Oaktree
Super Member
Subarus that vintage were tough cars.
ISTR them as being terrible rustbuckets, even worse than typical Japanese cars of that era. And the engines always sounded like they were about ready to throw a rod once they hit 50k...you could hear one coming a mile away. Quirky cars too...odd controls, etc. In the mid-80s my GF had one, I remember doing a brake job on it. Set the emergency brake, jacked it up...couldn't get the &^%$ front calipers off to save my life. Did a little investigation, discovered the e-brake went to the FRONT wheels on them! :mur:
I don't recall Suburu really getting their act together until the mid-late 90s.
A guy on youtube was talking about why GM is closing plants. He seemed to suggest that old GMs were better and lasted longer. I remember, here in Canada, pretty much any five year old vehicle was on it's way to rusting out.
Funny, I seem to recall 70s-80s GMs standing up to rust better than most makes (with some exceptions, like the Vega which would rust out in the Sahara). Japanese cars rusted like a brillo pad, as did Dodge trucks. Ford, VW & Chrysler were somewhere in the middle.
Various vehicles had their own problems and peculiarities back then, but compared to now, they were so simple and you wonder how hard it would have been to repair them. Like various CHOKE issues whether it was on a VW bug or a Ford Custom 500!
Carburetor problems in general were a PITA. Chokes were finicky to set up since you only got one chance before the car warmed up, but once you got it right they worked OK.
Yeah, vintage cars were easier to work on, which was a good thing because they needed working on way more than today's vehicles.
One thing that was a bit of a revelation when I bought an antique car a few years ago was how much brakes have improved over the years. I'd really gotten spoiled by discs!! You've really got to plan ahead when you need to stop in something with 4 wheel drum brakes!!