Automotive Forums .com - the leading automotive community online! Automotive Forums .com - the leading automotive community online!
Automotive Forums .com - the leading automotive community online! 
-
Latest | 0 Rplys
Go Back   Automotive Forums .com Car Chat > Car Comparisons
Car Comparisons Compare any cars and find out what every body else thinks. Just refrain from making stupid comparos like Viper vs. Geo Metro :)
Reply Show Printable Version Show Printable Version | Email this Page Email this Page | Subscription Subscribe to this Thread
 
Thread Tools
Old 12-11-2015, 11:40 PM   #1
MikeCStig
AF Regular
 
Join Date: Dec 2012
Location: Portland, Maine
Posts: 438
Thanks: 0
Thanked 47 Times in 47 Posts
Everyone's car history

Hey everyone! I thought it would be cool start a thread about cars we've had in the past and what we're driving now. Including what you learned how to drive in, the first car you owned, what you drive now,and everything in between, as well as what you thought of them. Just a discussion thread to breathe some life into this board.

I'll start... I learned to drive in a 1988 Volvo 240. Very comfortable car. Soft leather seats, soft suspension, good steering, but very heavy and I really had to put my foot down to get it going, and really take it easy around corners.

First car: 1989 Honda Accord LX. This is where I learned how to drive a stick. The clutch and gearbox were actually quite forgiving. I didn't stall it too many times, and there were very few jerky starts in their learning period. When I mastered the transmission, it was great. Also surprisingly zippy for only 98 horsepower. Shifted smooth, handled great and the interior was mint. The exterior... not so much. Faded paint, some rust on the body panels, etc. Then at about 230,000 miles the head gasket blew. Luckily, my girlfriend (at the time) had a cousin with a very well equipped garage and a love for Hondas. He had never worked on a 3rd generation accord before so he told me "buy the parts at carquest and let's do this!" $80 for an intake manifold gasket and a head gasket. 2 days later, the engine was running better than ever. However, being a carbuerated engine, the warm up process after a cold start was a pain in the ass in the winter. It would idle at 2500 rpm for about 10 minutes, gradually slowing down to the normal 800 rpm. It finally died at 325000 miles. The engine would start, then die 2 seconds later... it was time to say goodbye. I did manage to get $600 for the engine and various other parts.

Next was a 1994 Chevy Cavalier. It was a bit of a basket case, but I thought $500 was a good deal for a car with 160000 miles on it that ran, drove, and had a month old inspection sticker. It did need some work though. The catalytic converter was on its last legs, the midpipe was starting to rust and it had a Cherry Bomb muffler and tailpipe (illegal in Maine). So I did some exhaust work; all new from the cataylitic converter back and it was good to go. It had a really stiff ride, but comfortable seats. The handling was ok and the steering had a nice tight feel. I didn't really like the transmission. It was an auto, and missed my stick shift. Not only was it an automatic, but it was the sh*ttier automatic than I've ever experienced. 3 Speed with overdrive... pathetic. The engine could have performed so much better with an extra gear or two, I'm sure of it. 11 months later I went to get a new inspection sticker, and was told the car would never pass due to irreparable frame rot. I went to another shop to get a second opinion. They even put it on a lift and showed me the problem. The car was junk... didn't even make it to 200000 miles.

My next one was a project car. A 1991 Honda Prelude Si. Mint condition inside and out... except for one thing, the engine needed to be rebuilt. Apparently the #3 piston blew. The amazing part was that it was the rare B21A engine with 150 horsepower. The most power offered on that generation of Prelude. The seller wanted $1200 for it, but I talked him down to $1000 considering the full engine rebuild that needed to be done. The engine was already torn down and re sleeved. I decided to go with higher performance rather than just going stock. I had the crankshaft balanced and lightened, wiseco high compression pistons paired with a slightly more aggressive Pair of camshafts, New valve seals and retainers, and titanium valve springs. Also an AEM cold air intake, Greddy headers and catback exhaust. The end result was 212 horsepower and 190 ft-lbs of torque. I got a good deal on a set of nice sticky Pirelli tires. I didn't mess with the suspension, I didn't need to, it was perfect as it was. I wanted to use the car as a daily driver, but I also wanted in on some autocross races staged on an abandoned airport. I did surprisingly well, although that may have something to do with the fact that I raced a lot of cars that were good at straight lines, but sucked at corners. That car died after we widened one of the turns on the course. Before I would go down to second gear and take it at about 50mph. After the widening, I could easily do it at 70, which meant third gear. One time out of habit I went down to second gear at around 70 mph. The engine revved to almost 8000 rpm (with a 6500 rpm red line) and blew up. The transmission also disintegrated. It was a tragedy. The engine block had a hole in it where one of the connecting rods punched its way through. I wound up selling the body for $700

My current car: I don't race anymore, so after saving for a while after the Prelude catastrophe, I got myself an 03 VW Golf. There was a GTI sitting right next to it, but I couldn't afford it. The golf is good though. Smooth shifting 5 speed manual, decent ride quality, I bought it with 130000 miles on it and so far, I've only changed the timing belt, spark plugs, and done basic maintainance (oil changes,etc.) Now I'm up to about 175,000 and its still running strong. If you want something reliable, practical and fun to drive, get a Golf. If you want something with all those qualities and more.pep in its step, get a GTI.
__________________
"Ok, systems check; the battery is discharging, the oil temperature is very high, the oil pressure is very low, the engine temperature is off the end of the scale, I'm running out of petrol... but the clock is correct!"
-James May, in an old, worn out Lamborghini purchased for less than £10,000.
MikeCStig is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-12-2015, 12:21 PM   #2
Stealthee
Your worst nightmare
 
Stealthee's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Smithfield, Pennsylvania
Posts: 6,048
Thanks: 37
Thanked 251 Times in 245 Posts
Re: Everyone's car history

Not a bad idea for a thread. Not sure how much attention or responses it will get but I will participate. My list is a little longer, so I will try not to be too wordy.

