mitchkelleher
Mitch Kelleher
mitchkelleher

If the Canadian ones followed the US models, they were GL or DL with 1.8 or 1.6L engines respectively (though I’m not sure if that GL/DL match to displacement was strictly true). EA81 series engine. About as sophisticated as a garden tractor, only slightly more powerful, and at least as easy to work on.

It was the EA81 in the BRAT/Leone/GLs—OHV, gear driven cam. Replaced by the EA82, an OHC version with a separate timing belt for each head. The XT later had the ER27, basically a 6-cylinder version of the EA82.

Even when you could get decent ones in the $25-30k range, I wasn’t interested. Good looking, but slow and there (were) cars I thought were more interesting for the price at the time (mostly Gandini’s work: Espada, Khamsin, Montreal). Money kept going to a house instead. Even with the large price increases of those

I wonder if they really saved that much doing that or if the idea was more to push people into more profitable trims.

There are adaptors. I used one on a bike build to convert a ‘61 Columbia Firebolt step through cruiser to a 6-speed freewheel, which ditched the coaster. It’s the only brake on that bike and it works well for a rear brake only and it SEEMS solid, but I don’t completely trust it as the only brake and there’s no cheap

People shit on friction shifting and indexing is great, but on an around town/utility bike, I like being able to blast up or down multiple gears in one move and my legs have never had a problem telling me when I’ve found the right gear. Some of this might be down to custom shifters I got the feel for, so there’s no

Around here, it seems like people stop more for perfectly clear roundabouts than they do for damn stop signs.

I guess I can see leaving out the EG33 (basically a 6-cylinder EJ22 only on the SVX), but it seems odd to mention the EJ series and not bring up the 2.2 closed deck block (or the JDM EJ20G for that matter) from the lst gen Legacy turbos that were related to the homologation run for Group A rally (technically, those

He only has to pay 10% to a bail bondsman to get out (this can vary by state, but FL is 10%).

Dodge Ram, Fl, sounds right.

The ‘80s Cadillacs had MPG feedback and Camaros had the upshift light. Must have been a popular thing in the industry then. My Subarus did not have either.

Focus ST did that, too. Yeah, let’s invite LSPI by driving around in 6th at 1200 rpm to save $.02 in fuel!

I love Gordon Murray’s cars and philosophy, but my first thought was the shift knob, too—aside from the GMA logo, it looks like a cast piece found in industrial equipment. From the photos, it looks like there’s more flash along the side than a bottle of off-brand cleaner, but at least a replacement could be had from

Used mine all the time from vent to fully open and never had issues with them. Two were even aftermarket pieces with a combined mileage of about 420k miles.

My Focus ST averaged the highway rating with a combined cycle and I don’t drive Mrs Daisy. With DI, you get turbocharging with what used to be a decent NA compression ratio. Peak power is only produced at full load. Reduce load, reduce power, reduce fuel consumption. Of course, the displacement still has to be large

As above: you’re talking about what some outlying individual will pay while I’m talking about VALUE as if the two are the same thing when they are definitely not.

You’re talking about what some outlying individual will pay while I’m talking about VALUE as if the two are the same thing when they are definitely not.

That people will pay it doesn’t mean the price makes sense. There was some young woman selling jars of her farts making—reportedly—hundreds of thousands of dollars at 4-figures/jar. Weird morons will overpay for anything, it shouldn’t be taken as an absolute assessment of value.

The difference here is that the ‘65 Mustang was nowhere near this relatively expensive at that time. If it were a hardtop, it would have been affordable to a high school kid with a part time McJob. Fastbacks or convertibles were a little outside that, but still within reach of a normal person. Shelbys were a different

The possible reasons for it sitting doesn’t address his point that it’s a waste to have something and not use it, especially where having it sit this much does it few favors except for resale to other speculators. This isn’t one of those cars that have ascended to the level of art to justify it as a display piece.