My dad had a Corvair and loved it! He never forgave Nader.
@argus13935 жыл бұрын
A production run of nine years and 1.5 million units is not a failure.
@mysticwine5 жыл бұрын
Failure is not the right word. More like outsold by the Mustang.
@HansZarkovPhD5 жыл бұрын
That was going to be my point, you beat me to it...
@gooseknack5 жыл бұрын
I agree... Its didn't fail, was simply out sold by Ford's Mustang. The decision with the rear suspension didn't help.. It certainly was not a failure.
@HansZarkovPhD5 жыл бұрын
@dreamsnoir So every vehicle that was successful in its time, but is now no longer produced, has failed?
@HansZarkovPhD5 жыл бұрын
@dreamsnoir OK
@v.e.72365 жыл бұрын
Corvair: the very first Yenko. The Corvair's suspension was/is just like the VW/Porsche. Sadly, it was Chevrolet that killed the Corvair, as they were designing the Chevy II by late '62/early '63, on top of Nader's book. My mother owned a '64 that she both drag raced and rallye raced and she won or placed in every race/event she entered - I know 'cause I got to be her navigator and extra set of eyes. RIP Mom - I've got a '65 convertible just because you said you liked that model so much.
@RalphHuntington5 жыл бұрын
sweet tribute to your extraordinary mom
@bandccoresohio4 жыл бұрын
I have a lot of memories with my mom but we never raced cars together unfortunately thank you for sharing this awesome story bud!
@duradim13 жыл бұрын
What a cool mom!
@NHseacoast5 жыл бұрын
Ralph Nader certainly did not help with his “unsafe at any speed”. The Corvair was ahead of it’s time .
@crankychris25 жыл бұрын
That was 1966, by then the car wasn't selling very well because of it's poor acceleration and unreliable reputation.
@muir80095 жыл бұрын
why ahead of its time? it's very much a product of its time, just not in the main stream US market of the time. With the advent of the Chevy 2 only a couple of years after corvairs launch, the compact market was covered so the corvair could slot into its own niche market, which at worst was a very sporting pony car, with an aire of exotica
@Gnofg3 жыл бұрын
@@muir8009 because it was much more european and it was air cooled.
@muir80093 жыл бұрын
@@Gnofg remember of course the European influence had impacted a lot of design elements (admittedly in a very fifties US idiom) with the stylists. Exner being a prime example, with ghia. The huge swing of beetle buyers from '57 onward certainly having an influence on what in the late fifties was becoming the advent of the compact. Exner freely admitted the European influence on the valiant, even to its first year only all aluminium six. The corvair merely bringing another compact concept to the table. For all of course it was the Falcon that showed the way
@Gnofg3 жыл бұрын
@@muir8009 falcon and the mustang are actually the same car.
@brianpetersen34295 жыл бұрын
My dad bought a new 1960 Corvair 4 dr... it took us across the country (in the middle of winter), and later served as my first car through college years later. It was a reliable, unique car. I think my dad (being a aeronautical engineer) liked the rear engine design, reminiscent of a air-cooled helicopter drive system.
@thequesomanishere5 жыл бұрын
I don't think it failed. They made 1.4 million of them.
@michaelszczys83165 жыл бұрын
The failure was they sold 1.4 million of them and not 10.4 million
@wannabecarguy5 жыл бұрын
I just want to know how many of you know about over steer and under steer.
@LN997-i8x5 жыл бұрын
1.8 Million!
@lamper25 жыл бұрын
Yeah but even if a million people say a stupid thing,it's Still a stupid thing-(peter principle corollary) perfect example : 2008
@SpockvsMcCoy5 жыл бұрын
GM considered the Corvair somewhat of a failure because overall sales were nowhere near what they expected. Engineering was unique and the average transaction price was relatively low so GM likely lost money on them, especially for the second generation.
@whitsundaydreaming5 жыл бұрын
I've had four of them, three were earlies and I only had one instance of a tail-happy swingaround under hard braking, and that was coming in at an angle. They were easy to service and just by watching out for possible fan belt slip, you could go anywhere with little worry. With no water, water pump or hoses, your worries were few in comparison. Everyone looks at them and gives a thumbs-up!
@acarguycandreamright6345 жыл бұрын
It had a 10 year run, I wouldn’t call that a failure.
@wannabeetiger4 жыл бұрын
It failed to stay competitive within the market segment. Failure does not have to take place right away. Lol
@ronmccann75525 жыл бұрын
Hey thanx for this posting OCM, very informative. I agree with you that the demise of the Corvair was indirectly due to the unstoppable popularity of its competitor the Ford Mustang and directly due to Chevrolet's introduction of their response, the Camaro. However like some others have responded, I do have to disagree with you that it was a failed model. It was merely one which had an embattled existence and whose time had sadly come and gone. Like our friend Jay Leno remarked once, " Hey if I'd introduced a car that sold over a million and a half units over a 9 year period most companies wouldn't call that a failure. They'd make me the president of the company!".
@gazzafloss5 жыл бұрын
The styling of the convertible still looks good today, and I love air cooled engines. Win-win.
@jimh3095 жыл бұрын
My mom had a black / red 64 two door 3 speed when I was a kid. I loved that car!
@kenh90975 жыл бұрын
We had the same car.., hehe
@rustybrowneye5 жыл бұрын
Have you told your mom that you're gay yet?
@kenh90975 жыл бұрын
@@rustybrowneye fuzzy wuzzy??? Ha
@jerrytee26885 жыл бұрын
@@kenh9097 Does anyone remember the actual "fuzzy wuzzies"?
