Real Road Test: Volvo 122 Amazon estate or station wagon

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  • Опубліковано 16 лип 2024
  • EDIT - On the day I posted this video, Irv Gordon passed away. He owned a P1800 with similar mechanicals that had clocked up over four million miles! You're definitely due a rest now Irv. RIP.
    A pleasing drive in a Volvo 122 Amazon, with the B20 engine - not original fitment.
    HubNut Calendars, T-shirts, mugs and stickers available at www.hubnut.org right now!
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 502

  • @AtomicPenguin3
    @AtomicPenguin3 5 років тому +17

    i have a 122s four door and i am 19. all my mates take the mick but i love it

  • @sj122s
    @sj122s 5 років тому +39

    This car is a car that can be repaired by the owner... It doesn't have to be taken to the garage to be repaired. A person with average mechanical skills can repair this car. The electrical system consist of points, plugs, cap rotor.. fuel system is carbs, and a fuel pump mounted on side of engine... Everything is accessible... no computer crap... I've restored 2 Amazon 122"s... I think this car was the best car that Volvo ever made. The 1800 is sporty in appearance, however getting in and out of them is hard on an old man's body (like mine) The 544 was very nice also. I still think the 122 was the best of all... The new cars that Volvo produces doesn't do a thing for me... All cars made today look the same... Thank you for posting this video!

    • @davidmg1925
      @davidmg1925 5 років тому +3

      I complete agree with all this.
      I would have a 144 now or 145 .
      I saw a beautiful bronze 145 when i was looking or my first car. Fuel injected and over drive, id have loved that but couldnt afford it.

    • @design.hessen5238
      @design.hessen5238 4 роки тому +2

      Well i only really got interested in old cars because of the heritage styling of my Volvo C30. In some way, modern Volvos can spark the joy for old cars. But being born in Germany in the 90's there weren't a lot of great/ exciting cars in my childhood to spark interest. 😀

  • @danielebbeling4056
    @danielebbeling4056 5 років тому +13

    My first car was a 1970 142-S standard B-20
    Dual SU carbs.
    Set for rally racing.
    I truly miss that car.
    WE drove together as a single entity !

    • @francischurch4460
      @francischurch4460 4 роки тому

      Mine was a 71 144S. I miss that car. Sadly mine had been converted to a single Stromberg.

  • @jurivlk5433
    @jurivlk5433 5 років тому +15

    One of the best cars ever made!

  • @dlittlester
    @dlittlester 5 років тому +6

    I had a 1966 122s too. It was a four door sedan with a BW35 automatic transmission. Took its time to speed up, but it was the most reliable car I ever had. It had two SU HS6 carbs if I remember correctly. My girlfriend and her son were involved in an accident with it and it saved their lives. I had it repaired and it lived a good long life after that.

  • @antonioercolino6087
    @antonioercolino6087 5 років тому +6

    Being the owner of an Amazon, I really don't get tired of watching this video. Thanks Ian'.

  • @matthewbrown2037
    @matthewbrown2037 5 років тому +12

    Although the PV144 was a great car and gave people an idea of how good Swedish cars could be, Volvo, like Saab, were, i think, still seen a bit of an oddity. However, the Amazon, together with the P1800, really cemented Volvo's reputation for building safe, sturdy and reliable cars. You only have to look at how many are still out there to realize how well built they were and how bulletproof their engines were. Also they're one of those rare classic cars that can still be used every day, and there aren't many cars of this vintage you can say that about.

  • @jsc1227
    @jsc1227 5 років тому +2

    I had four or five of these through the last 30 years , always got me where I needed to go, hard to find parts now, it was easy in the old days , lots of character

  • @philipmartensson9342
    @philipmartensson9342 5 років тому +4

    My grandfather's first car was a Volvo Amazon Estate Sport. He bought it new in 1961, when came home from UN peacekeeping service in Congo. Ever since then he has always had Volvo cars.

