So that’s a convertible version of the Chrysler New Yorker since the LeBaron convertible has the C-body New Yorker features like pop up headlights and a digital dashboard!
I love those hidden headlights and the way the mechanism operated. Also, the digital dash is pretty neat too. My impression as a little kid in the 80s: I thought these cars had an eyes-closed & lips slightly pursed look 😌
In the 2003 movie ‘Cheaper by the Dozen,’ Nora’s boyfriend Hank (played by Ashton Kutcher) is very obsessed with his red LeBaron convertible. When the younger kids all come running towards them when they arrive, Hank yells at them to stop and says “Please do not touch the LeBaron, I just had it detailed!” Then asks the Dad to tell the kids to respect the perimeter around the LeBaron 😂. When Nora and Hank leave, all neighborhood dogs came running after him when the stepped out of the house, then started scratching up the whole car once he got in. We hear him say “Nora, will you please get in the LeBaron? I beg of you!” Then after she gets in, he says “The community canines have completely ruined the LeBaron’s whole paint job” or something like that.
Drove the 1993 LeBaron GTC Convertible all over California back in 1993. Rental of course in beautiful Green paint and tan top/interior. If you're doing Highway 1 in California, gotta pick a convertible!!
I had a love/hate relationship with my 1989 Lebaron "Highline" convertible. Loved the looks, the interior comfort, and the features. It was a head-turning boulevard cruiser. I hated the anemic power with the 2.5L 100hp 4cyl and 3spd automatic, the incredible amount of body flex (first-time convertible owner), and the poor reliability. Anything that was a powered feature was bound to fail early. It was my 3rd K-car derivative, previously having owned a 1990 Plymouth Sundance 5-door and a 1992 Plymouth Acclaim. Both were great cars and I miss them tremendously. Solid and dependable. The Lebaron convertible was definitely more style and luxury, but less substance than the other two. I swore off flashy cars and prioritized function over form ever since. Cars are too expensive and complicated to not prioritize reliability.
If you got a T2 Lebaron coupe with a 5 speed, it was a completely different animal. 180 hp, still a little squishy in handling, but properly quick, like, 0-60 in sub 7 seconds if you shifted right. I had a T1 Lebaron (2.5 turbo with the 3 speed) and that damn transmission was the worst part of that car. 2.5 turbo was a gem of a motor though, so long as you kept a good radiator in it every 5 years, lol.
@@danmccarthy4700 I live in DETROIT. If there’s any city that there’s a mix of old and new cars it’s here and I hardly ever see any of those tin cans you named. especially the accords. Accords and Honda in general has a history of transmission issues. 90’s trucks ? Yes but those are American. Hardly anyone is driving a very old SMALL CAR.
@@briq4409 your not going based off facts Interior materials the body structure and styling. It's luxury. You're going off name of the company which gets you no where.
A shame Chrysler killed this car in early 90s and never brought it back. This is actually one of Chrysler's most historic nameplates. I like the earlier exteriors best but I did like the interior refresh. It shared a lot of interior and mechanical parts with the Dodge Daytona.
Man those sold like hot cakes back then! I remember a guy from work bought two of them! The one that really caught my eyes was the white one with red interior! Boy that one sure looked great!
I traded a 1987 Mustang GT T-Top on a 1989 Lebaron GT - white on white with red interior and the 5 speed stick. Mine had the larger 2.4 liter Turbo with balance shafts. I loved that car. I wish I still had it! It was gorgeous!
Had an '88 LeBaron turbo convertible with an automatic. It was my favorite car! Quick, quiet, with overall good quality. Never gave me a single problem. I'd give up my Hyundai to have another one!
I loved those cars... I'm pen-star faulty. I would love to have that car in a hard top version, I would drive that now. I guess it would be called "old" now. Thank you Motorweek!! I have loved you guys from the start.
Ditch the digital dash and this car is really a gem. This version of the convertible and the coupe were a nice car. I dont know about the reliability, but i think these were one of the nicest looking cars.
I still have one... bought it new in 93. V6 auto. Been a good car. I always said I'd get rid of it when it started having problems. Well, it now has 326,000 miles and has been very good. Just typical maintenance stuff. Not a refined car by any means. But, decent and rather reliable. It's not worth a dime. So, I just keep driving it. Cheap, fun little convertible.
