A little spare time to think. Remembering my Chevy Vega..
#61
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: A little spare time to think. Remembering my Chevy Vega..
dsi1 <dsi1@spamnet.com> wrote in news:toLym.29048$lR3.26186@newsfe25.iad:
>
> Back in the 70s I had a "Sexy European" Ford Capri - similar to a Vega
> GT with a cast iron engine block. It was a gasss to drive but not many
> people will remember that car or it's engine.
I used to own a 68 English Ford Cortina GT with a 1.6L motor,it was a great
car and fun to drive. I only got rid of it because it became hard to find
parts for it.
--
Jim Yanik
jyanik
at
localnet
dot com
>
> Back in the 70s I had a "Sexy European" Ford Capri - similar to a Vega
> GT with a cast iron engine block. It was a gasss to drive but not many
> people will remember that car or it's engine.
I used to own a 68 English Ford Cortina GT with a 1.6L motor,it was a great
car and fun to drive. I only got rid of it because it became hard to find
parts for it.
--
Jim Yanik
jyanik
at
localnet
dot com
#62
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: A little spare time to think. Remembering my Chevy Vega..
On Oct 6, 1:46 pm, dsi1 <d...@spamnet.com> wrote:
>
> Back in the 70s I had a "Sexy European" Ford Capri - similar to a Vega
> GT with a cast iron engine block. It was a gasss to drive but not many
> people will remember that car or it's engine.
I remember the Capri.
It wasn't nearly as popular as the Vega, but I did know two people
who had one--both happened to be the same color, a nice brown IIRC.
One belonged to a classmate of my older sister, the other to
the father of my bud who had the Spirit of America Vega.
One day, he was paying more attention to papers or something
than driving, and smashed it into some parked cars, and that
was the end of that Capri.
>
> Back in the 70s I had a "Sexy European" Ford Capri - similar to a Vega
> GT with a cast iron engine block. It was a gasss to drive but not many
> people will remember that car or it's engine.
I remember the Capri.
It wasn't nearly as popular as the Vega, but I did know two people
who had one--both happened to be the same color, a nice brown IIRC.
One belonged to a classmate of my older sister, the other to
the father of my bud who had the Spirit of America Vega.
One day, he was paying more attention to papers or something
than driving, and smashed it into some parked cars, and that
was the end of that Capri.
#63
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: A little spare time to think. Remembering my Chevy Vega..
On 10/7/09 6:33 AM, in article
ede49d41-b631-4b52-b059-ee494fe077b8...oglegroups.com, "Otis"
<rev_otis_mcnatt@yahoo.com> wrote:
> On Oct 6, 1:46 pm, dsi1 <d...@spamnet.com> wrote:
>>
>> Back in the 70s I had a "Sexy European" Ford Capri - similar to a Vega
>> GT with a cast iron engine block. It was a gasss to drive but not many
>> people will remember that car or it's engine.
>
> I remember the Capri.
> It wasn't nearly as popular as the Vega, but I did know two people
> who had one--both happened to be the same color, a nice brown IIRC.
> One belonged to a classmate of my older sister, the other to
> the father of my bud who had the Spirit of America Vega.
> One day, he was paying more attention to papers or something
> than driving, and smashed it into some parked cars, and that
> was the end of that Capri.
I had a '72 Capri. At the time, they were calling it the German Mustang. It
was the first car I ever bought new. Cost exactly $3000. In 72 you had a
choice of three engines, the 1600 Cortina engine, a 2000 German 4 & the 2300
V6. I had the 2000. Bought it in Ohio & took it with me to Germany (in the
Army) 6 months later. On the autobahn it would do 95 MPH uphill, 115 MPH
downhill & would steady state & cruise all day at 105 MPH. the German model
with the same engine had a different rear end and would go considerably
faster. I kept it 5 years, brought back with me from Germany & traded it on
a '77 Chevy.
It had one recurring problem - there was an L shaped fiberglass tang on the
points that followed the cam. It would periodically simply snap off, usually
after a couple of hours of wide open cruising on the autobahn. This, of
course, left you dead on the side of the road. Must've been a very well
known problem, since whenever it happened & the German roadside assistance
car would pull up (you don't have to call them, they're just out there
cruising the highway), the guy would always have a new set of points in his
hand as he got out of the car.