  • @gryfandjane
    @gryfandjane 5 років тому +13

    Delightful! Old Volvos were a part of my childhood. Dad bought a new PV544 in 1959 when I was three years old. We had it for several years, and I remember it well. Then an uncle had a 122 (as Amazons were called in the US). Years later we had a ‘76 245DL wagon. So I remember those cars fondly, and it was nice to ride along with you in the Estate. Cheers!

    • @1100HondaCB
      @1100HondaCB 5 років тому +2

      I love these old Volvos. My parents had Volvos for years and Mum is a real Volvo fan as am I. Dad bought the family's first Volvo 345DL back in 1989 and since then, my late father swore by them and Mum would love another Volvo. I own a classic Volvo and also swear by Volvo. I wouldn't have any other car.

  • @antonioercolino6087
    @antonioercolino6087 5 років тому +7

    I was well pleased when you said you were posting this vid on the Volvo Amazon estate when we spoke at the NEC on Sunday . As the proud owner of a 1969 Volvo Amazon 2 door saloon with overdrive action - I really can't think of many classic cars that ticks all the boxes for me as my trusty Amazon. Now going to order my Hub Nut sticker.......

  • @1100HondaCB
    @1100HondaCB 5 років тому +7

    My Volvo 345DL although it has a Renault Cleon fonte 1397cc engine, it gets up to operating temperature very quickly. The heater is so efficient. I drove it 350 miles one day and still felt refreshed after the journey. I have been doing some work on my old Volvo and even though it is 35 years old, still feels as tight as a drum. Even the screws came off without being sheered. I just love Volvo's attention to ergonomics and engineering. As for the seats, they are so comfortable. Even my ex girlfriend even said it was the most comfortable car she has ever been in.

    • @marklaidlay6842
      @marklaidlay6842 4 роки тому

      How would you feel after a long drive? You know, 600-700 miles in a day?

  • @ginggur17
    @ginggur17 5 років тому +18

    Not heard a reverse growl like that for a long long time.

    • @HubNut
      @HubNut  5 років тому +8

      Lovely wasn't it? No way I could edit that out.

    • @ginggur17
      @ginggur17 5 років тому +4

      It was perfect.

  • @robertp.wainman4094
    @robertp.wainman4094 3 місяці тому +1

    My cousin had one of the first sold in the UK - he loved it and went on to own numerous Volvo estates!

  • @rich_edwards79
    @rich_edwards79 5 років тому +6

    Yay, good to see a Volvo on the channel!
    As I've mentioned before, I own a 1982 (Y-reg) 244 DL and going by this video they are very similar cars in a lot of ways (aside from styling, which is a matter of taste - I've always liked boxy 70s and 80s styling). It really is a very easy, forgiving car to drive and I much prefer the floaty suspension to the harsh, 'sporty' ride of modern stuff (thanks for that BMW!)
    The visibility is fantastic (important on such a big car) and the redblock engines pretty much unkillable. Being designed primarily for use in cold countries, the heater is indeed capable of browning toast (at least, until the fan breaks and you have to dismantle the entire dash to change it out - a whole weekend job and one of the very few downsides to this car - there's a saying in 240 circles that Volvo started with the heater / fan and then built the car around it!)
    Wonderful old cars that hold fond memories for me (my mum's big 740, and the lines of 240s and 740s on the motorway with their DRLs on, in the days when that was a real novelty and USP). The P6 aside, very few British products of that era compare to a Volvo for build quality, reliability, practicality and safety. Amazons are fetching silly money now but a good 240 can still be had for £1500-£2k and a slightly tatty one like mine for even less (paid £500 to rescue her from the scrap man who was preparing to part her out).

  • @jbz2079
    @jbz2079 5 років тому +3

    They really were solid well engineered cars, nothing Ford or BMC made could touch them for either quality or reliability.
    They were fairly rust resistant but once it got hold they like everything else got ruined.
    Engines were simple pushrod motors, but the front suspension was coil spring and wishbone.
    A friend had one for many years and it had been his everyday car, he looked after it and it responded by clocking up an
    amazing milage and still managed to remain reliable.

