hight on the right side next to the radio unplug it plug the radio into that harness thats not connected to the amp. Done its a white plug male and female
@neilmurphy8454 ай бұрын
I wish they'd bring back pop of headlights They're so cool
@abitofeverything12344 ай бұрын
Nice shoes, Ivan. Based on your tools, I've bought a Revvstark Impact wrench that comes with 2 batteries on Amazon for $99. It works like a champ.