@jerrytee26885 жыл бұрын
@@kenh9097 fuzzy wuzzy was a bear
@1L6E6VHF5 жыл бұрын
5:05 The problem was that the handling was compromised if the FRONT tires were over inflated, not the rear, and that too many owners didn't read their owners' manual. The introduction of more powerful - and heavier, engines in the rear created an automobile with very little weight at the front. The instructions noted that the front tires needed less air pressure than those at the rear, with the models having heavier engines needing the least front tire pressure (I believe the Spyder model specified 16 PSI in the front tires). However, most people always assumed (perhaps still assume) that tire pressure should be equal in all four tires. Many people look to the sidewall of their tires and inflate to the maximum air pressure stamped on the sidewall. If one had their front tires at 35 PSI, on a performance model Corvair, the had VERY LITTLE tread on the road surface. Under these circumstances, an attempt at a high speed turn could result in a skid. Everybody lambasted GM for having swing axles on the Corvair, but few people mentioned that they were also on the original Volkswagen and Renault Dauphine (though I'm sure no-one drove at 160km/h in a Dauphine).
@bobwtech5 жыл бұрын
Wow, finally an accurate history of the Corvair. Good job!
@chuckvt51965 жыл бұрын
My first car was a 2 dr. 1962 Corvair, and I loved that car. It as especially good in New England during the snowy winters. With snow tires on it and all that weight over the rear drive wheels, it went through snow with no issues, while all my friends were getting stuck. Such a fun car to drive!
@OOICU8125 жыл бұрын
I've been a Corvair fan since I was a kid. There's just something about that styling.
@carloscarpinteyro3325 жыл бұрын
Especially the '65-'69 models, still looks great!
@louisedwards40234 жыл бұрын
Cool looking car😃
@ferdjanklow35665 жыл бұрын
Love Corvairs, had two of them, but dude you sounded like a depressed funeral director in this video.
@srercrcr5 жыл бұрын
hahhaahahaha
@Coffeebreak63295 жыл бұрын
Not only is this extreamly boring, he's often wrong too.
@jerrytee26885 жыл бұрын
No doubt, what's his angle?
@planpitz41905 жыл бұрын
He sounds just like the depressed radio DJ on the Tarantino film sound track " super sound of the seventies " I think out of the movie "Jackie Brown " !
@Coffeebreak63295 жыл бұрын
@@planpitz4190 thats Reservoir Dogs your thinking, back when his films wern't banned in my house.
@RoadRunnergarage85705 жыл бұрын
These still have a following despite the bad rap..
@Oldbmwr100rs5 жыл бұрын
A lot of factors involved with the Corvair, including Ford's falcon in the same market segment, GM business decisions on cutting back on improving innovation and engineering, and that the Corvair was a different car then the market was used to. The actual death of the model was tightening SMOG laws though, as the air cooled engine ran higher combustion temperatures, a factor in NoX emissions which meant lowering compression and softening engine tune. Chevy also introduced the Chevy II aimed at the successful Falcon just before the Mustang was introduced as well. The deck was stacked against the 'Vair pretty quickly unfortunately early on in the market, but still have to say after driving one I was very impressed how nice a driver they are.
@WhittyPics5 жыл бұрын
The Corvair wasn't any worse than other cars in its era
@michaelszczys83165 жыл бұрын
I see them produce millions of new SUVs that roll over at the drop of a hat and they don’t ban them.
@jamescooke37635 жыл бұрын
They were all death traps by today's standard
@LN997-i8x5 жыл бұрын
@@jamescooke3763 The Corvair is somewhat safer than it's contemporaries in frontal impacts, thanks to the front trunk acting like a crumple zone and there being no potential engine intrusion. This isn't to say it's safe by modern standards, mind you!
@jamescooke37635 жыл бұрын
@@LN997-i8x I accept that, but it wasn't designed to be a crumple zone, and you would either be impaled by the solid steering column or you would be thrown through the windscreen.
@pardunmeesuh56125 жыл бұрын
My brother had one. He said they couldn't stop the oil leaks.
@edwardjones55645 жыл бұрын
That was a good car I worked on them as a GM tech work on the spider and the turbo that car had good steering Ralph Nader was a jackass
@toddwieland76645 жыл бұрын
Ralph put a red flag on that car when travel straps were all it needed. He is an american hero for sueing to get us seat belts, safety glass and airbags later. Long list of things he fought for we take 4 granted
@stevewaclo1675 жыл бұрын
Ed, please do your homework. Nader woke up the calcified auto industry, leading to padded dashes, collapsing steering columns, seatbelts, front crumple zones and numerous other safety features. A columnist in a major auto magazine just a few years ago wrote words to this effect, “Ralph, we have beaten you up way too long and without your spirit and dedication, the golden era of automobiles we now enjoy would likely have been delayed by many years.” Ralph Nader May have been a bit harsh on the early Corvair, but as this fine video points out, the early car had serious rear suspension issues which were largely financial motivated and indeed later corrected, and low tire pressure, combined with overdriving of those models, caused too many crashes. Post-Nader, industry decision makers woke up and began listening to their engineers, most of whom knew exact what needed to be done...and they began doing it.
@zzubaman5 жыл бұрын
@Lord Colin So called 'Libtards' are the ones trying to stop corporations from selling flawed dangerous products.
@michaelplegge35735 жыл бұрын
Steve Waclo I’ll agree with the Nader part. A lot of good came out of what he did. People give him too much credit for killing the Corvair. Firstly the Corvair was exonerated in 1972 by the NHTSA as being no more dangerous as any other car of its era. It didn’t have any inherent suspension issues. It just drove differently from other cars and drivers didn’t know how to handle it. Corvair was doomed from the start because of production costs and price point. Chevy II built its coffin and Mustang drove the final nail in. Corvair sales dripped after 62 and Nader’s book didn’t hit shelves until 65. The bad press actually forced GM to continue Corvair production for a few years just to save face.
@markmailander64415 жыл бұрын
Spyder!