  • @timmorris245
    @timmorris245 5 років тому +2

    High school mate had one back in the 70s and I always admired the style and engineering. It was everything a car should be with incredible dependability.

  • @toothytube
    @toothytube 3 роки тому

    The entire series of Volvo 122 "Amazons" were fantastic cars. They were safe, reliable, long lived, easy to work on, fairly economical, and they performed and handled quite well for a European car of that era. I did a total ground up resto-mod of a two tone red & white 67 122S amazon coupe for my eldest daughters first car back in the late 90's. She loved it so much that she kept it to adulthood and planned on keeping it forever. Unfortunately, her ex-husband fell asleep at the wheel on the way home from work and totaled it, but "fortunately" I had equipped it with a full racing harness so he was not seriously injured. The specialty cars, trucks, off road vehicles, motorcycles, boats, and RV''s that I owned numbered somewhere well into the hundreds, but I always had an appreciation for the old Volvos. Possibly due to the fact that in my youth I had traded my nice solid 544 coupe for a stunningly beautiful Arbor Green Poly 1961 Chevy Impala SS convertible that was the love of my life.

  • @janhanchenmichelsen2627
    @janhanchenmichelsen2627 5 років тому +2

    Nice! A very, very usable vehicle. Safe, reliable, easy to work on and stylish in a restrained, Swedish way. Used to see these cars all over the place and the Amazon was a typical first car for many young people 30-35 years ago. Then, suddenly, good surviving cars became quite rare and the enthusiasts came in. An Amazon can be used as an everyday car, but these cars do rust a bit (they are old now) and engines with dual Strombergs will sooner or later make you swear.

  • @geraldmellon740
    @geraldmellon740 5 років тому +3

    Aw what a review Brilliant Ian just keep it up showing us these gems when you can!!!

  • @colsparky651
    @colsparky651 5 років тому +2

    Love all these classics and such a down to earth person explaining all about them . Thankyou

  • @Nikki_Holland
    @Nikki_Holland 5 років тому

    What a lovely old car and in great condition too for its age. Thanks for sharing your drive Ian

  • @derekscorner5287
    @derekscorner5287 5 років тому +1

    Took me back to 1977 my apprenticeship days when I used to get a lift from a work colleague in his Volvo 122 estate... He had an eight-track tape deck... Thanks for jogging my memory...

  • @briancornish1296
    @briancornish1296 3 роки тому

    My late father Harry Cornish had the same wagon and year 1966 (in the color beige). Of all the vehicles he owned (which were many) this model was his favorite...( He had his first speeding ticket in it. Lol) Thanks for the ride down memory lane! Cheers!🇬🇧👍🇺🇸

  • @goatuscrow4135
    @goatuscrow4135 4 роки тому +1

    Your videos are a flat joy to watch, thanks for posting them.

  • @antonyhowell6189
    @antonyhowell6189 5 років тому +1

    Hi great car to drive , good to work on simple layout. Nice to see one in action again. Thanks for the trip down memory lane.👍

  • @stephenhodges2735
    @stephenhodges2735 5 років тому +1

    My family bought a 122 in 1966... Drove round Europe with the whole family, camping...happy memories. It lasted well, in Jamaica, despite few parts being available

  • @dunc1958
    @dunc1958 5 років тому +3

    remote brake servo similar to the ones fitted to the Rover p6. The Laycock overdrive units fitted to many British cars of that time had an ignition interruption device which operated when the overdrive switch was switched on/off (quite often a gear knob mounted switch) they would operate in 3rd and 4th gears thereby giving SIX gears! I'll now have go and have a sit down.

  • @raspucin70
    @raspucin70 5 років тому

    Thank you for the different camera angle! Spot on and much appreciated by us weirdos who love to see the whole operation. And the view of the road is a delicious bonus!