I think they feel that the operation of the dash and the look were confusing! They should have used the one from the New Yorker Landau instead because you don’t have to try to find the oil and voltage gauges in the dash design!
@@4HBirtcher Whats confusing about a big zero for the speedo? Some of these guys remind me of Henry Ford. So afraid of change..If they hated those digital dashes back then, they'd have a heart attack with the dash boards we have now, lol
I've owned so many of these things... finally sold my last one recently. Mitsu 3.0L V6 5 speed so the most reliable one ever made. I miss looking at it but I don't miss owning it, if that makes sense.
I rented a Lebaron convertible in 1995 while on vacation in Ft Lauderdale. It had the V6. The only thing that I didn't like was the rain would leak in around the top of door glass. Apparently it was a common problem. I worked at a Chrysler dealership back then and we were always replacing weatherstrips. My personal car was a 90 Lebaron GT coupe 3.0 with a 5spd. It moved along pretty well. I liked the new dash design that was introduced for the 1990 model year.
They seem to have figured out digital gauges 30 years later. Could you imagine trying to find a replacement when the old digital gauges eventually broke. Great advice from John Davis as always. What a wise man.
My Dad was mighty proud of their brand new two tone Cavalier wagon...may have been one of my biggest childhood disappointments when I heard them say they were getting a new car, and came home with that lump lol
When my parents got the Aries I was just about to get my regular driver's license. I knew whatever they got, I'd be driving it. I had absolutely no cool points so I figured a new convertible would somehow help. A white station wagon with fake plastiwood siding didn't help.
I always wanted one of these cars when I turned 16, unfortunately I never got one. My mom had a similar car called the Dodge 600. I still want one of these cars to this day.
"She wants a car (hey) with a cup holder armrest (ho) She wants a car (hey) that will get her there (ho) She's changing her name (hey) From Kitty to Karen (ho) She's trading her MG (hey) for a white Chrysler LeBaron I want a girl with a short skirt and a long, jacket"
My mom had one of these for 14 years, gave it to my nephew and bought a Sebring convertible that she had for another 14 years until I bought it for my daughter. I can’t see one of these without thinking of her.
The red one looks just Mrs. Wormwood’s LeBaron convertible in ‘Matilda.’ But seeing the top go down and the interior reminds me of the one in ‘Jumanji’ Alan and the kids steal after the owner Mrs. Thomas suffers seizures from a mosquito bite and is taken to the hospital after colliding with the ambulance.
I had a two toned turbo coupe back in 02 with a fist sized rust hole in the lower front fender lol. It was a burgundy/tan 87 or 88, blew a head gasket not long after I bought it.
The 1992-1994 are the ones to get. More structural integrity, and better brakes. These are the ultimate K convertibles. Great looking and fun to drive, while K car easy to fix.
My brother had an ex father in law who had one in a bright teal color. He used it to pick me up from Jr high school one day, and sadly that was the only time I got to ride in a convertible with the top down :(
I remember my Mother renting this car from “Dollar” on our vacation to Miami in 1989, the car had 2000 miles on the odometer, and the trim on the dashboard as well as the stitching around the convertible top was already falling apart.
Good timing! I just saw one just like this yesterday! Paint was a bit faded tho, but in excellent condition. Personally I had an 1989, non-convertible. 2.5L with the 3 spd auto. Slow, but got good gas mileage. I liked the car. Neat looking. Sold it to a friend......and then the block cracked on him. Whoops!
My first car was a 90 model with the Mitsubishi v6 and 4 speed electronically controlled auto. For $300 it was a riot! The transmission was weird with its early electronic controls; instead of having Drive 3 2 1 (or some similar shift pattern) it had Overdrive, Drive and Low. The first two gears did what you'd expect- Overdrive had all 4 gears and Drive cut out the overdrive gear, but Low did something unusual. It wasn't just first gear, it was like a sports mode; it would run every gear to 5500rpm before shifting and would downshift to the next lowest gear as soon as it could, even off throttle! I remember that in drive, if you floored it in first gear and then let off for a moment just as it was about to shift into second before flooring it again, it would (effectively) neutral bomb second gear and chirp the tires! It would also do smokey burnouts if you floored it in reverse and then slammed it into drive- I miss that car.
grandparents had this ; it was really nice considering the price. The radio had AM stereo ! something that remains obscure to this day .... (non conv) it was aerodynamic and had MPG reading .. the most I could get I believe was 35. very close to 55mph
I loved this car when I was a kid. I thought this was the most elegant design in a convertible. Clean. Sleek. Hidden headlights. What else can you ask for?