@jakespeed635 жыл бұрын
How can a 9 year run and over a million in sales be considered a failure?? Fantastic vehicles in the hand of those that knew how to appreciate and maintain them
@justanaverageguytoday5 жыл бұрын
Bill Mitchel who championed the design was clearly a visionary. Having owned two a 61 wagon and a 68 coupe I think the real reason corvair was only successful in the early years was due to design issues beyond the obvious. The wagon rusted the entire floor out because it used rubber mats with jute backing which held in moisture. I cut a floor out of. A sedan and replaced it gas petal back to rear seat. Worked perfectly. The tail heavy wagon never jacked the swing axle in a corner because I paid attention to the rear tire pressures and installed C sized tires. Unstoppable in the blizzard of 78. Used the front wheels like rudders in 18 inches do snow. Drove the 68 until 79 80k. Handled really well even with bad rear alignment. Radials were a huge improvement. Nobody knew that. Underside of dash and windshield Pilar’s and door jambs rusted out way too fast. All the 2 carb engines were super reliable. But cheap external systems like the cooling door bellows caused the engine to run too cool during warm up. The the biggest problem were the rubber the seals in the oil cooler and tubes between the crankcase and the heads and proximity to the exhaust manifolds. Heat cooked the seals causing the engine to leak oil. The heater relied on hot engine air which now contained oil fumes. So the heater and defrost became unusable. Who wants a car like that. With the space program a new seal material called viton was developed which can handle the heat and retrofitted corvair engines are oil tight. So many aspects of the corvair design were brilliant but a few cost cutting mistakes bring down any inspired design. VW improved the beetle for 50 years. Air cooling would not have survived emission controls. But the Vega was a stupid backpedal which also had serious design flaws. GM management has been stupid since Mitchel. Blame them and the idiot accountants. Engineers make great companies. Not business school idiots.
@misterericsir5 жыл бұрын
I own a 1966 Corvair Monza 4 door with 110 HP and it is a dream to drive. The steering is very responsive, engine is easy to maintain and my personal opinion is that the 65 to 70 Corvair's body style is much more appealing than the ford falcon with a different exterior, oops I mean the 65 mustang. I'd also like to add a correction related to tire inflation. Steering issues with 1960 to 1964 models is more related to the fact that to balance out the issues with weight distribution the front tires are only supposed to be inflated to 20 PSI while the rears are inflated to 32 PSI. When properly inflated current road tests show that the handling for the Corvair was in fact superior to the handling of many other cars released at the time. As far as the Corvair being the poor man's Porsche, the Corvair may have cost less but with the Corvair's 4 carburetor and turbo setup and it's great handling, I am confident that the Porsche buyers of that period wasted their money on an inferior automobile.
@wsl18755 жыл бұрын
You also needed to make sure the u-joints were in good shape on the axles of the early models. I had a 1962 4 door and it was awesome. Took curves around Parksville lake like dream. That thing got compliments everywhere I drove it back in the late '90s. I put dual port heads and bigger jugs on it, and it flew. Wish I still had it.
@gojoe28335 жыл бұрын
I also own a 66 Monza 4 door hardtop with the 110 engine Powerglide and factory air conditioning and it is a delightful car to drive on the highway!! I added a quick steering box and KYB shocks all around...and my car handles as well as a modern car
@MBSLC5 жыл бұрын
Former owner of several Corvairs both early and late versions ('61 Monza, '64 700 sedan, '66 Monza, '66 Monza sedan 4spd). Fun to drive and easy to maintain with great reliability. As a mechanic back in the 1990's working at an independent garage specializing in European makes, I had the opportunity to service and drive some amazing cars. We had several customers with early Porsche models 356, 911 and 912. The first Porsche I drove was a 1963 356 Super 90. It was built like a bank vault and was much faster than I expected-an amazing car built to the highest standards. I'm still a Corvair fan but after driving and maintaining these Porsches, the Corvair just doesn't compare in engineering, build quality and driving dynamics. The two makes are just in different automotive worlds. Any time I see a Corvair I still stop and appreciate how neat those cars are!
@gojoe28335 жыл бұрын
@@MBSLC I don't know much about Porsches, but in general German engineering was tip notch back in the 1960s. However when you consider the American automobile industry, you realize that often it's the engineers, the stylists and the bean counters at each other's throats. It's truly a miracle that anything new made it to market without exploding or falling apart. Certainly the radical Corvair was an amazing accomplishment...
@MikeBMW5 жыл бұрын
Love this vid! My grandmother had a 1965 Corvair, bought new. I still have the bill of sale and a pic of me, as a child, standing beside it. Sadly, the car is long gone.
@michaelszczys83165 жыл бұрын
I was in the back seat of a Corvair going about 40 mph with a friend driving when a young kid rode his bike right in front of us. To avoid hitting him my friend did a maneuver that might be hard to do in a Vette. We did not flip over, we did not roll even though we went completely sideways 40 mph then straightened right out on asphalt street. You had to work hard at it to flip one of these over.
@jamescooke37635 жыл бұрын
Did it have a font sway bar fitted?
@misturchips5 жыл бұрын
Drove one for 9 years; sold it and recouped almost every penny I put in to it, including building an engine etc. They are quite affordable, and fun to work on. I miss actualyl DRIVING a car vs, simply 'guiding' one.....
@judgetk83275 жыл бұрын
I've had four of them in my life and wish I still had them. I always had good money because of my trade and was quite the car buff. I knew some people that worked in GM's experimental building and was privy to info that other people were not. I'm glad you brought up this segment and enjoy your videos. I wish you could have seen and driven the doom buggy I made out of a Corvair Spider because there wasn't any other buggy out there that could hold a candle to my conservative 210 HP, 15 inch wide tires on the back and self-made headers with a VW front end and came in at a little under 900 lb cromoly tubing frame that was uniquely tided together for strength. I was very proud of my creation. Look forward to your next video.