There was no interlock to keep it out of reverse, it just had a fairly
strong spring pushing back against reverse. That had something to do with
the only other problem I ever had with it (other than a couple of fender
benders). As I was putting it into reverse one morning, the shift lever
simply snapped off at the base. This was apparently also a common problem.
Even though my car was an American spec Mercury, the local German Ford
dealer had a shelf full of shifters when I went in to get a new one.
I definitely agree with the other comments about the interior. Cheesiest
vinyl ever.
ede49d41-b631-4b52-b059-ee494fe077b8...oglegroups.com, "Otis"
<rev_otis_mcnatt@yahoo.com> wrote:
> On Oct 6, 1:46 pm, dsi1 <d...@spamnet.com> wrote:
>>
>> Back in the 70s I had a "Sexy European" Ford Capri - similar to a Vega
>> GT with a cast iron engine block. It was a gasss to drive but not many
>> people will remember that car or it's engine.
>
> I remember the Capri.
> It wasn't nearly as popular as the Vega, but I did know two people
> who had one--both happened to be the same color, a nice brown IIRC.
> One belonged to a classmate of my older sister, the other to
> the father of my bud who had the Spirit of America Vega.
> One day, he was paying more attention to papers or something
> than driving, and smashed it into some parked cars, and that
> was the end of that Capri.
I had a '72 Capri. At the time, they were calling it the German Mustang. It
was the first car I ever bought new. Cost exactly $3000. In 72 you had a
choice of three engines, the 1600 Cortina engine, a 2000 German 4 & the 2300
V6. I had the 2000. Bought it in Ohio & took it with me to Germany (in the
Army) 6 months later. On the autobahn it would do 95 MPH uphill, 115 MPH
downhill & would steady state & cruise all day at 105 MPH. the German model
with the same engine had a different rear end and would go considerably
faster. I kept it 5 years, brought back with me from Germany & traded it on
a '77 Chevy.
It had one recurring problem - there was an L shaped fiberglass tang on the
points that followed the cam. It would periodically simply snap off, usually
after a couple of hours of wide open cruising on the autobahn. This, of
course, left you dead on the side of the road. Must've been a very well
known problem, since whenever it happened & the German roadside assistance
car would pull up (you don't have to call them, they're just out there
cruising the highway), the guy would always have a new set of points in his
hand as he got out of the car.
There was no interlock to keep it out of reverse, it just had a fairly
strong spring pushing back against reverse. That had something to do with
the only other problem I ever had with it (other than a couple of fender
benders). As I was putting it into reverse one morning, the shift lever
simply snapped off at the base. This was apparently also a common problem.
Even though my car was an American spec Mercury, the local German Ford
dealer had a shelf full of shifters when I went in to get a new one.
I definitely agree with the other comments about the interior. Cheesiest
vinyl ever.
#64
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: A little spare time to think. Remembering my Chevy Vega..
On Wed, 07 Oct 2009 10:33:36 -0500, "E. Meyer" <epmeyer50@gmail.com>
wrote:
> As I was putting it into reverse one morning, the shift lever
>simply snapped off at the base. This was apparently also a common problem.
>Even though my car was an American spec Mercury, the local German Ford
>dealer had a shelf full of shifters when I went in to get a new one.
>
Brother had one. '74 I think, bought used. Paid what I thought was
way too much for a cable/housing when his froze up.
Just the cable - he did the work. Shifter I think.
I was right. The new one froze up before a year was out.
Reminds me in a way of a friend who had a Merkur.
Expensive maintenance compared to common domestic cars.
At least that's my recollection. Been a long time.
--Vic
wrote:
> As I was putting it into reverse one morning, the shift lever
>simply snapped off at the base. This was apparently also a common problem.
>Even though my car was an American spec Mercury, the local German Ford
>dealer had a shelf full of shifters when I went in to get a new one.
>
Brother had one. '74 I think, bought used. Paid what I thought was
way too much for a cable/housing when his froze up.
Just the cable - he did the work. Shifter I think.
I was right. The new one froze up before a year was out.
Reminds me in a way of a friend who had a Merkur.
