I never thought the Vega looked bad. Looked kind of like a mini Camaro from the front. It was just that it tended to drop parts along the side of the road as it went.
IP: Logged
12:38 PM
Formula88 Member
Posts: 53788 From: Raleigh NC Registered: Jan 2001
I had two of them back in the eighties. Both wagons. Great for hauling stuff. Paid $400 for one and $200 for the other. They were cool little cars if you could keep the rust away and the parts from falling off. The starter kept falling out of the motor. No amout of torque on the bolts would hold it.
IP: Logged
02:30 PM
82-T/A [At Work] Member
Posts: 24109 From: Florida USA Registered: Aug 2002
Does The Chevy Vega Look Better Today Then It Did Back Then?
Honestly, I don't like the car in the picture you posted... I'm not a huge fan of the cowl hood and the huge tires in the rear. It makes the car look disproportionate.
But I do like this one that someone else posted.
STILL not a fan of the wheels, but I think period-correct Chevrolet wheels would look really nice on this car:
My 1st wife had one when we met, that someone had given to her when she went to college. It was a good car, except about the time we got married, one day it wouldn't start and I never could get it running again. We sold it for something like $50.
IP: Logged
03:50 PM
Patrick Member
Posts: 37649 From: Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada Registered: Apr 99
I'm one that never thought they were 'bad' either. I prefer the earlier years with the 'open' grill. And i liked the wagon, when it had the side windows taken out for steel.
But, they were junk. Then again, lots of cars were back then.
IP: Logged
04:38 PM
rinselberg Member
Posts: 16118 From: Sunnyvale, CA (USA) Registered: Mar 2010
I had a 72 with the open front grill and a 77 (last model year) with the closed grill--which I think looked real "sharp".
Check out the photographs in this brief writeup: A photo of a 1977 Cosworth Vega and a clever magazine advertisement COSWORTH. ONE VEGA FOR THE PRICE OF TWO.
I bought a 1972 Vega 2300. It was a standard interior with the GT engine and suspension. Parts NEVER fell off. I did go thru a motor which GM replaced for free. It was a tight handling gem, wish I still had it. It sure as hell looked better than anything else out there, and better than the current crop of polished turds.
IP: Logged
06:10 PM
avengador1 Member
Posts: 35468 From: Orlando, Florida Registered: Oct 2001
I bought a 1972 Vega 2300. It was a standard interior with the GT engine and suspension. Parts NEVER fell off. I did go thru a motor which GM replaced for free. It was a tight handling gem, wish I still had it. It sure as hell looked better than anything else out there, and better than the current crop of polished turds.
Parts fell off my friends wagon. When what the parts mount to rots away, simply air and luck wont hold them on.
IP: Logged
06:54 PM
Cheever3000 Member
Posts: 12400 From: The Man from Tallahassee Registered: Aug 2001
Oh yeah. My brother had one of those for a short time (just before he got his 68 Chevelle SS). Once I set a roll of pennies on the dash, and it rolled down the defroster duct. I never got it back. Don't know how I remembered that, it was a long time ago.
IP: Logged
07:24 PM
carnut122 Member
Posts: 9122 From: Waleska, GA, USA Registered: Jan 2004
The only one I ever drove died if driven below 15 mph. That was not a good combination on a snow covered road in Colorado in the late 70's. If it wasn't for a big rock, I'd have gone over a small cliff.
[This message has been edited by carnut122 (edited 03-30-2011).]
IP: Logged
07:28 PM
Wudman Member
Posts: 1593 From: Sacramento, CA Registered: Jan 2001
To answer the question, no. It looks the same. Having said that, new they were pretty sharp for the day when compared to the Pinto and the very ugly, but incredibly more reliable and expensive Japanese cars.
My Datsun 510 could kill a stock Vega and unless someone stuffed a V8 in the Vega, my boxy, four door 510 could drive circles around one without needing an oil pan underneath it after a good run. Not much you could do to that stock mill but clean up oil leaks. If you did put a V8 in them which was pretty common back in the day, you better re-enforce the frame if you wanted to open the doors or not crab down the road. Vegas tended to twist into unusual geometries under torque. I can recall one friend who after his first test run at the Wed. Night high school drags, could not open his doors. He was fast, but had to climb out the window. Eventually his car was great at "crabbing" down the road.
Now I did see a pretty panel wagon out the California Zephyr last month somewhere in Iowa. The bright yellow wagon jumped out at me from the used car lot when framed against the grain bins at 30mph. I couldn't get my video camera on fast enough to catch a shot.
Inside there were pretty spartan in a way you don't see anymore. In a head on between a Vega and a Fiero I suggest that you could push the motor into the back hatch and the driver? Well....