@michaelplegge35735 жыл бұрын
Steve Silvas 64 was the last year for the Spyder.
@DS_IndustrieZ5 жыл бұрын
To people who are not satisfied by this video or channel. Or have negative feedback. Just go elsewhere... Simple solution. Would u rather have some hand-me-down comedian narrating that focuses more on jokes than information. I respect this channel and all it's videos. Please continue to upload. Happy new year's to all an have a great year you guys.... Anyway back to my nostalgic fix.... 😏🤙😎
@RoadRunnergarage85705 жыл бұрын
Sounds to me like the evolution of the Pony Car and Muscle Car did as much damage to Corvair sales as Nader's book...
@msbae5 жыл бұрын
My local Chevy dealer still has one of these on display in the showroom, along with a 1970's era Caprice convertible.
@livewire27595 жыл бұрын
My local Chevy dealer that I work for has a '66 Corvair spyder convertible with the turbo engine. It's unrestored but in pretty fair shape.
@mikeskidmore67545 жыл бұрын
There is a Dealer in VA still has a brand new Plymouth Super Bird on the showroom floor..
@garymckee88575 жыл бұрын
@@mikeskidmore6754 why can't I hit a large amount lottery and purchase that vehicle.
@rileysmith98435 жыл бұрын
My local Chevy dealer still has a Squarebody in display. No restoration was necessary.
@KirkParro5 жыл бұрын
At 8:50 in this video, it is said, "If Chevrolet had given the Corvair the fully independent rear suspension for 1960, instead of waiting for 1965, the Corvair would never have received this bad rap." I respectfully disagree. Opportunists have little regard for truth, and that, IMHO, applies to trial lawyers in general, and Mr. Nader in particular. I have a saying, "A trial lawyer's main job is to make the untrue sound plausible." The Corvair was celebrated by innovative thinkers, but the industry was rather hidebound in those days, and there were many who disliked unconventional designs- including some at Chevrolet.
@jamescooke37635 жыл бұрын
All that would have happened is that the book would have featured a different car.
@Monza620003 жыл бұрын
my 62 corners just as good as any fwd car,,,radials an tire psi is the trick...you can crash anything,,,
@davidcoudriet84392 жыл бұрын
They always HAD "fully independent suspension"... Just a different type. Early ones had swing axles- still, one operates completely independent of the other, but is not attached to the other, hence the term. The camber issues are another story. An example of a semi-independent or "not fully independent" would be the popular twist-beam axle. One wheel moves independently of the other but is still tied to the other by the twist-beam; making it NOT fully independent.
@bullfrogger12084 жыл бұрын
I'll never forget . In the mid1960s were driving on the Hollywood freeway in a storm . We hit a water patch , the Monza did a quick 360 spin ending in the same lane and direction it started . Freakiest thing that ever happened to me in a car . Well , maybe second freakiest . My first girlfriend was pretty freaky too .
@billhayward26685 жыл бұрын
Look at what the aftermarket and Corvair folks have done for the Corvair since Chevy gave up on it! Disc brakes,fuel injection,electronic ignition,cooling improvements,handling improvements only touch the surface! The proven Corvair could have been Chevy's saving grace during to fuel crisis of the 70s,had they looked past their nose and continued to improve the car!
@gojoe28335 жыл бұрын
Add some suspension upgrades that are readily available and you can turn a Corvair into a true GT touring car! I did that with my 66 Monza and what a wonderful car it is to drive!!!
@jamesanderton3445 жыл бұрын
Air cooling was a dead end due to emissions regulations....even Porsche gave up.
@mosesberkowitz32984 жыл бұрын
@@jamesanderton344 But they didn't give up until the 90's
@MarkAnderson-vg5vq3 жыл бұрын
My Dad had a 68 red convertible it was a beautiful car . He also had a 65 VW bus , good times .
@manthony2255 жыл бұрын
Didn't know about GM's decision to not spend the money to put a front sway bar on the 60-63 Corvair. That's inexcusable.
@tonyunderwood96785 жыл бұрын
The Covair engineers intended for the car to have a sway bar from Day-1. It was the beancounters who decided to omit it. Look close at the gas tank of any 1960-63 Corvair, The bottom is notched to clear a factory sway bar. Spyders got a sway bar from '62-up, and of course all Corvairs got a sway bar after the '63 model year. I have 2 1960 Corvairs, one of which has a '64 front suspension and yes its original gas tank has the notch to clear the sway bar. It wasn't engineering, it was beancounters.
@michaelplegge35735 жыл бұрын
Tony Underwood the lack of a sway bar was common. Just like on the early Chevy II. GM offered them as an option. And honestly the front sway bar on a Corvair doesn’t make a huge difference in daily driving. Keep the tires at the right pressures and they drive just fine.
@muir80095 жыл бұрын
@@tonyunderwood9678 spot on. well informed comment. to be honest I love the corvair, I've always felt to a certain extent that GM were genuinely unsure about what the corvairs market was. Yes, I appreciate the new compact market, but in commentary at the time, the main designers were struggling to understand the success of the beetle. as exner succinctly put it: "ever seen a poor person in a VW?", exner and walker put it down to the "beret wearers", which I'm guessing meant arty individual types, so maybe GM were coming to similar conclusions and designed and styled corvair to be sold as more exotic with euro engineering? (the valiant of course had pseudo euro styling with conventional engineering but exners star was starting to wane). I've been reading contemporary design studio interviews and they really were struggling with the success of the beetle. curiously none of the responses from the engineers or the stylists at the time touched remotely on the sheer reliability and longevity of the beetle, which is possibly saying something?