The convertible is nice, but I agree the coupe looked even better. It had a very sexy shape for a late 80s car. I think the design aged beautifully. The Lebaron convertible was a dime a dozen on the road, but the coupes were a rare sighting.
@@palebeachbum and the only reason the convertibles survive is because they aren't usually winter vehicles and are pampered more...hardtops get thrashed.
@@pl5624 Makes sense. When I bought my 1989 Lebaron convertible in 2006 it was a Florida car with 55k miles. It looked brand-new, though the replacement vinyl top was starting to show age.
I have sat in one of these cars. It was quite comfortable. Did sit low, though. It was much better with the 2.5 liter turbo four (152hp) or the Mitsubishi-built 3.0 liter V6(142hp).
Please post more Convertibles Motorweek videos. Like the Volvo C70 Convertibles or the Chrysler Sebring Convertibles or the Mitsubishi Eclipse Convertibles or the Volkswagen Beetle Convertibles or the Audi A4 Convertibles or the Saab 9-3 Convertibles or the Dodge 400 Convertibles or the BMW 6 Series Convertibles or the Lexus SC430 Convertibles please.
1992 GTC with Mitsubishi 3-liter V6. Bought in 98 with 88k on the odometer for $3k. Great beater car kept it for three years till it needed tires and breaks. Sent it down the road with some HS kid for $1k.
@@MyerShift7 whoa chill out.... but i mean, of course a 40K RAV4 will smoke this 47K K-Car to 60, while being MUCH more fuel efficient, much safer, more reliable, pull a stronger skidpad, seat five, haul luggage, etc. It's OK, we know mopar fanboys are still holding on to the Marchionne dreams that never were. We're here for you. Big hug.
I was only half listening while I was working. At 1:24 John says it is refreshing to see a sporty car without side curtains. I almost twisted my neck to see what was going on. First, I though I was watching a video about a 1988 Chrysler Le Baron and John is talking about a sporty car. Second I never imagined I would ever hear John Davis be happy about a car without a safety feature like Side Curtain Airbags. When I paid more attention, I realized it was 1988 and "sporty" was relative to the time and the term side curtain had another meaning to John before the wide spread installation of airbags. The times sure have changed.
back then, the cars that were converted to...umm...convertibles would have extra bracing added inboard of the rocker panels to prevent sagging or flexing after the top was removed...when these were added on (since the car was designed/engineered as a fixed-roof unibody), they would have to cover them up with something that we would call a side skirt today....john's referring to chrysler engineering that type of reinforcement into the car from the beginning
I knew someone who had a Chrysler lebron thing rode rough and the convertible top was bad in the midwest winters. But due to the lovely Mitsubishi transmission they made non stop for Chrysler and dodge thru the yrs that's what caused the person I know to scrap it once he found out how expensive it was to rebuild a Chrysler transmission. Fun fact Carroll Shelby helped build a lotta turbo models to help Chrysler compete at the time.
Why in 1988 were these guys still looking at radial tires as a safety feature? By this time radial tires had been widely adopted for at least 20 years.
These things aged like milk IMO. Chrysler sold A TON of them, 7 model year production run. Yet they are rare as hen's teeth here in 2022. Convertibles like the E30 BMW, R107 Benz SL, 3rd gen Camaro/Trans Am, C4 Corvette, fox body Mustang, I still see those occasionally on the weekend or at car shows. Can't tell you the last time I saw an 88-95 Lebaron convertible, despite them outselling all those cars by a good margin.
These were everywhere back then. Always thought they were good looking cars but preferred the coupe version. I'm sure the junkyards are littered with them now.
@@corssecurity le barons were also unibody. The front end shake was a result of wheel hop when you dumped the clutch the 80s Chrysler turbo stick shift cars were known for.