Expensive maintenance compared to common domestic cars.
At least that's my recollection. Been a long time.
--Vic
#65
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: A little spare time to think. Remembering my Chevy Vega..
"E. Meyer" <epmeyer50@gmail.com> wrote in message
> Not the computer I'm talking about. Cards in, cards or paper out. One
> job
> at a time. I'll grant you I/O with the cell phone might be a bit tedious
> for batch processing, but my ipod touch (which runs Unix internally & cost
> $399) would have absolutely no problem running rings around that dinosaur.
My first one was an IMB 1620 in my college days. Large, slow, not
interactive
at all. We got to use it in the math department when the university wasnt
using
it during the daytime.
My tiny Asus EEE would kick its *** and send it home crying.
#66
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: A little spare time to think. Remembering my Chevy Vega..
On Tue, 06 Oct 2009 07:46:56 -1000, dsi1 <dsi1@spamnet.com> wrote:
>Neo wrote:
>>
>> I drove a 1974 Vega GT (2 dr hatchback coupe) for serveral years.
>> My mother purchased it new and after 7 years gave it to me -
>> I drove and cared for it for the next 5 years.
>>
>> I only did minor updates to the car. I replaced the stock
>> AM radio to a AM/FM/stereo cassette radio and add
>> stereo rear speakers.
>>
>> Being a poor student at the time I tried to do most
>> of the maintance myself. I changed the oil, oil filter,
>> air filter, spark plugs, spark plug wires, points and
>> condensor, rotate the tires, replace tail lights, replace
>> the headlights, cleaned the carborator, etc. During
>> the lifetime of the car, beyond replacing the tires
>> and battery, I also had to replace the had the shock
>> absorbers, exhast systems ,the alternator,
>> the radiator and its hoses. Near the end of its
>> life I was going to the car junkyard to find
>> replacement parts to fix it (broken tail lamp
>> lense). I remember a local auto mechanic,
>> refusing to repair it - saying that I should get a
>> replacement car and to put the Vega out of
>> its misery.
>>
>>
>> The aluminum cylinder heads and iron/steel engine block
>> expanded at different rates so it had a tendency to burn oil.
>> Unlike the Toyota Corolla or the Honda Civic, the Chevy Vega
>> was very heavy and it had weak engine. The sluggish automatic
>> further handicapped acceleration when using the stock 4 cylinder.
>> The car intially got about 24 mpg but as it grew older it got about
>> 21 mpg.(combined highway and city driving). The interior
>> did not age well. Near the end of the car's life, The back of
>> the driver's seat became warped.
>
>The Vega had an iron cylinder head and an aluminum block which was the
>reverse of the small cars of the time. That was considered cutting edge
>technology at the time and they probably thought that most cars after
>the Vega would be running on sleeveless, aluminum block engines. That
>never happened but had the Vega come with a conventional engine, we
>wouldn't be having this conversation today.
>
>Back in the 70s I had a "Sexy European" Ford Capri - similar to a Vega
>GT with a cast iron engine block. It was a gasss to drive but not many
>people will remember that car or it's engine.
>
My roommate back then wanted a Capri and he put in an order for one.
Which at the time meant telling the dealer what you wanted and when
teh boat got here they would try and find one that matched your
choices. After a few months his came in and he loved it. When it was
about six months old he was driving it somewhere with his small kid
with him (weekend visit, he was divorced) and while stopped at a
stoplight he could see a faint glow from inside the center AC vent. He
looked in and it was on fire. Most likely the fan resistor pack. He
and the kid got out of the car and within minutes the whole car was
engulfed in flames. The insurance payout was not enough to buy a
replacement new one so he got screwed.
>Neo wrote:
>>
>> I drove a 1974 Vega GT (2 dr hatchback coupe) for serveral years.
>> My mother purchased it new and after 7 years gave it to me -
>> I drove and cared for it for the next 5 years.
>>
>> I only did minor updates to the car. I replaced the stock
>> AM radio to a AM/FM/stereo cassette radio and add
>> stereo rear speakers.