  •  5 років тому +1

    They were so simple to work on.
    This makes me want to look for one to buy.
    They were great fun in the Canadian winters here in Canada.

  • @RichieRouge206
    @RichieRouge206 5 років тому +1

    Being a huge Volvo fan, loved this video. Never been in an Amazon but it was fascinating to experience the lovely sounds and relaxed nature of it. Can see where modern Volvos got their heritage

  • @sefikempowermentcoachvilla7843
    @sefikempowermentcoachvilla7843 5 років тому

    One of the best test drives Ian loved it ... seemed like you loved it also !

  • @clinkerboats
    @clinkerboats 5 років тому +2

    Fond memories of this type of Volvo. Parents had a 1963 121 with B18 from about 1969 to 1974 took us and tons of luggage on many, many trips, always with a roof-rack fully loaded. Dad only gave it up because of poor fuel economy at the time of the 1970s fuel crisis.

  • @alexzujovich5826
    @alexzujovich5826 5 років тому +2

    Thank you for sharing the tour! Enjoyable to hear the reverse gear in action. You should have done a couple of laps in the roundabout. I have the same model in left hand drive with desert sand color and brown saddle interior now in the garage getting the hydraulic clutch put in. A 1965 wagon with over 400,000 miles on the chassis. Dad bought it new. It took me through college. We Yanks had a saying for the 122S series, "Old Volvos never die. They move to Santa Cruz."

  • @chrispenn715
    @chrispenn715 5 років тому +1

    I thought I was watching a What Car video when you sat in the back - was waiting for you to do the banana test! Another nice old car

  • @legambaz
    @legambaz 4 роки тому

    This car is super cool and it's so well kept. Big thumbs up to the owner. So glad you made this video too Ian.

  • @cannedcatfood377
    @cannedcatfood377 5 років тому +1

    This one I had to see. When I was boy my Aunt had the sedan version she bought new in 1963 (in Sweden). I loved to ride around Seattle in it with her. This brought back some great memories. If I didn't find such a great deal on the scrap MGB's, that is what I would have looked for. Thanks Ian!

  • @Phil-1969
    @Phil-1969 5 років тому

    When I was young I was obsessed with wipers , and the different types , on vehicles, I think I still am when you talk about them

  • @andysalter4473
    @andysalter4473 5 років тому

    A friend of the family had one of these back in the 70's and changed it for an Escort Mk1 estate. Never got to go in the Amazon, but the video made up for that. Also a steamed up window added to the 70's experience. Thanks Ian another good choice of car!

  • @saxonrains
    @saxonrains 5 років тому +1

    Best camera angle you have ever done.

  • @tonycox5625
    @tonycox5625 5 років тому

    Lovely car.Ive always fancied one of these, either the estate or 123 Gt . Another great video Ian!

  • @bergolli1
    @bergolli1 6 місяців тому

    Hello HubNut,
    thank you for this Volvo video.
    I had two of those. At first a V70 Estate (5 cyl. 2,5 ltr. 144 hp, fwd) and after that a 240 Estate (4 cyl. 2,3 ltr. 116 hp, rwd). Two very different cars, but both very fun to drive, very solid vehicles.
    The Amazon sounds amazing, just like my 240.
    Greets from Germany and go on

  • @S8250503
    @S8250503 5 років тому

    My Dad had one of these for 17 years. He bought it when I was 2 years old. When I passed my test at 17 years of age I had the exhaust manifold glowing cherry red giving my friends a lift to the Gordon Arms in Peterborough. As a kid we drove from Peterborough to Butlins in Minehead with my three sisters in the back seat and me in the back with the luggage. Thought about buying one but even a barn find crate costs a fortune.

  • @davidohanesian5351
    @davidohanesian5351 5 років тому +2

    I had 1966 122S. Same color loved the baa wop exhaust Simple but safe. Reliable!!