@michaelplegge35734 жыл бұрын
Daniel S Sorry, not going to sway my opinion. Failure to properly maintain your vehicle doesn’t equate to a fault in the design. The NHTSA study in 72 proved that the 60-63 Corvair wasn’t any more prone to loss of control than its competitors. And having used Corvairs as my daily drivers for a few years now unless I am really pushing one through a rough corner I notice very little difference between my 62 without a sway bar and my 63 that has one.
@RobDog654 жыл бұрын
It wasn’t just a cost issue. Chevy omitted the anti-sway bar to make servicing the undercarriage easier. They eventually engineered around that issue.
@salmonline5 жыл бұрын
It didn't fail. It was sabotaged.
@ebayerr5 жыл бұрын
salmonline : Agreed. How could a car that was in production for 10 years be called a "failure"? The Edsel was made for just 3 years.the Chevy Vega was made from 1970-1977. So the Corvair outlasted both those cars.
@dennisleporte23275 жыл бұрын
That and the fact that nobody knew how to drive it,
@MilkMan6085 жыл бұрын
Dennis LePorte That’s true, and keep the tires properly inflated. (Just like Ralph Nader’s ego.)
@elcabezon54875 жыл бұрын
Ralph Nader was bought by Folkswagen ,, pardon me Volkswagen
@dmj-ju9zx5 жыл бұрын
@Rich Santoro But "why did X fail" makes a catchy title.
@STONEDARTphotos5 жыл бұрын
I believe you are right on about the Mustang and Camaro, also the tire pressures. I owned a 64 convertible for many years and loved it. Now I love my Vette.
@triples4good5 жыл бұрын
Fantastic video. My first car was a 1965 light blue Corvair Monza. I really loved that car and wish I still had it.
@trackman1745 жыл бұрын
I had a 65 Corsa convertible with the 180 hp turbo 4 sped. One of the most fun to drive cars I ever owned...it would destroy a 289 Mustang. Great times in the auto industry back then....lots of innovation and nice styling. Like the VW, the Corvair's heater wasn't all that great.
@Oldbmwr100rs5 жыл бұрын
What do you mean, nothing like the cabin filling with the smell of an oily hot engine to warm you up! VW's idea of exhaust heat exchangers worked a bit better and without the smell for the most part.
@beastlybuickv64025 жыл бұрын
Well I can destroy any Mustang of the same era in the low end with my 1980 231 3.8L V6 LeSabre Ltd. Boogity-boogity racecar! 😂😂
@Loulovesspeed5 жыл бұрын
If you didn't purchase the optional (and expensive) propane heater for your VW Bus, anyone in the back would freeze to death in northern states! Little power, and no heat - I hated those things!
@spaceghost89954 жыл бұрын
@@Loulovesspeed Why would anyone drive a VW Bus in the winter? lol
@Loulovesspeed4 жыл бұрын
@Space Ghost - You would have to ask my Brother-In-Law, it was his! Overall, it is probably my most disliked passenger vehicle (just the Bus). The Beetle was fun to drive, but its lack of real heat in the Winter was tough on passengers and not tough enough on windshield ice. The Bus though was a different story. IMHO, it had a frighteningly narrow track coupled with a fairly high center of gravity - especially when loaded up, and tires way too narrow and small overall for this vehicle. It was pathetic in anything resembling a cross wind. You want to really fight a steering wheel like you never did before? I never felt safe in one and made a point of staying out of one when possible.
@p47thunderbolt685 жыл бұрын
Used to see them around a lot . My dad bought a new 1966 Ford Fairlain with a 289. He decided to take on a Corvair Spyder . Spyder left him in the dust .
@bobdc2345 жыл бұрын
I could beat the Chevy 283, and 327 with mine. It was not as fast as a GTO, or 396 Chevelle.
@p47thunderbolt685 жыл бұрын
@@bobdc234 I think the Fairlane new was $2400 . 2 door sedan 3 speed 2 barrel . Back then those small V8's were quite peppy even with a 2 barrel .
@ericfredrickson55174 жыл бұрын
@@bobdc234 A classmate of mine's older brother had a Turbo Spyder that would stomp any Corvette stoplight to stoplight.
@raymondclark17853 жыл бұрын
I had a 68 Spyder with the handling pkg. In NJ time trials/track days it was in the same class as Mustangs & Camaros and they couldn't understand how they were getting beat by a Corvair :)
@warrenny5 жыл бұрын
Corvair (both gens) was one of the best designs from Chevrolet. From Nader to Lee Iacocca, many people found Corvair to be unsafe. However, there were Corvair options for better handling as was stated in the video. Whether yesterday, today or in the future, people will always demand more nanny devices and lay blame on others. It is just the way of the world.
@richardprice5978 Жыл бұрын
both men worked/payed 💰by ford/drearbon-independent propaganda wings of Henry ford,edcel-ford,ford-the-3d and the Jewish publisher... sorry forgetting Henry's friends names but easy to learn/look-up faced with how well corvair sold ( 100k+ aka full line producing as ever 90k is a full line for that era so 1-4-line's running year round and or needing retooling at the end of the tax-year from being wore-out-fully ) ford-3d/grandson probably was scared that he was loosing younger/sub-30yo buyers and didn't have something/products/R&D that could competition-fairly so next planning was to taint/tank GMC/Chevy's reputation's ( also hopeful for foreign makes would get banned in the USA 🇺🇸 markets from successful P-R campaign against them, but being vw and toyota is made/sold in the USA 🇺🇸 that politically motivated/movement failed hard and in the 70's-90's kinda backfired on ford/big-3/UAW, mixed feelings about that as i like home grown production/products and local workers ect but the clean air act and safety/consumers protection standards was needed by 1930's ) and somewhat dodge's-ect, dodge by the mid60's had mid to higher end products and sales and a buyer's crowd of 17-45 year olds ( even worked on me a millennial/90-kid generation that got a convertible/2-gen-charger manual+426hemi... so Chrysler corporate office strategy was to move at midlevel/same-old or going up marketing/$$$ with older/wealthy buyers and therefor didn't see the bug/corvair as a worthwhile challenger/threats yet ) mostly aimed to convertibles or faster/proformnice ie 440-max-wedge or hemi-v8 on drag strips or nascar, leaving ford with mid-priced/optioned SBF-v8-automatics satiation-wagons or high/super-end Lincolns ( yes they had a good ROI but as a % didn't sell very many )( ps ford-truck's didn't sell well in 1950-80~ that was a Chevy's timeline and 2d placement was fargo/FCA/international/other's ) being the better selling models btw i don't care for lee as CEO of dodge townson was a better experience, later on nader turncoated on ford corporation and ford-3/grandson
@dicarlo57 Жыл бұрын
added to the fact that few people recognized the handling characteristics of a rear engine car. Popular among school teachers and the like.....