Well, indeed. I actually DID crash a Vega. 50mph into a T-Bird that turned across traffic in front of me. Pushed the drivers corner of the front bumper back to the cet of the wheel. Passenger side was almost full length. Roof was oil-canned down about 3-4 inches in the center, and the door wouldn't open. No problem, the side windows weren't there any more. My buddy & I "Dukes of Hazzarded" it out the windows. Other cars had stopped, they ran to the T-Bird to help. Nobody wanted to look in the Vega! We both walked, well, LIMPED, away. I was seriously bruised up, and my buddy had a broken collarbone. We considered it good.
When the car was taken to the junkyard weeks later, they didn't even bother to remove it from the flatbed, just stripped it right there. I went by to get the plates. I told the head guy I was here for the plates on the Vega. He asked if i was driving it. I said yes. THEY ALL STOPPED WORK AND TURNED TO LOOK AT ME. I guess it was a pretty well smashed up car. Head guy asks "You got a church?" I admitted I didn't. He says: "You better get one."
IP: Logged
09:36 PM
jimbolaya Member
Posts: 10652 From: Virginia Beach, Virginia Registered: Feb 2007
Make fun of me if you want, but I love Vega's. Yes I know they were rust buckets and quality was horrible, but I love the way they look. All those problems can be overcome with a frame off restoration and an engine swap.
Jim
IP: Logged
10:31 PM
PFF
System Bot
williegoat Member
Posts: 20783 From: Glendale, AZ Registered: Mar 2009
I also crashed my Vega. I almost died in a head on collision with it. The front end ended up where my knees where and the engine was pushed in several inches into the passenger compartment.
I like the early skinny bumper style Vega. The Vega would rock with a turbo Ecotec, t-56 and a narrowed nine inch with 4.11 gears. Big fat tires all around, big brakes, some suspension upgrades...I would clear a place in the driveway to park one. Imagine the look on the younger crowd when your olde tyme wimpy car shows their fart-can mobile what some 70's tail lights look like.
IP: Logged
11:32 PM
CoolBlue87GT Member
Posts: 8447 From: Punta Gorda, Florida, USA Registered: Apr 2001
Of course, if Boonie had really been on the ball, he would've been asking us our opinion of the Pontiac Astre.
OMG, that is the coolest car I've ever seen in my life... no longer do I long for my Porsche 944 that I sold, or that 1988 Mazda RX-7 Turbo-II that I sold... that's what I want... holy crap, it looks like a 70s Ferrari and a Trans Am had sex. I've got to find one!!!
quote
Originally posted by avengador1:
I also crashed my Vega. I almost died in a head on collision with it. The front end ended up where my knees where and the engine was pushed in several inches into the passenger compartment.
Damn, that looks bad. I'm guessing that hole is where your head went through??? OUCH!!!
quote
Originally posted by User00013170:
I'm one that never thought they were 'bad' either. I prefer the earlier years with the 'open' grill. And i liked the wagon, when it had the side windows taken out for steel.
But, they were junk. Then again, lots of cars were back then.
How junky could they be now though? With the exception of the chassis... everything else is just old 70s technology that you could easily replace with newer stuff...
IP: Logged
08:36 AM
82-T/A [At Work] Member
Posts: 24109 From: Florida USA Registered: Aug 2002
I'm going to think about this car for the rest of the year now. I'm trying to be responsible, I'm trying to pare down my cars... and here you post a car like that...
A smallish, 2-door, rear-wheel drive, Pontiac with European styling...
Damn... that car is soo damned cool.
If I got that car, I would probably pull the entire running gear + 5-speed from a 95 Camaro w/ 3.4 and drop it in there... it would be smooth running, have decent fuel economy, and plenty of power for it's size... man... I TOTALLY want one...
My Datsun 510 could kill a stock Vega and unless someone stuffed a V8 in the Vega, my boxy, four door 510 could drive circles around one without needing an oil pan underneath it after a good run.
I concur. My 510 was a four door with a Mulholland slalom kit. It had mechanical secondaries on the carb. Definitely outperformed a stock Vega.
Arn
IP: Logged
09:07 AM
82-T/A [At Work] Member
Posts: 24109 From: Florida USA Registered: Aug 2002
OMG!!! There was an Oldsmobile one too!!! It looks like a space ship!!!
This olds model, the Starfire, had two sister cars, the Chevy Monza and the Buick Skylark. They were supposed to be the model that got the wankel rotary GM was devloping in the 70s.AMC Pacer was supposed to get that engine too.
The engine never was devloped far enough for production and was scrapped/cancelled
and the Monza went on to get 305 V8 power. Some like the spyder got 350 4V V8s (4V meant 4bbl carberator)
The Skylark got the 3.8 V6, the ancestor to the 3800 V6