Time to show the old TC convertible to which the LeBaron kyped a lot of it's styling from- with the 16-valve Maserati motor & Getrag 5-speed. They never lived up to the Chrysler/Iacocca hype that promised way too much with the TC.
funny how they call the celicas less solid then the LeBaron yet tell me again how many celicas from this era are still on the road compared to the LeBaron? I saw a Toyota Cressida today from this era in the parking lot of the restaurant we went to so proves my point
Still a very attractive car, in my opinion
The hideaway headlights and digital dash were so perfectly 80s.
So that’s a convertible version of the Chrysler New Yorker since the LeBaron convertible has the C-body New Yorker features like pop up headlights and a digital dashboard!
Great to see the Chrysler logo on the front grille
It gleamed so proudly during the braking test 😌
One of the best looking K-cars ever made!
Those last generation LeBaron convertibles were beauties
We rented an 89 maroon LeBaron Turbo Convertible while on Vacation in California in August of 89. We loved it😎
I love those hidden headlights and the way the mechanism operated. Also, the digital dash is pretty neat too.
My impression as a little kid in the 80s:
I thought these cars had an eyes-closed & lips slightly pursed look 😌
In the 2003 movie ‘Cheaper by the Dozen,’ Nora’s boyfriend Hank (played by Ashton Kutcher) is very obsessed with his red LeBaron convertible. When the younger kids all come running towards them when they arrive, Hank yells at them to stop and says “Please do not touch the LeBaron, I just had it detailed!” Then asks the Dad to tell the kids to respect the perimeter around the LeBaron 😂. When Nora and Hank leave, all neighborhood dogs came running after him when the stepped out of the house, then started scratching up the whole car once he got in. We hear him say “Nora, will you please get in the LeBaron? I beg of you!” Then after she gets in, he says “The community canines have completely ruined the LeBaron’s whole paint job” or something like that.
Now I don’t have to watch the move
LMFAO I forgot about this, let me try and find a clip
I remember that part of the movie!
Can you help me find the clip
PLEASE KEEP OFF THE LE BARON!!!!
Drove the 1993 LeBaron GTC Convertible all over California back in 1993. Rental of course in beautiful Green paint and tan top/interior. If you're doing Highway 1 in California, gotta pick a convertible!!
The LeBaron has a super sleek design, that still looks great to this day. One of the most beautiful convertibles ever made!
But what do Jon Voight and George Costanza think of the LeBaron?
lmao😂😂
Missing the wood paneling kit haha
Was looking for this comment
@@mikederucki That was Jon Voight the periodontist’s car, though, that’s why. 😉🤣
@@9Xavier1 lol that’s right, as confirmed by Tim Watley
I had a love/hate relationship with my 1989 Lebaron "Highline" convertible. Loved the looks, the interior comfort, and the features. It was a head-turning boulevard cruiser. I hated the anemic power with the 2.5L 100hp 4cyl and 3spd automatic, the incredible amount of body flex (first-time convertible owner), and the poor reliability. Anything that was a powered feature was bound to fail early. It was my 3rd K-car derivative, previously having owned a 1990 Plymouth Sundance 5-door and a 1992 Plymouth Acclaim. Both were great cars and I miss them tremendously. Solid and dependable. The Lebaron convertible was definitely more style and luxury, but less substance than the other two. I swore off flashy cars and prioritized function over form ever since. Cars are too expensive and complicated to not prioritize reliability.
If you got a T2 Lebaron coupe with a 5 speed, it was a completely different animal. 180 hp, still a little squishy in handling, but properly quick, like, 0-60 in sub 7 seconds if you shifted right.
I had a T1 Lebaron (2.5 turbo with the 3 speed) and that damn transmission was the worst part of that car. 2.5 turbo was a gem of a motor though, so long as you kept a good radiator in it every 5 years, lol.
I love Chrysler Lebaron 88, is my favorite
One of those cars you used to see all over the place and now there's hardly any left.
Thays all lad cars. Lol you an hardly find a boat load of 1999 anything. People don't want to drive cars that old.
@@Natethegreat200c I still see a shit-ton of 1990s Accords, Corollas, and Camrys. 🤷♂
@@danmccarthy4700 I live in DETROIT. If there’s any city that there’s a mix of old and new cars it’s here and I hardly ever see any of those tin cans you named. especially the accords. Accords and Honda in general has a history of transmission issues. 90’s trucks ? Yes but those are American. Hardly anyone is driving a very old SMALL CAR.