@catherinemushaw81444 жыл бұрын
My father had a silver Corvair 2 door and it was a sharp looking vehicle. I absolutely Loved it and I was only 8.
@scootergeorge95764 жыл бұрын
The introduction of the 1962 Chevy II Nova also cut into Corvair sales.
@MyEyesBled4 жыл бұрын
Despite some inaccuracies, this is a great report.
@hhairball95 жыл бұрын
My mom had a 1964 Corvair sedan and I remember many times when my sister and I rode in it by standing up on the rear seat. I also remember that after a couple of years, it started "throwing oil" as my dad would say.
@VTPSTTU5 жыл бұрын
In the late 70's, I knew a guy whose family had a bunch of old Corvairs sitting around the property. The cars had just been driven or towed to various places in the woods and left to rust. I guess there was still enough stigma to the name that no one thought of assembling parts to get a couple of working vehicles. If they'd had storage space, they probably could have made some money keeping the parts from rusting and selling them over time.
@barryervin85365 жыл бұрын
The early Corvairs had some problems. I had a 61and it never let me down but the heater sucked and the handling was iffy. Great in snow though. The later models had many improvements and were really very nice cars, but by then the Corvair's reputation had been destroyed by Ralph Nader's book about the shortcomings of the early models. If GM had continued to build and improve them who knows what we might have seen? I remember going to SCCA races and watching Yenko Stingers blow the doors off much higher priced cars.
@jimmydeen585 жыл бұрын
Great Video.. Ive owned many Corvair cars and Rampside and they were AWESOME..
@atatexan4 жыл бұрын
Has anyone noticed how the original Corvair styling was aped by BMW and NSU??? Imitation the sincerest form of flattery. We had two Corvairs. Served the family well.
@BIGPOPRL4 жыл бұрын
The Corvair was definitely a car ahead of its time. The design was imitated on cars throughout the world. I haven’t owned one yet but my dream Corvair would be a Yenko Stage III Stinger.
@RicardoGarcia-of2mf4 жыл бұрын
I had 3 of them, 4door, 2door Monza, an truck, loved them!
@thedancingdutchman28744 жыл бұрын
My Dad bought the 1960 Corvair when it came out. Automatic, it was one of the first cars to have A/C, which was and is, sorely needed in Florida. The only problem was that when Dad wanted to pass someone, he had to turn off the A/C to get that extra power!
@XR650L_GUY5 жыл бұрын
My dad taught me how to drive in a 4 speed corvair. Telephone books on the seat so I could reach the pedals.
@leonardprovost26343 жыл бұрын
I owned a 63 then a66 Corsa. It was and still is my favorite one! Over steer is easy to use? Please check your info on the 180 power plant
@cazgerald94715 жыл бұрын
Unlike the Beetle, the Corvair had the power and torque of a Porsche.
@markmailander64415 жыл бұрын
Actually, TWICE the torque of a contemporary Porsche.
@cazgerald94715 жыл бұрын
@@markmailander6441 You could make that case, but dependent on the year and models compared.
@ocvettek075 жыл бұрын
Dad bought the station wagon in 1961 and it was a great vehicle. With the engine weight over the drive wheels, it was excellent in snow.
@LaPabst5 жыл бұрын
Chevy was renowned for oil leaks back then... this was a masterpiece of driveway destruction.
@LectronCircuits5 жыл бұрын
Get up, go out and see your driveway oily in the morning. Cheers!
@LectronCircuits5 жыл бұрын
@Poof wear a gas mask when using the heater. Problem solved. Cheers!
@hkk36564 жыл бұрын
Agreed. Strange this wasn't mentioned. Coviar was a smoky oily mess!
@nunyabidniz28684 жыл бұрын
Yes, the Corvair was killed by the accountants because GM would save a whopping $0.50/car by using buna (neoprene) o-rings on the [much hotter running, air-cooled engine] push-rod tubes instead of the Viton o-ring specified by the engineers. Bottom line: DO NOT ALLOW ACCOUNTANTS TO SECOND-GUESS ENGINEERING DECISIONS.
@jockellis4 жыл бұрын
Porsche 356s would offload oil, too. You didn’t worry til you didn’t see any oil puddles because it meant you were out of oil. SCCA didn’t know anything about turbocharging at this time, and a racer I know was getting 400 HP and running in D production against MGBs and TR4s.
@Ben-Rogue5 жыл бұрын
The second gen 2 door Corvair is one of the best looking American cars ever made. It's a shame so many are rotting away because of peoples fear of them
@thefettfan39945 жыл бұрын
A very educational and informative presentation indeed. I had no idea that the Chevrolet Corvair was so versitile and ground breaking. Thank You! P.S I'm not an American so I greatful for your excellent channel :-)
@rtwice935554 жыл бұрын
Bless my Mom and Dad for their patience in hauling me, my sister and brother from California to Florida in a Corvair without air conditioning back in 1969. I'm sure the three of us kids got a long well throughout the trip (sarcasm noted).