>>
>> Being a poor student at the time I tried to do most
>> of the maintance myself. I changed the oil, oil filter,
>> air filter, spark plugs, spark plug wires, points and
>> condensor, rotate the tires, replace tail lights, replace
>> the headlights, cleaned the carborator, etc. During
>> the lifetime of the car, beyond replacing the tires
>> and battery, I also had to replace the had the shock
>> absorbers, exhast systems ,the alternator,
>> the radiator and its hoses. Near the end of its
>> life I was going to the car junkyard to find
>> replacement parts to fix it (broken tail lamp
>> lense). I remember a local auto mechanic,
>> refusing to repair it - saying that I should get a
>> replacement car and to put the Vega out of
>> its misery.
>>
>>
>> The aluminum cylinder heads and iron/steel engine block
>> expanded at different rates so it had a tendency to burn oil.
>> Unlike the Toyota Corolla or the Honda Civic, the Chevy Vega
>> was very heavy and it had weak engine. The sluggish automatic
>> further handicapped acceleration when using the stock 4 cylinder.
>> The car intially got about 24 mpg but as it grew older it got about
>> 21 mpg.(combined highway and city driving). The interior
>> did not age well. Near the end of the car's life, The back of
>> the driver's seat became warped.
>
>The Vega had an iron cylinder head and an aluminum block which was the
>reverse of the small cars of the time. That was considered cutting edge
>technology at the time and they probably thought that most cars after
>the Vega would be running on sleeveless, aluminum block engines. That
>never happened but had the Vega come with a conventional engine, we
>wouldn't be having this conversation today.
>
>Back in the 70s I had a "Sexy European" Ford Capri - similar to a Vega
>GT with a cast iron engine block. It was a gasss to drive but not many
>people will remember that car or it's engine.
>
My roommate back then wanted a Capri and he put in an order for one.
Which at the time meant telling the dealer what you wanted and when
teh boat got here they would try and find one that matched your
choices. After a few months his came in and he loved it. When it was
about six months old he was driving it somewhere with his small kid
with him (weekend visit, he was divorced) and while stopped at a
stoplight he could see a faint glow from inside the center AC vent. He
looked in and it was on fire. Most likely the fan resistor pack. He
and the kid got out of the car and within minutes the whole car was
engulfed in flames. The insurance payout was not enough to buy a
replacement new one so he got screwed.
#67
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: A little spare time to think. Remembering my Chevy Vega..
Ashton Crusher wrote:
> My roommate back then wanted a Capri and he put in an order for one.
> Which at the time meant telling the dealer what you wanted and when
> teh boat got here they would try and find one that matched your
> choices. After a few months his came in and he loved it. When it was
> about six months old he was driving it somewhere with his small kid
> with him (weekend visit, he was divorced) and while stopped at a
> stoplight he could see a faint glow from inside the center AC vent. He
> looked in and it was on fire. Most likely the fan resistor pack. He
> and the kid got out of the car and within minutes the whole car was
> engulfed in flames. The insurance payout was not enough to buy a
> replacement new one so he got screwed.
I take it he's not much of Capri enthusiast, then.
> My roommate back then wanted a Capri and he put in an order for one.
> Which at the time meant telling the dealer what you wanted and when
> teh boat got here they would try and find one that matched your
> choices. After a few months his came in and he loved it. When it was
> about six months old he was driving it somewhere with his small kid
> with him (weekend visit, he was divorced) and while stopped at a
> stoplight he could see a faint glow from inside the center AC vent. He
> looked in and it was on fire. Most likely the fan resistor pack. He
> and the kid got out of the car and within minutes the whole car was
> engulfed in flames. The insurance payout was not enough to buy a
> replacement new one so he got screwed.
I take it he's not much of Capri enthusiast, then.
#68
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: A little spare time to think. Remembering my Chevy Vega..
dsi1 <dsi1@spamnet.com> wrote in news:SWUzm.240331$cf6.40348@newsfe16.iad:
> Ashton Crusher wrote:
>> My roommate back then wanted a Capri and he put in an order for one.
>> Which at the time meant telling the dealer what you wanted and when
>> teh boat got here they would try and find one that matched your
>> choices. After a few months his came in and he loved it. When it was
>> about six months old he was driving it somewhere with his small kid
>> with him (weekend visit, he was divorced) and while stopped at a
>> stoplight he could see a faint glow from inside the center AC vent. He
>> looked in and it was on fire. Most likely the fan resistor pack. He
>> and the kid got out of the car and within minutes the whole car was
>> engulfed in flames. The insurance payout was not enough to buy a
>> replacement new one so he got screwed.