  • @KnudErikMadsen
    @KnudErikMadsen 5 років тому

    Very nice review of the car of my childhood. Also very nice to be able to see what is going on both inside and outside the car while you drive it:-)

    • @HubNut
      @HubNut  5 років тому

      Now all I need to do is sort out the bloody camera shake...

  • @WWarped1
    @WWarped1 5 років тому +2

    Volvo 122 is a work of art, first car I got to drive as a kid. The car was my grandfathers. Maybe find an older PV444/544 for a spin, stunning cars. Or a newer 140 series. Utilitarian beauty.

  • @ifga16
    @ifga16 5 років тому +1

    The Amazon is a great little car. I never had a chance to have one. My Volvos were a 1959 544, 1973 145, 1986 745GLE, 1988 745GLE, 1989 744GLE twin cam, 1979 242, 1991 244 and a 1995 945. I still have the 89 740, 91 244 and the 95 940. The others succumbed to the Midwest Rust Monster. Most achieved more than 200,000 miles. The 86 745 had 320K. I just came off of a 1000 mile trip in the 945 which is at 265K miles. It cruises, easily, at 70 mph+. Thanks for the test drive of a classic Brick.

  • @slowerthansound
    @slowerthansound 5 років тому +1

    I had a 1960 122 in the 80's, the choke would slide in by itself and the right hand indicator had to
    be held on, the drivers window could be pushed down by hand, which was a bonus because the
    drivers door lock didn't work. Best heater ever and no break downs. Great car!

  • @tw2210
    @tw2210 5 років тому

    Great video. Thanks Ian.

  • @richardcarels2592
    @richardcarels2592 5 років тому +2

    Absolutely great and lovely cars! I enjoy mine very much, and have done so for the past 14 years. Never want another car!

  • @craigmclean8260
    @craigmclean8260 5 років тому

    Another great road test! When I was young, I recall a TV ad for the Volvo 122 (mid-'60s vintage), boasting of an average lifespan of 11 years for Volvos...later, when I lived in Australia in the mid-1970s, I read that the lifespan had jumped to more like 17 years for the Volvos (by then, of course, the 240 and 260-series)...

  • @Garffey
    @Garffey 5 років тому +11

    If you want an estate buy a Volvo!.....lol....Only experience I have of Volvo estates is a 740 (which was nice if a bit staid looking) and & 850 2.3 turbo (at the time was a real flying machine!.. And both of which were works cars)....the 850 would do Hull to Leeds in under an hour!....but back then they didn't have speed cameras on the M62!... Oh the good old days!

  • @johnboytd
    @johnboytd 5 років тому

    A friend of mine had a saloon Volvo 122, RTJ150C, he let me drive it, so, me being me, I drove it, nursing it, double de-clutching! It was a good, smooth drive!! Another great video! Including shooing the cat!!

  • @6ettinold
    @6ettinold 5 років тому +1

    Have always lusted after one of these. Prices have quite rightly rocketed past my grasp now. Have had a few Volvo's, best one was a stunning Volvo 740 turbo estate. Huge fun to drive.

  • @keithwelton
    @keithwelton 5 років тому +3

    Whist still a child in the late 50's a neighbour had a saloon Amazon. The biggest attraction of Volvos through the 50's and 60's was their rust protection compared to British cars such as the infamous Vauxhall Victors of around 1960. It wasn't until the 80's that British cars rust protection met the 50's standards of Volvo.

  • @DavidMBanes
    @DavidMBanes 3 роки тому

    Great review, handy that UA-cam popped it into my timeline today as I was looking at one to run for my food business and to take to the odd show, if ever we get to go to car shows again!

  • @MapleMarmite
    @MapleMarmite 5 років тому

    Nice video. My first thought was "An Amazon - seen lots of those" but then realized I have seen lots of PHOTOS of them but never been in one or possibly even seen inside one - so it was a revelation. Big part of why I enjoy your vids - it's an experience, not just a picture. In my opinion the best camera angle for being on board for the drive, too. Though I did want to reach your and tuck the bloody camera lead under your arm lol

    • @HubNut
      @HubNut  5 років тому

      I needed a longer lead. As it happens, I seem to have lost that microphone...