Learned how to drive in a 87 Dodge Omni. It was manual so I learned that at the same time. When it came to taking my driving test I borrowed my uncle's 90ish Chrysler Lebaron.

My first car was a 75 Chevy Monza. It had been my dad's DD for a year or so. We moved my Ohio back to PA and it came with us. My mom drove it for awhile and I think it ran out of oil on her and locked up. It sat here in PA for the year we lived in Washington and continued to sit until I was given ownership of the car. I found a replacement engine for dirt cheap and did everything to get it back on the road. I drove it for about 3 months, then wrapped it around a telephone pole, ripping it into two pieces.





I went without my own car for a few months after that, and just drove whatever my parents had available when needed. After I started making some money I found an 85 Bronco II at a used car lot. It was lifted (body lift), with 31/10.50's, nice sawblade wheels and was bright yellow. It got dubbed "The Magic Schoolbus."

Hunting season came around, and as I pulled into the field behind my dad another truck coming out the tram road stops to talk to my dad. He jumps out, runs back to my Bronco, tells me to get out that there is a dozer on fire and the operator is trapped inside. (They were doing a reclamation on the land, that is why a dozer was there)

He takes off out the road and as he takes a curve the Bronco started sliding sideways, he tried to correct, but it caught a rut and did a barrel roll. It flipped about 1 1/2 times in the air and came down on the passenger side. Thankfully he was okay, but the Bronco wasn't as lucky.

Since my dad wrecked it he basically let me have free reign over there Pontiac Sunbird he had just bought.

I drove it until I found a 87 Dodge Shadow that needed work for dirt cheap.

Drove it for awhile and found a clean 4 cylinder 86 Mustang for a nice price.

In the meantime work was going into "reviving" the Magic Schoolbus. I was making a lot of money (for a 20 year old in 2000) so I was able to buy the stuff needed to make it even better. Bought a suspension lift, fender flares, paint, etc and it was again an attention grabber.



Unfortunately one day at work, while driving from one location to another it shot a fireball out the exhaust and was dead in the water.

The Mustang was driven met a death by rearending a loaded triaxle at about 50 mph.

After that I bought a 93 Eclipse. Drove it for a year and sold it to my brother when I bought my Stealth.

The Stealth didn't look anything like my sig when I got it in 2002. I actually still have the Stealth, but it currently looks like this



At one point when the Stealth was down for one reason or another I picked up a 93 Talon TSI.



I drove it for awhile. It leaned out on me when racing a Cobalt SS. It was still drivable, but there was definitely an issue with the rings. A few months later I went to shift gears and was blocked out of 3rd and 4th. I picked up an engine on eBay in New Jersey and found a transmission more local and put them both in at the same time. A month or so later the ECU fried.

I parked it and put the Stealth back on the road. Money got tight and I sold the Talon a few months after that.

The Stealth started transforming into what the sig pic looks like. Then I took it to the track and after about 7 runs I got bad wheel hop and broke the original transmission at 155k miles. Put another trans in it and started throwing the coilovers and solid mounts at it. Took it to the track 3 months later and broke that transmission on the very first launch it ever saw.

Called a friend of mine and made a deal with him and we cobbled together a transmission with used parts he had and other parts I had. There was something we missed when we put it back together because I had no 4th or reverse. I dealt with it for 10 months until one day for no reason yet another differential ate itself.

In that period I had already picked up a Quaiffe differential and some more used trans parts so I put together an "indestructible" transmission. Unfortunately while the stronger differential let spin the tires without fear of breaking it, putting it into 2nd under spin and power shredded 2nd gear.

I actually drove it with no 2nd until I acquired another transmission. I didn't have the time to pull the transmissions apart and put the Quaiffe into the good one so it just went in stock. One day while driving home from work I noticed the shifting was notchy. I got home and inspected and sure enough, for no reason the differential had let go and I lost all my fluid.

I went and bought my 07 Grand Prix that weekend. It is basically stock other than the hood, spoiler (stock GXP spoiler), ZZP 3" downpipe and custom 4" intake. I hit 181k miles the other day.



I'm looking to replace in some time next year.
__________________
Stealthee is offline   Reply With Quote
 
Reply

POST REPLY TO THIS THREAD

Go Back   Automotive Forums .com Car Chat > Car Comparisons

Thread Tools

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off



All times are GMT -5. The time now is 12:08 AM.

Community Participation Guidelines | How to use your User Control Panel

Powered by: vBulletin | Copyright Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
 
 
no new posts