I'll start with my dad's. He drove used fullsize body-on-frame Ford wagons all through the 70's. I remember the last one of these; I was old enough to roll down the rear window all the way.
We got this fairmont and I was immediately disappointed that the window only went down 60%. My mom said it was so I wouldn't throw ice scrapers out the window. Huh??
It was 1980. Dad special ordered this wagon with the 200-6 and 4 speed manual transmission. I found the window sticker and the base model was a little over $4k but this wagon was $6k. They really stuck it to you on options! And this price was with no AC, no cruise, vinyl seats, manual locks & windows, and that manual transmission! The dome light only had a door pin switch for the driver's door. It did at least have PS/PB and something bigger than the "pinto motor" as my dad snidely noted.
By the mid 80's the dealer vanished and was a grassy park! Dad alleged it was b/c of the "shady deals."
There was a gas crunch in 81-82 and the other car was a dodge omni 024 miser with the 50ish hp VW 1.7 (?) motor. Dad commuted in that leaving my stay at home Mom with the fairmont in which to drive us kids around. I would have rather ridden in the Miser even though it was a 2 dr hatch and I had to fold the seat back to get in/out etc.
The fairmont was mostly reliable. Bragged about not having the valve cover off. E-brake cables kept freezing up, plastic transmission forks bent or broke. Catco clogged up. Mom blamed the e-brake issue on the car being supposed to being equipped with an automatic transmission. Our driveway was on a slope and my dad had a wheel chock he carried with him. He'd open the door then roll back until the LF tire was hung up on it. Left it in gear with no e-brake and called it good. Several times with us kids on board he'd get in, put it in reverse, and gun the gas driving over the chock! A little numb to the physics of driving; usually with the clutch in on a hill you roll anyway.
He's still a bad driver today.
The heater core leaked mildly on the passenger floor. Hindsight says we missed an expensive trip to the mechanic to change that out.
Near the end I had my learner's permit and I preferred driving the Fairmont! It had usable torque for starting out in 1st gear unlike Mom's car, by then a mazda 323. The fox body platform held its own at 150k and still steered crisply. It had great visibilty and being a wagon I never had to guess where the rear was. In a memorable moment I was a rank noob driving on a quiet country road with my newly printed permit when a rolls royce pulled out of a side street right in front of me. I locked 'em up and missed the target.
It's funny how I thought they were beaters through the late 80s and 90s because of the vinyl seats and indifferent appearance/care. Now rolling chassis are starting to pick up in price for hot rod motor drops. The car didn't rust out in 13 years of Massachusetts winters, the doors always lined up; body was pretty nice except for chalky faded paint.
What finally did the car in was a clutch/trans issue that required it to be turned off every time it stopped so it could be jammed into 1st. We sold it to a guy with dental problems for $60 so he'd have more storage place on his property. He took the motor out and put it in an Thunderbird!!
Oil was GTX 10w40 and a fram filter. Dad did his own through the mid 80s then quit for some unknown reason.
We got this fairmont and I was immediately disappointed that the window only went down 60%. My mom said it was so I wouldn't throw ice scrapers out the window. Huh??
It was 1980. Dad special ordered this wagon with the 200-6 and 4 speed manual transmission. I found the window sticker and the base model was a little over $4k but this wagon was $6k. They really stuck it to you on options! And this price was with no AC, no cruise, vinyl seats, manual locks & windows, and that manual transmission! The dome light only had a door pin switch for the driver's door. It did at least have PS/PB and something bigger than the "pinto motor" as my dad snidely noted.
By the mid 80's the dealer vanished and was a grassy park! Dad alleged it was b/c of the "shady deals."
There was a gas crunch in 81-82 and the other car was a dodge omni 024 miser with the 50ish hp VW 1.7 (?) motor. Dad commuted in that leaving my stay at home Mom with the fairmont in which to drive us kids around. I would have rather ridden in the Miser even though it was a 2 dr hatch and I had to fold the seat back to get in/out etc.
The fairmont was mostly reliable. Bragged about not having the valve cover off. E-brake cables kept freezing up, plastic transmission forks bent or broke. Catco clogged up. Mom blamed the e-brake issue on the car being supposed to being equipped with an automatic transmission. Our driveway was on a slope and my dad had a wheel chock he carried with him. He'd open the door then roll back until the LF tire was hung up on it. Left it in gear with no e-brake and called it good. Several times with us kids on board he'd get in, put it in reverse, and gun the gas driving over the chock! A little numb to the physics of driving; usually with the clutch in on a hill you roll anyway.
The heater core leaked mildly on the passenger floor. Hindsight says we missed an expensive trip to the mechanic to change that out.
Near the end I had my learner's permit and I preferred driving the Fairmont! It had usable torque for starting out in 1st gear unlike Mom's car, by then a mazda 323. The fox body platform held its own at 150k and still steered crisply. It had great visibilty and being a wagon I never had to guess where the rear was. In a memorable moment I was a rank noob driving on a quiet country road with my newly printed permit when a rolls royce pulled out of a side street right in front of me. I locked 'em up and missed the target.
It's funny how I thought they were beaters through the late 80s and 90s because of the vinyl seats and indifferent appearance/care. Now rolling chassis are starting to pick up in price for hot rod motor drops. The car didn't rust out in 13 years of Massachusetts winters, the doors always lined up; body was pretty nice except for chalky faded paint.
What finally did the car in was a clutch/trans issue that required it to be turned off every time it stopped so it could be jammed into 1st. We sold it to a guy with dental problems for $60 so he'd have more storage place on his property. He took the motor out and put it in an Thunderbird!!
Oil was GTX 10w40 and a fram filter. Dad did his own through the mid 80s then quit for some unknown reason.