    • @MapleMarmite
      @MapleMarmite 5 років тому

      Ah - that was the one that eloped with the Rover keys, then. Hope you find both - or at least one...

  • @Georgeolddrones
    @Georgeolddrones 5 років тому

    Thanks for the video lan. Love the old Volvo👍🇬🇧

  • @mediocrefunkybeat
    @mediocrefunkybeat 5 років тому +14

    Now I desperately want one. What have you done?!
    Also. Galvanised sills. Those Swedes are full of good ideas.

    • @rich_edwards79
      @rich_edwards79 5 років тому +3

      My '82 244 stood in a garden for 15 years after her first owner died. There are rust spots on the bonnet, roof and doors, but the structural parts of the shell (sills, floor pan, suspension turrets / mounting points etc) are all clean. It's as though the whole bottom half of the car was made of some rot repelling super material. I am certainly not complaining.

    • @Mercmad
      @Mercmad 5 років тому +1

      Those Swedes are full of good ideas. except politics (shhhhhhhhh)

    • @rich_edwards79
      @rich_edwards79 4 роки тому +3

      @ferkemall they are awesome cars. I prefer the look of the sedans but the wagons are so practical - great camping cars with an air mattress in the back!

  • @srfrg9707
    @srfrg9707 5 років тому +13

    The Amazon is one of the most elegant, reliable and powerfull car ever produced.

  • @Tom.J.O
    @Tom.J.O 5 років тому +1

    I like the angle you filmed this at, makes me feel like I'm in the passenger seat :D

  • @mfbfreak
    @mfbfreak 5 років тому +4

    The parents of a friend of mine used to have an Amazon. I loved it.
    The most amazing thing is that the seats have springs, kind of like a mattress. That makes bumps in the road almost non-existant. Why don't more cars have that? It is hilarious how you stay pretty much at the same level, while the rest of the car moves up and down.

    • @BenBen-ux4el
      @BenBen-ux4el 5 років тому +2

      LimaVictor Amazon front seats normally have webbing actually. You can get springed conversions for the fronts.

  • @tauncfester3022
    @tauncfester3022 5 років тому +3

    Should note: When the dual SU carbs get worn, they start leaking air around the throttle plate shaft and that causes bad idling and makes the engine overheat. Local shop that specialized in old Volvos, would rebore, install brass sleeves and line bore the carb's bodys to repair, after brazing in any wear on the throttle plate shafts. Best $200 spent on making an old red B engine idle and drive well in city traffic.

  • @DeerKoden
    @DeerKoden 5 років тому

    What an amaz'in sight. Nicely kept up.

  • @RETROCAM73
    @RETROCAM73 5 років тому

    Really enjoyed that Ian great car nice road test apart from some traffic but that's normal now days sounds lovely 😊👍🏻

  • @grayfool
    @grayfool 5 років тому

    Another one I missed. Wonderful stuff.

  • @wilhelmsallsten7706
    @wilhelmsallsten7706 5 років тому +1

    Those machines were almost indestructible.

  • @geetee7154
    @geetee7154 5 років тому

    The 120 series were a serious work horse of a car,i worked for a Volvo dealer as an Apprentice Mechanic back in the day,when these were still relatively new, the 122S was the one with twin carbs, they went quite well for a car of its time,watching this video brings back a lot of good memories

  • @brendanhurley8780
    @brendanhurley8780 4 роки тому

    My father had an estate (LHD) twin carb B18 & a 2 door amazon (black with red roof) and a whole host of 140s up until 1995. I have carried on the Volvo tradition with my own '72 144. I just love old Volvos. An dark green Amzon came up for sale couple of years ago but I was out of the country at the time, sickened. The old Volvos have a very distinct smell, takes me right back to the 70's.

