Lately, I've been thinking that it might be time to get a new daily driver. My current car is actually a truck–a 1999 Toyota Tacoma V-6 PreRunner extended cab pickup. I've owned it since new, and as of this afternoon it has 343,456 miles on the odometer. It has been as close to bulletproof as I think a vehicle can be, and has given me no major problems to worry about–until recently. Late last year, the air conditioning compressor went out, which cost a bit of cash to fix. At the last service visit, I was advised that the steering rack was leaking and probably should be replaced. The transmission is getting jerky going up hills. The Cruise Control "ON" annunciator has been out for a year or so now (but cruise still works), and the airbag light stays on for an ever-lengthening period of time when I start the truck. Now, were the truck a wee bit younger, or had fewer miles, I'd go ahead and pony up the dough right now to get these matters attended to. But with 10,000 miles to go until the next 90,000 mile interval–and all Toyota owners should know what that means (timing belts, trans flush, diff flush, etc., etc.)–I'm beginning to wonder what will be the next major failure. And I'm starting to realize that the truck's days of a 90-mile round trip, five days a week are coming to an end. I won't trade the truck–I won't get much in trade, maybe $3,000–and where I live, you need a truck to do those around-the-homestead errands like run the recycling to the drop off center, haul stuff to and fro, and to use when the weather isn't very hospitable to a car. Nope, the truck has served me well and deserves a retirement in the country…
I've been looking at something that gets better gas mileage than the 20- to 22mpg I currently get, and I want something that I can pay off quickly. All of this points to a compact or subcompact. I want a car that will be reliable for many years, and one with a good warranty. Like it or not, that points me towards either a Japanese or Korean car (I'm starting to gravitate towards either a Hyundai or Kia). And that got me to take a look back at the cars I've owned in my lifetime.
My first car was my father's 1978 Datsun 510 station wagon, with the nearly indestructible 1,952cc inline four cylinder engine driving a four speed manual transmission which was also nearly indestructible. I started driving it in 1981, after dad got a company car. After some wheeling and dealing, I got the car–I'd need something to get me between Ft. Lauderdale and Daytona Beach. That car was through a lot–both my brother and I learned to drive with that car. We probably were the reason for the first clutch replacement. My brother was in an accident when a guy ran right into him. The car got fixed and was nearly as good as new. But, being a Datsun from the 1970's meant that the steel was unprotected. About the time I started driving the car, rust was becoming evident. See, Datsun didn't use any sort of anti-corrosive primer or coating on their metal. Couple that with a rubber compound in the door drains that tended to swell shut when submerged in water, the doors were the first places to show evidence of corrosion. Also remember that this car saw a lot of Daytona Beach–those were the days you could drive on the beach, down by the water. You could wash the car every hour and still not be able to keep up with the salt-laden air. So, I learned my fair share of shadetree body work during the time I owned that car. By the time I traded it to my mother for her 1982 Toyota Corolla, the Datsun had had three clutches, five sets of brakes, a transmission rebuild, one brake master cylinder, one clutch master cylinder, and was 85% Bondo by volume. Mom and dad traded the Datsun for Mom's new car, a 1987 Hyundai Excel 5-door (which taught me a lesson about buying a first- or second-model year of anything). I'll bet that little Datsun 2L engine is still being used, though, maybe to power a well or something. I miss that car…
The replacement was a 1982 Toyota Corolla. Mom bought the Corolla to replace her 1981 Dodge Reliant-K station wagon that exploded a transaxle at about 11,000 miles. Funny, a lot of people we know who had K-cars had the same thing happen at almost the same mileage. Now, my mom is easy on cars–she could be the prototypical Little Old Lady from Pasadena. The Toyota was a good little car that could get her from home to work, and back again safely. It could get her where she needed to go–and that meant that it saw little of the Interstate (I-95, in this case). See, mom doesn't like the Interstate or Florida's Turnpike. She likes quiet roads where she doesn't feel hounded. But I had to drive the Interstate and the Turnpike. One thing I learned very quickly was that in order to merge, I had to shut off the A/C, drop the transmission to "L". and floor it. I would manually shift through the automatic trans until I hit "D"–and by that time I hoped to be up to about 60mph. The Toyota served its purpose–it got me through my last year of college and through a year at work in the real world. The only real problems I had with this little car was a balky fuel pump (it would mimic vapor-lock, and would manifest itself at the worst times–like on I-95 just outside Boca on my way home for the weekend) and a ruptured oil pressure sending unit. I had the same part go bad on me on the Datsun, and it took literally 10 minutes to change back then. It took me several hours on the Toyota, since they located it on the most inaccessible part of the engine.