@@danmccarthy4700 Not sure where your at but many 90's vehicles both domestic and foreign I barely see anymore
Those 90s cars didn't have turbos.
I love when motorweek describes a Chrysler LeBaron convertible as a luxury car.
Because it was pretty luxurious for it time!
@@anibalbabilonia1867 a Cadillac of the time. Luxury. A Mercedes’ Benz of the time. Luxury. A 4 cylinder K car? No. Not luxury.
@@briq4409 your not going based off facts Interior materials the body structure and styling. It's luxury. You're going off name of the company which gets you no where.
Very very sleek design for mid-80s car. Still good looking
The design definitely aged well
I heard Jon Voight had one of these
A shame Chrysler killed this car in early 90s and never brought it back. This is actually one of Chrysler's most historic nameplates. I like the earlier exteriors best but I did like the interior refresh. It shared a lot of interior and mechanical parts with the Dodge Daytona.
Man those sold like hot cakes back then! I remember a guy from work bought two of them! The one that really caught my eyes was the white one with red interior! Boy that one sure looked great!
I want a red Lebaron convertible so badly, my grandmother had one when I was young and I want to preserve her memory by having one just like hers
I traded a 1987 Mustang GT T-Top on a 1989 Lebaron GT - white on white with red interior and the 5 speed stick. Mine had the larger 2.4 liter Turbo with balance shafts. I loved that car. I wish I still had it! It was gorgeous!
The Turbo GT white on red is probably the best looking of all the LeBarons and (in my opinion) one of the best looking cars of all time.
Can’t believe the Mustang GT convertible was cheaper. Would be a no brainer which one to get.
Ford clearly spent all the money under the hood of these old Fox Bodies... The interior was plastic trash and miles behind even the LeBaron.
@@TakuroSpirit77 The drivetrain is the most important thing to me. :)
Lol
ice ice baby
I proclaim this, the Lebaron of George!
Had an '88 LeBaron turbo convertible with an automatic. It was my favorite car! Quick, quiet, with overall good quality. Never gave me a single problem. I'd give up my Hyundai to have another one!
I loved this generation of Chrysler lebaron and hatchbacks and Daytonas . My first time being in a turbocharged car
I loved those cars... I'm pen-star faulty. I would love to have that car in a hard top version, I would drive that now. I guess it would be called "old" now. Thank you Motorweek!! I have loved you guys from the start.
Ditch the digital dash and this car is really a gem. This version of the convertible and the coupe were a nice car. I dont know about the reliability, but i think these were one of the nicest looking cars.
I still have one... bought it new in 93. V6 auto. Been a good car. I always said I'd get rid of it when it started having problems. Well, it now has 326,000 miles and has been very good. Just typical maintenance stuff. Not a refined car by any means. But, decent and rather reliable. It's not worth a dime. So, I just keep driving it. Cheap, fun little convertible.
I just love those Gran Detroit Farm & Country Turbos with the fake wood paneling.
What a great review of such a nice designed car from the 90's.
Thanks for the share and take care.
I know it's 1988... but how was this digital dash design confusing? To me, it looks pretty clean for this time period's digital clusters
I think they feel that the operation of the dash and the look were confusing! They should have used the one from the New Yorker Landau instead because you don’t have to try to find the oil and voltage gauges in the dash design!
@@4HBirtcher Whats confusing about a big zero for the speedo? Some of these guys remind me of Henry Ford. So afraid of change..If they hated those digital dashes back then, they'd have a heart attack with the dash boards we have now, lol
I've owned so many of these things... finally sold my last one recently. Mitsu 3.0L V6 5 speed so the most reliable one ever made. I miss looking at it but I don't miss owning it, if that makes sense.
I had a love/hate relationship with my 90 GT coupe 3.0 5spd. After seven years I traded in in for a Nissan Maxima.
I had a 1989 LeBaron convertible with the turbo. I loved that car! I didn't know it had only 146 hp, since it seemed quite fast to me.
yours was a 1989, it might've been the 2.5L turbo, like mine is. 155hp/180lb.ft stock
I used to own a 1987 coupe. That was the car that taught me never to loan anyone my car, because the guy I loaned it to buggered up my clutch.