@kingerikthegreatest.ofall.78605 жыл бұрын
Here on the Oregon coast, a lot of people like using the pancake engine in their sandrails. Poor man's Porsche.
@marcomoreno81885 жыл бұрын
Lol ok nowww 😅
@LynxStarAuto5 жыл бұрын
Finished Finnish but not the last... that is what really matters.
@dirtydave26915 жыл бұрын
Same in the California desert. Corvair powered sand rails sound really cool.
@TravelBackroads5 жыл бұрын
@Finished Finnish Porsche didn't come out with a turbo until what 1974 or 75?
@akishot67355 жыл бұрын
Here in the Willamette Valley we have a decent amount of Corvairs that gather at meets, and too many old VWs to count
@icefoxracing3 жыл бұрын
In 1960, I received a 1960 Corvair fire chief car made by Ichiko toy company, I was 4. In 1971 I bought a 1962 Corvair 500 for $150. Drove it for 3 years. We hit a mule with it after a football game on Friday night. I have always said that if the engine had been in the front, we'd still be sitting there. Bought a 63 Spyder for $50 (no engine) for body parts. Traded the 62 for a 65 900 4 door. Wouldn't mind having all of them back........ just sayin'.......
@rmick665 жыл бұрын
Over the years my family and I had seven of them. To me the biggest drawback wasn't the handling, it was the rubber seals in the engine that would crack over time and leak like a sieve. Also the 2-spd. Powerglide was a dog, the 3 or 4-spd. manual was the only way to go.
@markwagner49095 жыл бұрын
I have a 66 Monza convertible and love it handles great and looks so much better than any new cars out there today
@douglasadams60245 жыл бұрын
they were not a failure in fact gm sold millions of them they were a very well built car got good mileage easy to keep up the maintenance, actually good cars all the way around
@Darrylizer14 жыл бұрын
I've loved the styling of this car from the day I first saw one as a little kid in the 60s. Especially the later models, just beautiful!
@SteveAZ7115 жыл бұрын
I always liked the Corvair. The Spyder was the model I wanted to get my hands on back then. Finally ended up getting a '67 Mustang GT 390.
@atech90205 жыл бұрын
A Corvair owner and lover here, and I gotta say that your presentation is the most truthful, unbiased and realistic one I have heard. Not filled with BS, hype, folklore or misrepresentation!! I truly is a great car that is simply misunderstood and storied with false or untruthful hearsay. Get your Corvair now while you can, they are going up in value pretty fast considering where they were 10 years ago. Too much longer and you will be paying real money to get a nice one.
@KorinaBrother5 жыл бұрын
Another huge factor in the demise of the Corvair, was the coming smog laws. Engineers would have to keep leaning out the fuel mixture, among other things, leading to poorer performance. Quite a sad story, Corvairs are really fun, handle very well.
@roberthart98864 жыл бұрын
I had 2 of them 64 and 66,both convertibles . sadly, a mechanic must have adjusted the valves backwards and blew the engine on my way to Warner Robins AFB duty. I loved them both, neither was the high performance model. I replaced it with a Mercury Capri V6
@jvs3335 жыл бұрын
I had one (1969 / 2 door monza) I LOVED IT. It was and still is to this day one of my favorite cars I ever owned. It was like driving a big gocart with a body. I regretted trading it for a 65 el Camino. The 67 camaro took its design from the 66 camaro. If I was to ever come into money I would by another one and have it completely off body restored
@mr1rapid5 жыл бұрын
I still have 2 1965.... a convertible 140 4 sp and a hardtop 1965 110 power glide. Love 'em.
@danielt.31525 жыл бұрын
I liked the Corvair the ride was fun,snappy and I loved the 60’s smell of the interior I owned a 69 Cameron it was a huge blast to drive
@MrTeff9995 жыл бұрын
Excellent presentation. All consistent with what I remember. Too bad Chevrolet didn’t create a Corvair racing program. Things might have turned out differently.
@wesfrazier57395 жыл бұрын
I learned how to drive a Stright gear in one of these, thanks Pop
@AtZero1385 жыл бұрын
Great video.. thanks for the Post.. Cheers from Southern California.. Daily driver 68 Dodge Dart.. I live 60s era cars.. and always had fondness for the Corvair..
@branon65654 жыл бұрын
The 1st gen Corvair is the ONLY chevy I'd ever consider owning, it's a good lookin, unique ride....I'd especially like to own the 1964 turbocharged version....
@michaelharned87414 жыл бұрын
My family had a Corvair from 1964 to 1969 it was state of the art for its time
@turbolivesinmyheart63285 жыл бұрын
I wouldn' call a 10 rear run a failier
@barryervin85365 жыл бұрын
It's like when Chrysler stopped making PT Cruisers, all stories about it "failing". It was built almost unchanged for 11 years and for most of those years sold well. In today's auto industry that's a success story.
@jigglydoo5 жыл бұрын
10 “rear’ run ?.?. ... You funny guy .. haha ..
@alfresco49764 жыл бұрын
@@jigglydoo Ree's rawking rike Rastro or Scooby Doo for some reason.
@jeffwolf80185 жыл бұрын
I believe they're one of the only cars that have a synchronized reverse gear on the standard transmission and let you go into reverse when you were going forward at almost any speed. Which made for a very fun ride
@carloscarpinteyro3325 жыл бұрын
Maybe that is how James Garner (Rockford, from Rockford Files TV show), started practicing his "Rockford" driving manouver, and perfected it in his firebird!
@alna12875 жыл бұрын
They built ~200k cars a year on average. Far from a failure.