By 1989, I was ready for something that had a little more oomph–the Toyota was starting to show signs of an impending need for a transmission rebuild, it needed brakes, and honestly, I didn't think the car was worth the work. So, it got traded for what would be my first "new" car, a 1989 Chevrolet S-10 Blazer. I hauled a lot of stuff for work, so I needed something bigger than the Corolla. The truck had the 4.3 V-6, which was the first source of heartburn for me. After about 20,000 miles, the truck would smoke on start. The Chevy dealer knew right away what the problem was–weak valve springs. I took the truck in, and they fixed it under warranty. They also fixed some rust I found on the truck. Then, more heartburn–I couldn't keep front brake pads from wearing out. I tried every type and manufacturer I could, they all would last maybe 10,000 miles. I had the rear brakes adjusted and re-adjusted. Same deal. I could never solve that problem. I had an accident in a parking lot that required suspension arm replacement on the passenger side. I started to get some bad tire wear. Before I could fix that, I was in another accident where an old lady hit me nearly head-on while I was on my way home from work. The driver's side headlight bucket was even with where the center of the front wheel had been, the roof was buckled, the engine block was cracked–and the insurance company still wanted to fix it. I finally was able to convince them that it wasn't in their best interest when I asked the Service Writer at the dealership to crawl under the truck with a string. He held the string at the output of the transmission, I took the other end, pulled the string taut, and held it at the input of the differential, and you could see that the driveshaft was not straight, but more of a gently arced rainbow shape. They totalled the truck. Honestly, I was relieved to get rid of the truck.
But, apparently I hadn't learned quite enough. The replacement to the Blazer was a 1993 GMC S-15 Jimmy SLE 4-door, 4.3L Vortec power–this was the last year for the "square" Blazers and Jimmys, 1994 saw the redesigned, rounded models. At first, it was a great truck. Then, at 20,000 miles, it would smoke when I started it. I've seen this play before (and wondered how, in four years, General Motors couldn't fix the issue with their 4.3L V-6 engines), so I had the dealer fix it under warranty. After that, things seemed good–except again, I would burn through a set of front brake pads in 10,000 miles. I guess GM still hadn't figured that one out, either. Anyway, I drove the truck for the next five years or so with few problems. Then, at about 60,000 miles, trouble hit–big time. I never had issues with starting–the truck had an electric fuel pump. You'd turn the key, wait a few seconds until you heard the pump, then start the truck. It would rarely crank over more than once before starting. Well, it got more and more difficult to start. Took it in, and I was told that the fuel plenum was bad. A new one was $500. Well, it sure beat a car payment (I had recently paid the truck off), so I had it replaced. Then, the next oil change came with a surprise in the form of a bad filter adapter–the gasket split, and I dumped at least 10 quarts of oil on the road between my house and the dealership (5 of those being Mobil 1, since the only place that was open where I could buy oil was the local Mobil station, and they were out of non-synthetic oils). Okay, that got sorted. Two weeks later, the coolant pump shit the bed in magnificent fashion. New pump, all is well. Then, the radiator tank split a seam. Fixed. Last straw? The freeze plugs started seeping–badly–at 70,000 miles. With a $1,500 quote to replace all 12 (including the ones behind the bell housing), I declined and decided that the time was nigh to end this madness.
So, I traded the Jimmy for the Tacoma. And until recently, I haven't looked back. And if I follow the pattern, wouldn't I be due to buy a Nissan? Then again, with the warranties the Koreans are offering, they'll get a stong look from me. I'm as Buy American as they get, but I was burned on not one but two American vehicles (sure, fome the same family–but other members of the family were just as burned by the other two branches of the Big Three–see my story on the K-Car above). Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, and I'll buy a Toyota…or Hyundai…or Kia. And I remember when all of them were the proverbial "cheap rice-burners", even the Toyotas. They've obviously learned something that the domestic auto builders haven't–Ford and GM still only have a 3/36 warranty, when Toyota and Nissan are 6/60 and the Koreans are offering 10/100…
That being said, people often ask me what my dream car would be. Well, if they never wore out and gasoline and maintenance were free, here are my Top Three:
1. 1970 Hemi 'Cuda (with a nod to a 440+6 powered 'Cuda as well)
2. 1969 AMC AMX or Javelin
3. 1964 Jaguar 4.2L XK-E
Alas, the MOPAR of yesterday is long gone, AMC was sacrificed to the Gods of Daimler when Chrysler-Jeep needed money, and Jags, while nice, are maintenance intensive. (sigh) At least I have model kits of all these…
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Tonight marks the 100th post to my little corner of the Interwebs. While I had hoped to do more frequent updates–like, maybe daily–it isn't in the cards. I'm trying to make more frequent posts, really, I am, but this is a bit of work, especially when I have a lot of photos or a lot of research material that needs to be formatted, cleaned up, and posted. I'll stick to updating when I am able, and when I feel like I have something to share that you all would appreciate. I can't compete with any of the daily websites, and I won't try to. I'll just keep throwing out snippets when I can.
Thanks for reading. Be good to one another, and I bid you Peace.