  • @JVChester
    @JVChester 5 років тому +1

    Great review of a very fine car Ian, never owned a Volvo myself nearest I got to one was a DAF 66 Marathon Coupe!

  • @herrfister1477
    @herrfister1477 4 роки тому

    Another great video!

  • @shanehnorman
    @shanehnorman 5 років тому +1

    My first boss had a 4-door 122S/ B18 (can't recall the year of manufacture) that I drove regularly. I found it a pleasure to drive - twin carbs! - although the steering was a bit rubbery and handling was wallowy on the bends. I loved the look, especially: solid, handsome, and - my fave - a painted metal dash, so much a feature of cars from the '50s/ 60s. Sod the safety - bring 'em back!

  • @Levenstone132
    @Levenstone132 5 років тому +8

    That's it.I'm saving up!

  • @madhatters1966
    @madhatters1966 5 років тому

    What a lovely classic you need one in the HubNut fleet

  • @northdevonwildlifewithandy788
    @northdevonwildlifewithandy788 5 років тому +1

    Love it. I had a 145 many years ago. I loved that as well

  • @TheFlyingSaucePan
    @TheFlyingSaucePan 5 років тому

    I can safely say I have never seen one of these in my life. What a beauty!

  • @darrenwilson8042
    @darrenwilson8042 5 років тому +8

    Never overlook the Volvo 340 Ian if you want outdated charm. They went on to 1991 - imagine what modern machinery they were competing with then !!

    • @chilman6461
      @chilman6461 5 років тому

      Would like to find a nice 340 or 360 I have a 940

  • @dennisrobinson735
    @dennisrobinson735 5 років тому +3

    The amazon is my favourite Volvo great video

  • @brixtonsaint
    @brixtonsaint 5 років тому +1

    This is a car nuts Ultimate slow tv. Great to be taken back home to England for a drive at bedtime.
    Excellent commentary as well. “Look before you leap love”. 😁 often used.

  • @CortinasAndClassics
    @CortinasAndClassics 5 років тому

    Lovely Volvo Ian, I remember seeing loads of these in the 80's

  • @theoriginalwallace
    @theoriginalwallace 5 років тому +1

    They are lovely cars! My parents had a white '66 4 door when I was little. As for the remote servo, I used to put them either in the boot, or under the dash on the near side with a non return valve. Worked very well indeed & reduced under bonnet clutter. I'm fitting one in the boot of my YB Cosworth turbo powered Ford Corsair (RetroFord mag March 2008). Will be fitting a diesel vacuum pump alternator alternator & larger pulley to reduce the revolutions due to the petrol engine! My wife's SBC V8 HC Viva will be getting one under the dash. Cheers. Leigh.

  • @bensonwarungu343
    @bensonwarungu343 4 роки тому

    Excellent video of the Amazon it's so fun to drive

  • @markroffe3967
    @markroffe3967 5 років тому

    What a FABULOUS car!
    I've owned two estates and a 2- door. Man I miss them...

  • @yamahonkawazuki
    @yamahonkawazuki 4 роки тому

    ive never driven one of these. but , i do know how to drive a manual. thank you my friend for not being afraid to drive a manual.

  • @triviace
    @triviace 5 років тому +1

    The model which was responsible for the Durability legend of Volvos,sturdy and strong,strongly mechanical,way overbuilt by todays standards,simply wonderful!

  • @orionderevere3377
    @orionderevere3377 3 роки тому

    love the review

  • @Bryan-fg3ey
    @Bryan-fg3ey 5 років тому

    Takes me back to my mum's 245glt estate,in racing gold with black leather.
    Not an Amazon,but it was a nice car as a teenager and introduced me to the delights of cleaning alloy wheels.

  • @ou6037
    @ou6037 5 років тому +1

    A thoroughly well thought through car

  • @profrumpo
    @profrumpo 5 років тому

    Terrific stuff another great test drive, and what a beautiful car.