The first time I ever barrowed my buddies car is win I learned not to ever lone my car to anyone.....
Similar thing happened to me. Lesson learned the hard way.
I immediately stopped my buddy from practicing manual on my 89 lebaron turbo II the 3rd time he stalled. It was a wrap after that
5:18 I always thought that little car icon looked like a Testarossa 😂
I have seen one of these in flawless condition on the street not far from me. Good god it's so cool.
I rented a Lebaron convertible in 1995 while on vacation in Ft Lauderdale. It had the V6. The only thing that I didn't like was the rain would leak in around the top of door glass. Apparently it was a common problem. I worked at a Chrysler dealership back then and we were always replacing weatherstrips. My personal car was a 90 Lebaron GT coupe 3.0 with a 5spd. It moved along pretty well. I liked the new dash design that was introduced for the 1990 model year.
5:06 John: WE RECOMMEND THAT YOU’D STICK WITH THIS SUPERIOR AND STANDARD ANALOG UNIT! LOL
They seem to have figured out digital gauges 30 years later. Could you imagine trying to find a replacement when the old digital gauges eventually broke.
Great advice from John Davis as always. What a wise man.
Ridiculous
I remember those things being everywhere!
I had a 1992 V6 I had it until I bought a 2002 Sebring limited convertible and let me tell you what a huge difference but loved both
So nice of Jon Voight to lend his car to the guys for this review
When my parents were looking for a new car I campaigned heavily for one. We ended up with an Aries-K station wagon.
Your parents had great taste 🤣
😂
My Dad was mighty proud of their brand new two tone Cavalier wagon...may have been one of my biggest childhood disappointments when I heard them say they were getting a new car, and came home with that lump lol
When my parents got the Aries I was just about to get my regular driver's license. I knew whatever they got, I'd be driving it. I had absolutely no cool points so I figured a new convertible would somehow help. A white station wagon with fake plastiwood siding didn't help.
@@christopherconard2831 lol
I always wanted one of these cars when I turned 16, unfortunately I never got one. My mom had a similar car called the Dodge 600. I still want one of these cars to this day.
"She wants a car (hey) with a cup holder armrest (ho)
She wants a car (hey) that will get her there (ho)
She's changing her name (hey)
From Kitty to Karen (ho)
She's trading her MG (hey) for a white Chrysler LeBaron
I want a girl with a short skirt and a long, jacket"
My mom had one of these for 14 years, gave it to my nephew and bought a Sebring convertible that she had for another 14 years until I bought it for my daughter. I can’t see one of these without thinking of her.
Same with my mom. 3 of these and like 5 sebrings.
The red one looks just Mrs. Wormwood’s LeBaron convertible in ‘Matilda.’ But seeing the top go down and the interior reminds me of the one in ‘Jumanji’ Alan and the kids steal after the owner Mrs. Thomas suffers seizures from a mosquito bite and is taken to the hospital after colliding with the ambulance.
The LeBaron is the grandaddy of the Chrysler 200 Convertible, last made in 2017
Loved this car as a child, but never got to drive one.
Wow the exterior reminds me of my 88 buick reatta a lot
My neighbors had a silver turbo coupe. My kid brain thought it was the coolest thing ever...next to my parent's two tone Cavalier wagon 🤣
I had a two toned turbo coupe back in 02 with a fist sized rust hole in the lower front fender lol. It was a burgundy/tan 87 or 88, blew a head gasket not long after I bought it.
@@chynacash3138 ooof definitely past it's prime lol
In junior high I used to steal my mom's red and white Chrysler LeBaron and drive all my friends to school lmao.. this just brought me back
The 1992-1994 are the ones to get. More structural integrity, and better brakes. These are the ultimate K convertibles. Great looking and fun to drive, while K car easy to fix.
My brother had an ex father in law who had one in a bright teal color. He used it to pick me up from Jr high school one day, and sadly that was the only time I got to ride in a convertible with the top down :(
I'd only buy one if it was owned originally by Jon Voight.
I remember my Mother renting this car from “Dollar” on our vacation to Miami in 1989, the car had 2000 miles on the odometer, and the trim on the dashboard as well as the stitching around the convertible top was already falling apart.