@garfield89004 жыл бұрын
Those Corvairs were really great in the snow cause of the rear engine. My roommate in Park City, UT had one and never got stuck.
@PhaQ25 жыл бұрын
There is a junkyard near me that has a bunch of rusty Corvairs just wasting away. If I didn't already have a rust bucket to pour money into, I'd be tempted to get the convertible out of there.
@bgone49795 жыл бұрын
In 1969 my friend sold me his 1966 corvair corsa. It was an awesome car. I surprised the driver of a 1966 Fairlane 289. I had it up to 115 mph with 4 passengers on it. I let up because the front end felt like it was lifting. Great car with lots of memories. Black/black. My friend was upset that I didn't sell it back to him, as I guess I said I would
@wkeil19815 жыл бұрын
I want a rampside in 2019! What a great idea
@Coffeebreak63295 жыл бұрын
Not worth millions in design changes for just a handfull. They'll never recoup what they spend on R&D and tooling.
@wkeil19815 жыл бұрын
Robert Hayes relax old man
@flashgordon37155 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I'm seeing a need for a side ramp.
@flashgordon37155 жыл бұрын
@@Coffeebreak6329 if you work in the city a side ramp is often advantageous
@Coffeebreak63295 жыл бұрын
@@flashgordon3715 they already got that, sprinter vans with side ramp installed. Or if you got a little more, the Mercedes version. Most people just use the tailgate on a pickup.
@leostask4 жыл бұрын
Had 3 of them! 65-69 were much better than the earlier ones!
@georgemouse53284 жыл бұрын
I remember most of all, the unique engine sound of the Corvair.
@johanbrand86014 жыл бұрын
That's exactly the same thing my father said. I wish I can hear one. I've never seen one in my life.
@marksample62304 жыл бұрын
Ralph Nader bashed it over the swing axle design yet the VW had the same design til '68.
@jamesfranklin22035 жыл бұрын
I always liked the Corvair, especially the Monza Coupé and Spider
@fletcher39135 жыл бұрын
Back 1964 my Dad bought a used Carvair (2 speed automatic with the shifter on the dashboard) for his 'work' car. I just got my driver's license. You always remember the first car you get to drive. A few years later my younger brother bought a sportier Corvair and drove it a couple of years. Never believed anything Ralph Nader said after he bashed to the car.
@alphakky5 жыл бұрын
A ten year model run is not a failure. The Porsche 914 is not a failure and it only lasted five years
@arailway88095 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video. Lots of memories. I remember its rear end sliding on dirt roads. Fun. First Camaro I tried to climb into was so small, I never tried to get in one again.
@GroundhogzGarage5 жыл бұрын
The 65+ model years are especially good looking cars. My Dad had a 66 when I was a kid.
@nikolaihill73645 жыл бұрын
I bought a 64 Corvair Monza about 6 months ago, I've been working on it for the time that I've had it and I have to say that I really love the car. It just looks, sounds, and handles well, I've never really had any major malfunction with it (when driving it, not when working on it lol) other than the occasional fan belt slip, which is an easy fix.
@bryandepaepe59845 жыл бұрын
And public perception still beats actual reality to this day even with all the knowledge available at everyone's fingertips.
@TravelBackroads5 жыл бұрын
Everything stated in the video is correct. I would also like to add the two last nails in the Coffin of the Corvair. Firstly the Corvair was expensive to produce. Expensive because it didn't share any significant parts with other GM/Chev vehicles. Everything from the engine, axles, etc to the steering wheel were all Corvair specific. This isn't the way large manufactures operate. You want to limit as many parts as you can by having components that fit multiple vehicles. Think of how many cars and trucks were available with a Chev 327 at that time. The last nail in the coffin is the fact that you could never fit a V8 engine in the Corvair. That's what the public wanted. GM/Chevrolet had actually planned on ceasing production of the Corvair at the end of 66 with the introduction of the Camaro but they didn't want to appear to be bending to Ralph Naders campaign to kill the Corvair. A big corporation knuckling under to one wacko lawyer trying to sell books and make a name for himself. They scaled back production and ran it in limited numbers until 1969. At the end of 66 they quit developing it entirely and actually quit producing any performance models though. The performance model like the Corsa 140Hp and the Corsa 180Hp Turbo ceased production at the end of the 66 model year. One last thing I should mention that's kind of interesting. Ralph Naders book "Unsafe at any Speed" isn't only on the Corvair. The fact is the early swing axle Corvair is only the topic of one chapter in the book. There are many other cars talked about in there. GM raised the profile of the book by fighting back the way they did. That's what put this in the front pages. GM tried to discredit Nader by setting him up with a bunch of hookers or something and they got caught. This was now a big deal. "Why was this big corporation going after this lawyer like this?" the press thought. The rest is history. No one even knows about the other cars Nader went after in the book.
@tertommy5 жыл бұрын
Should have made it right from the start GM, their cheapo ignition switches prove that they never learn.
@Maccbruce5 жыл бұрын
Owned two in the seventies: automatic and stick. The stick was a lot of fun. That car was great in the snow. I learned quickly to ALWAYS keep a spare fan belt onboard. Spent a day in east New Jersey driving slowly looking for a belt to buy. Replaced it with a Jeep CJ5. Thanks for stirring up good memories. Peace
@bretttimmons26535 жыл бұрын
Another factor is the success of the Ford Falcon. Chevy rushes to built the Chevy II which was a conventional layout. You could get a V8 in the Nova SS. Therefor it was gutted in the sports car market by the Mustang and the economy car market by the Falcon and Chevy II.
@robertwhatley90785 жыл бұрын
I loved that car when I was 6 years old, I still get that feeling when I see one today. I know they weren't well made but I can't help it. I was 6 and I fell in love.