Originally Posted By: Vizzy
One of the biggest problems in the USA is finding cars that set a balance between great driving dynamics, affordability, and reasonable reliability...
Most affordable Chrysler cars for decades now have been absolute bores to drive not only that they simply haven't been that reliable either. The ONE exception was the MKI Neon and now that is long gone...
I guess none of my Chrysler cars were "affordable".
I've owned a 3rd gen Firebird (1984 LG4), Fox body Mustang (1985 LX 5.0) and an '86 Daytona TurboZ CS (turbo1) . If I could choose from all 3 in good condition, I would choose the Daytona every time. In spite of the fact that it made the least horsepower. It was just so much fun to make the boost needle wiggle around in the red and when it spooled up, it honestly felt faster than the other two. Plus, it was the only one that was competent in inclement weather.
My Sebring Convertible was suprisingly fun to drive (Mitsubishi 6G73) and I cannot express how much women loved that car. It was a great date car.
The PT Cruiser....I affectionately refer to it as the "Turbo Clown Hearse." and it's a premium gas pig, but I like the [darn] thing. It's delightfully unrefined. It growls and occasionally pops like it's Neon SRT/4 little brother. When you push the accelerator, it goes like no PT Cruiser should. Handling?
meh....it's better than your garden variety PT or HHR LS. Not great, but better than a lot of small crossovers I've driven. Front brakes lasted 68,000 miles. Rack and Pinion was replaced under warranty for a "leak" that I never saw and never left anything on the garage floor. Affordable? we got it with 4000 miles on it for $15,995 at CarMax (wife's choice). That's four thousand miles....not forty thousand.
My mother-in-law had a 2.2 Sundance. It was a pretty boring car to drive but compared to a similar year model Tempo or Cavalier, it was good. Plus, when you needed to carry something big, it was a hatchback. The Cavalier had a big trunk but compared to the opening of the Sundance, it falls short.
The Daytona was the only one that had mechanical problems. Given the way I drove it, I'm suprised it made it past 100,000 miles before it had any problems. Most hard driven turbocharged cars in the '80s did not.
One of the biggest problems in the USA is finding cars that set a balance between great driving dynamics, affordability, and reasonable reliability...
Most affordable Chrysler cars for decades now have been absolute bores to drive not only that they simply haven't been that reliable either. The ONE exception was the MKI Neon and now that is long gone...
I guess none of my Chrysler cars were "affordable".
I've owned a 3rd gen Firebird (1984 LG4), Fox body Mustang (1985 LX 5.0) and an '86 Daytona TurboZ CS (turbo1) . If I could choose from all 3 in good condition, I would choose the Daytona every time. In spite of the fact that it made the least horsepower. It was just so much fun to make the boost needle wiggle around in the red and when it spooled up, it honestly felt faster than the other two. Plus, it was the only one that was competent in inclement weather.
My Sebring Convertible was suprisingly fun to drive (Mitsubishi 6G73) and I cannot express how much women loved that car. It was a great date car.
The PT Cruiser....I affectionately refer to it as the "Turbo Clown Hearse." and it's a premium gas pig, but I like the [darn] thing. It's delightfully unrefined. It growls and occasionally pops like it's Neon SRT/4 little brother. When you push the accelerator, it goes like no PT Cruiser should. Handling?
My mother-in-law had a 2.2 Sundance. It was a pretty boring car to drive but compared to a similar year model Tempo or Cavalier, it was good. Plus, when you needed to carry something big, it was a hatchback. The Cavalier had a big trunk but compared to the opening of the Sundance, it falls short.
The Daytona was the only one that had mechanical problems. Given the way I drove it, I'm suprised it made it past 100,000 miles before it had any problems. Most hard driven turbocharged cars in the '80s did not.