Good timing! I just saw one just like this yesterday! Paint was a bit faded tho, but in excellent condition. Personally I had an 1989, non-convertible. 2.5L with the 3 spd auto. Slow, but got good gas mileage. I liked the car. Neat looking. Sold it to a friend......and then the block cracked on him. Whoops!
My first car was a 90 model with the Mitsubishi v6 and 4 speed electronically controlled auto. For $300 it was a riot! The transmission was weird with its early electronic controls; instead of having Drive 3 2 1 (or some similar shift pattern) it had Overdrive, Drive and Low. The first two gears did what you'd expect- Overdrive had all 4 gears and Drive cut out the overdrive gear, but Low did something unusual. It wasn't just first gear, it was like a sports mode; it would run every gear to 5500rpm before shifting and would downshift to the next lowest gear as soon as it could, even off throttle! I remember that in drive, if you floored it in first gear and then let off for a moment just as it was about to shift into second before flooring it again, it would (effectively) neutral bomb second gear and chirp the tires! It would also do smokey burnouts if you floored it in reverse and then slammed it into drive- I miss that car.
I was alive when this aired. I feel old.
grandparents had this ; it was really nice considering the price. The radio had AM stereo ! something that remains obscure to this day .... (non conv) it was aerodynamic and had MPG reading .. the most I could get I believe was 35. very close to 55mph
I loved this car when I was a kid. I thought this was the most elegant design in a convertible. Clean. Sleek. Hidden headlights. What else can you ask for?
I’m only here for the Jon Voight comments.
Warm weather is here, while wearing a winter coat.
John was hiding his fast growing waistline during these years.
To heck with the drop top...the coupe is the style leader..the roof curve is radical
The convertible is nice, but I agree the coupe looked even better. It had a very sexy shape for a late 80s car. I think the design aged beautifully. The Lebaron convertible was a dime a dozen on the road, but the coupes were a rare sighting.
@@palebeachbum and the only reason the convertibles survive is because they aren't usually winter vehicles and are pampered more...hardtops get thrashed.
@@pl5624 Makes sense. When I bought my 1989 Lebaron convertible in 2006 it was a Florida car with 55k miles. It looked brand-new, though the replacement vinyl top was starting to show age.
I have sat in one of these cars. It was quite comfortable. Did sit low, though. It was much better with the 2.5 liter turbo four (152hp) or the Mitsubishi-built 3.0 liter V6(142hp).
If "The Office" was set in 1995, you just know Michael Scott would be driving this
Very nice looking cars, they still look good even today.
My mom used to own a 1992 Chrysler LE BARON coupe with the V6. It was a good road trip car.
Virtually none of these cars are around today.
"I only see one Lebaron Freddy. Where's your Lebaron? It's because they love me more."
Please post more Convertibles Motorweek videos. Like the Volvo C70 Convertibles or the Chrysler Sebring Convertibles or the Mitsubishi Eclipse Convertibles or the Volkswagen Beetle Convertibles or the Audi A4 Convertibles or the Saab 9-3 Convertibles or the Dodge 400 Convertibles or the BMW 6 Series Convertibles or the Lexus SC430 Convertibles please.
I really wanted this car when I was 12 years old
1992 GTC with Mitsubishi 3-liter V6. Bought in 98 with 88k on the odometer for $3k. Great beater car kept it for three years till it needed tires and breaks. Sent it down the road with some HS kid for $1k.
My cousin that died had one of these bback in the day loved it
Just driving around is Jon Voight's car
A $47,000 (in 2022) K-Car. 😮
Considering the average new car price is about $42k today and quickly going up, that's about right. 💯
@@MyerShift7 whoa chill out.... but i mean, of course a 40K RAV4 will smoke this 47K K-Car to 60, while being MUCH more fuel efficient, much safer, more reliable, pull a stronger skidpad, seat five, haul luggage, etc.
It's OK, we know mopar fanboys are still holding on to the Marchionne dreams that never were. We're here for you. Big hug.
Thank you Joe bidet.
@@joec1774 Yeah,what about a 1988 Toyota to be fair ?
The second greatest car ever made, after the Chrysler TC by Maserati
Don't forget the yugo
You've forgotten the pinto
You forgot Lada.