  • @ahassen1236
    @ahassen1236 Рік тому

    Old classic cars get more heads turning than new ones these days. The days when new cars were a marvel are long gone. They're all the same thing. Older cars seemed to be possess a character that set them apart from one model to the next. The sense of nostalgia nowadays is very unusual I have to say.

  • @spitzsticker
    @spitzsticker 2 роки тому +1

    It takes me back to mine, same year and model. Same colour too. It would keep up with the Cortina two litres on the motorway at 85mph. Very comfortable and a quality build. Only problem was the fuel consumption, I had a new mortgage at a time of high inflation in so it had to go, for a cretinous Mini.

  • @akr01364
    @akr01364 5 років тому

    My '94 940 estate is onto 289k and thanks to the rustproofing and the inch thick paint it still looks new. That the engine is now up to 208 bhp without a turbo is just my own little indulgence. ;)

  • @chrisyork3125
    @chrisyork3125 5 років тому

    Great review! A BMC Farina built up to a quality instead of the BMC built down to a price is a good summary. The true glory for me is that split tailgate. I'm a very big fan of those......... Perfect for sitting to drink tea!

  • @craigmonteforte1478
    @craigmonteforte1478 3 роки тому

    Good looking car !thanks for sharing both my parents drove 70s Wagons for twenty years I’ve been looking for a decent 1960s Wagon in the United States as I’ve seen a couple Hot Rod ones I thought were pretty cool

  • @paulbennell3313
    @paulbennell3313 5 років тому +1

    I used to see these a lot when I was a kid in the early 70's and I always liked them. Looks really easy and relaxing to drive. I don't think that indicator stalk is like that by design though, I suspect fettling is required.
    For me, an estate with the B20 engine and overdrive is the ideal spec. It must be cavernous with the back seat folded down! Ideal for carting drum kits, guitar amps and old hi fi gear around. Or throw a mattress in the back and kip in it!

  • @captscarlet17
    @captscarlet17 5 років тому +1

    I do love 💕 these Volvo’s when I was in school I lusted after a 164TE Which was the executive model then the 264 series with the big V6 engine which was in the Renault 30 and the Peugeot
    604, but I ended up buying a 345 instead!!!
    If I was going to buy a Volvo today it would be a P1800ES I’m not keen on today’s Volvos.
    I must admit this is my favourite channel on UA-cam I’m really enjoying the blogs, thank you 😊.
    If possible can you do a blog on the P1800, the Saints car that would be fantastic.

  • @danielpothier9990
    @danielpothier9990 5 років тому

    Wonderful review especially the commentary on harkening back.

  • @TheSimonhammond
    @TheSimonhammond 5 років тому +1

    UA-cam needs to add a 'Love button'.

  • @niklaswejedal463
    @niklaswejedal463 5 років тому +2

    My parents had one of those when I was a kid, between 1977 - 1981. It was a 1967 in some kind of foot-fungus yellow/green colour. Still after all these years, everything about it feels familiar. Not very common anymore, not even here in Sweden - but when I do see one, I'm amazed of how small they look compared to any modern Volvo. Sadly, my only really strong memory of that car was when the drive shaft broke off, during a holiday trip to a ski resort. There was a bang and then the most horrible noise and the car was unable to go any further. As a small kid, I could off course not understand what had happened, so I got really scared. Somehow my dad got hold of a break-down truck and later we could continue the trip in a rented, by that time brand-spanking-new, Volvo 343, which was intensly brown just about everywhere. (Maybe you should try to drive one of those if you haven't done it yet - might be interesting, if not pleasant...)
    And, speaking of over drive - a later car in the family, a 1979 244 GL in dog-poo yellow, had that little overdrive button on the shift-knob. It looked like a device that the Q-devision of the James Bond-movies would have put there... It was always like a big thing when my dad pushed that button. I had no idea what it did, but the name overdrive sounded so cool, it had to be something really special and cool.

  • @encorespod2135
    @encorespod2135 5 років тому

    I don't even have a car, but I appreciate your passion and engineering.