>
> I take it he's not much of Capri enthusiast, then.
>
only SIX MONTHS old,and the insurance would not cover replacement,minus
deductible???
does not compute.
--
Jim Yanik
jyanik
at
localnet
dot com
> Ashton Crusher wrote:
>> My roommate back then wanted a Capri and he put in an order for one.
>> Which at the time meant telling the dealer what you wanted and when
>> teh boat got here they would try and find one that matched your
>> choices. After a few months his came in and he loved it. When it was
>> about six months old he was driving it somewhere with his small kid
>> with him (weekend visit, he was divorced) and while stopped at a
>> stoplight he could see a faint glow from inside the center AC vent. He
>> looked in and it was on fire. Most likely the fan resistor pack. He
>> and the kid got out of the car and within minutes the whole car was
>> engulfed in flames. The insurance payout was not enough to buy a
>> replacement new one so he got screwed.
>
> I take it he's not much of Capri enthusiast, then.
>
only SIX MONTHS old,and the insurance would not cover replacement,minus
deductible???
does not compute.
--
Jim Yanik
jyanik
at
localnet
dot com
#69
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: A little spare time to think. Remembering my Chevy Vega..
On 10/10/09 7:59 AM, in article
Xns9CA05B9496869jyaniklocalnetcom@216.168.3.44, "Jim Yanik"
<jyanik@abuse.gov> wrote:
> dsi1 <dsi1@spamnet.com> wrote in news:SWUzm.240331$cf6.40348@newsfe16.iad:
>
>> Ashton Crusher wrote:
>>> My roommate back then wanted a Capri and he put in an order for one.
>>> Which at the time meant telling the dealer what you wanted and when
>>> teh boat got here they would try and find one that matched your
>>> choices. After a few months his came in and he loved it. When it was
>>> about six months old he was driving it somewhere with his small kid
>>> with him (weekend visit, he was divorced) and while stopped at a
>>> stoplight he could see a faint glow from inside the center AC vent. He
>>> looked in and it was on fire. Most likely the fan resistor pack. He
>>> and the kid got out of the car and within minutes the whole car was
>>> engulfed in flames. The insurance payout was not enough to buy a
>>> replacement new one so he got screwed.
>>
>> I take it he's not much of Capri enthusiast, then.
>>
>
> only SIX MONTHS old,and the insurance would not cover replacement,minus
> deductible???
>
> does not compute.
I'm going to guess that was just the story. After a car burned down around
me, I can't see myself replacing it with another one just like it.
This would have been the same time frame as the exploding Pintos. At least
he had time to get out and watch.
Xns9CA05B9496869jyaniklocalnetcom@216.168.3.44, "Jim Yanik"
<jyanik@abuse.gov> wrote:
> dsi1 <dsi1@spamnet.com> wrote in news:SWUzm.240331$cf6.40348@newsfe16.iad:
>
>> Ashton Crusher wrote:
>>> My roommate back then wanted a Capri and he put in an order for one.
>>> Which at the time meant telling the dealer what you wanted and when
>>> teh boat got here they would try and find one that matched your
>>> choices. After a few months his came in and he loved it. When it was
>>> about six months old he was driving it somewhere with his small kid
>>> with him (weekend visit, he was divorced) and while stopped at a
>>> stoplight he could see a faint glow from inside the center AC vent. He
>>> looked in and it was on fire. Most likely the fan resistor pack. He
>>> and the kid got out of the car and within minutes the whole car was
>>> engulfed in flames. The insurance payout was not enough to buy a
>>> replacement new one so he got screwed.
>>
>> I take it he's not much of Capri enthusiast, then.
>>
>
> only SIX MONTHS old,and the insurance would not cover replacement,minus
> deductible???
>
> does not compute.
I'm going to guess that was just the story. After a car burned down around
me, I can't see myself replacing it with another one just like it.
This would have been the same time frame as the exploding Pintos. At least
he had time to get out and watch.
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