@@thewiseguy3529 I have a Pinto lol
quite a nice-looking car. I actually like the digital dashboard
Loved the old PEPSI can.😎👍
My 8th Grade Spanish teacher actually had a red LeBaron convertible just like the one tested here.
Chrysler é sensacional 👍👍
Esse carro é muito lindo 😍😍👍
Wheres your Le Baron Freddy? Ha ha
I was only half listening while I was working. At 1:24 John says it is refreshing to see a sporty car without side curtains. I almost twisted my neck to see what was going on. First, I though I was watching a video about a 1988 Chrysler Le Baron and John is talking about a sporty car. Second I never imagined I would ever hear John Davis be happy about a car without a safety feature like Side Curtain Airbags.
When I paid more attention, I realized it was 1988 and "sporty" was relative to the time and the term side curtain had another meaning to John before the wide spread installation of airbags.
The times sure have changed.
don’t think he’s talking about side curtain airbags, pretty sure that didn’t exist until at least 2001
He was talking about the plastic add on bodywork, not the airbags.
back then, the cars that were converted to...umm...convertibles would have extra bracing added inboard of the rocker panels to prevent sagging or flexing after the top was removed...when these were added on (since the car was designed/engineered as a fixed-roof unibody), they would have to cover them up with something that we would call a side skirt today....john's referring to chrysler engineering that type of reinforcement into the car from the beginning
@@J.Gainez Side air bags were available in the mid 1990s on some cars.
Jon Voight used to own one…not the actor, the periodontist..
As a kid back then I liked these. They looked good for an American car.
Where did rubber shift boots go? I like them way better than leather ones, it looks so clean
I knew someone who had a Chrysler lebron thing rode rough and the convertible top was bad in the midwest winters. But due to the lovely Mitsubishi transmission they made non stop for Chrysler and dodge thru the yrs that's what caused the person I know to scrap it once he found out how expensive it was to rebuild a Chrysler transmission. Fun fact Carroll Shelby helped build a lotta turbo models to help Chrysler compete at the time.
I was actually wondering just a few days ago when we might see a review of this model
Why in 1988 were these guys still looking at radial tires as a safety feature? By this time radial tires had been widely adopted for at least 20 years.
Yeah I don't even think bias ply tires were even still around in 1988
"Where's your Le Baron, Freddy?" -Tom Green
I VAGUELY remember that my aunt had one like this!
These things aged like milk IMO. Chrysler sold A TON of them, 7 model year production run. Yet they are rare as hen's teeth here in 2022. Convertibles like the E30 BMW, R107 Benz SL, 3rd gen Camaro/Trans Am, C4 Corvette, fox body Mustang, I still see those occasionally on the weekend or at car shows. Can't tell you the last time I saw an 88-95 Lebaron convertible, despite them outselling all those cars by a good margin.
They rust out, people dont maintain em, normal cheap car stuff. Mine was rock solid for 12 years until it got hit.
These were everywhere back then. Always thought they were good looking cars but preferred the coupe version. I'm sure the junkyards are littered with them now.
They are past that stage even. These things got used up hard.
Beautiful Car Convertible .
How can you have "solid feel" and "front end shake" at the same time?
Front end shake I believe it's acceleration it's typical in FWD vehicles. But one it's cruising it's a solid feel.
Solid feel as it is built on a frame. Front end sake is the front clip. Toyota, and Mustang don't have a frame, unibody design
@@corssecurity le barons were also unibody. The front end shake was a result of wheel hop when you dumped the clutch the 80s Chrysler turbo stick shift cars were known for.
@BG Hoody I literally thought the exact same thing. I’m assuming they prob meant wheel hop and torque steer when accelerating hard
Time to show the old TC convertible to which the LeBaron kyped a lot of it's styling from- with the 16-valve Maserati motor & Getrag 5-speed. They never lived up to the Chrysler/Iacocca hype that promised way too much with the TC.
funny how they call the celicas less solid then the LeBaron yet tell me again how many celicas from this era are still on the road compared to the LeBaron? I saw a Toyota Cressida today from this era in the parking lot of the restaurant we went to so proves my point
Was this John Voight's LeBaron perchance?
Tom Green prefers these in blue
Great work
Where your Lebaron Freddy?
My mother had a red turbo with the 3 speed automatic. It was roomy enough for a family of 4.