Why do classic cars spend so much time in the shop? This '82 Corvette is back to CAR WIZARD - AGAIN!

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  • Опубліковано 30 вер 2024
  • Some cars seem to live at the mechanic shop, but why do classic cars seem to spend even more? This 1982 Chevy Corvette has comeback to CAR WIZARD 🧙‍♂️ again this time for a whole new set of issues. What are they and why did they fail?
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 730

  • @carguy3028
    @carguy3028 2 роки тому +135

    I wonder what the future holds, old cars are getting too expensive to fix and new cars are getting too expensive to buy.

    • @NatashaRaisorGlam
      @NatashaRaisorGlam 2 роки тому +8

      I have been thinking the same thing🤦🏾‍♀️

    • @glassman1533
      @glassman1533 2 роки тому +15

      Two words: public transport

    • @seth10122000
      @seth10122000 2 роки тому +20

      @@glassman1533 Will never work outside of big cities in the US

    • @jonathanryan2915
      @jonathanryan2915 2 роки тому +5

      Restoration shops will be more viable

    • @samholdsworth420
      @samholdsworth420 2 роки тому

      They want us out of cars

  • @barbiesandlol3018
    @barbiesandlol3018 2 роки тому +4

    No more old cool cars......hmmm. So what are we going to be watching, F150 3 valves, Chevy 1.4 turbo, or Prius battery swaps ......this channel will be done in no time......

  • @brianthomas8180
    @brianthomas8180 2 роки тому +104

    The package is actually called the Collector's Editon. The package was the only way to get an opening hatch

    • @buzuxi
      @buzuxi 2 роки тому +22

      Yup. The special package came with those turbine wheels and if I'm not mistaken the mirrored t-tops.

    • @ozarkliving7263
      @ozarkliving7263 2 роки тому +5

      Gorgeous

    • @edwardleyland1979
      @edwardleyland1979 2 роки тому +4

      And only in that color...it's missing hood decal

    • @JasPlun
      @JasPlun 2 роки тому +9

      They are too hard to work on now Wizard is moving on from old cars. I wish he would just change his stance and continue to take them in at least for his youtube channel. I am serious there are hundreds of youtubers doing modern crap, what makes this channel unique is the working on the old and new so I think its a big mistake as far as his youtube channel goes. You are making money off youtube so I do not see how hes not making money off old cars because he is making money off interesting content. Just wait and see once the old cars are gone. His viewership is going to take a hit.

    • @larsmanson9577
      @larsmanson9577 2 роки тому +4

      you're absolutely correct and I passed up buying one last year that just needed the complete brake system replaced I should've brought it they only wanted $8000 for it.

  • @ericchill864
    @ericchill864 2 роки тому +43

    Love the older general motors. Had a 1970 firebird and also a 78 trans am, and I miss them both greatly. Strangely I also miss a little Mazda MX3 V6 manual that I had for a couple years after those cars. But the Pontiacs win, they were so much fun and easy to work on.

    • @TimeSurfer206
      @TimeSurfer206 2 роки тому

      Which is a damned good thing, because Planned Obsolescence made sure we did and do, right?

    • @jeffreyvietzke2125
      @jeffreyvietzke2125 2 роки тому +2

      Still have my '65 and '67 GTO's I bought 40 years ago and have been driving the whole time. I like them more now than I did then, and they are still practical useable cars. No car payments, either!!

  • @HAunderscoreVE
    @HAunderscoreVE 2 роки тому +4

    I mean, yeah, old cars have their problems. But i'd still rather drive an old car where stuff can be fixed rather than drive a modern shapeless blob with a engine that is designed to fail after 100K and you cant fix anything on because it all requires you to plug into a special-made diagnostic machine.

    • @thymirusconfederatus
      @thymirusconfederatus 2 роки тому +1

      But that's what most high-end shops with substantial market share now want to do - banal maintenance on modern cars, mostly involving plugging in proprietary diagnostic machines. Real mechanics are becoming less common.

  • @theshadowman1398
    @theshadowman1398 2 роки тому +65

    That design is timeless

    • @ozarkliving7263
      @ozarkliving7263 2 роки тому +2

      Agree, only GM I’d ever own, a Corvette of any year

    • @jimmyfleetwood1118
      @jimmyfleetwood1118 2 роки тому +2

      @@ozarkliving7263 Interesting. Having had Corvettes, they're the one GM I would never own again.

    • @TimeSurfer206
      @TimeSurfer206 2 роки тому +2

      A Timeless Design, that was designed to last 3 years.

    • @edwardleyland1979
      @edwardleyland1979 2 роки тому

      @@jimmyfleetwood1118 why I had 3 everyone was great

    • @Stefonius
      @Stefonius 2 роки тому +3

      The 1980-82 'Vettes were the most beautiful ever made in my opinion. I was bitterly disappointed in the "cheese wedge", "doorstop" "pie slice" design of the C4. The C5, C6 and C7 looked just like it with minor changes. Boring.

  • @Wbfuhn
    @Wbfuhn 2 роки тому +26

    Wizard: We're going to look at this sweet 1983 Corvette.
    Me: I thought 1983 didn't have a Corvette released to the public. The only one that exists is stored in a museum as the only survivor of that year.

    • @calvincooley1074
      @calvincooley1074 2 роки тому +3

      The Corvette Meuseum.

    • @marvinheemeyer9768
      @marvinheemeyer9768 2 роки тому +5

      The 'glass sinkhole museum? Lol

    • @jonathanryan2915
      @jonathanryan2915 2 роки тому +3

      They made a handful of '83 Corvettes but they were never sold and on the day they were supposed to be crushed, one of them was spared because it was in a few inches of water that day and nobody wanted to get it out. Someone stuck it in a warehouse to be found years later

  • @violinmiata
    @violinmiata 2 роки тому +67

    You would think that the wizard could subsidize his vintage car labor costs with UA-cam money and keep the videos coming. I think a lot of us subscribers like to see cool vintage cars. Charge what it takes and business comes to you, if you do a great job.

    • @canadaguy1234
      @canadaguy1234 2 роки тому +6

      Thats for sure. Its more interesting to see a mix with this old stuff included then your run of the mill daily drivers and aged exotics which also take time to get parts for.

    • @robbsclassics
      @robbsclassics 2 роки тому +7

      He runs a shop and is only one person. That's the great thing about UA-cam. You can find something you want to watch. I agree, but that doesn't matter, it's not my channel.

    • @Steven-yl4lg
      @Steven-yl4lg 2 роки тому +1

      It's a business. UA-cam also takes massive time energy to create. He's trying to please everyone. But as usual - needy needy why why why commenters want more from him!

    • @bradklingensmith
      @bradklingensmith Рік тому +1

      He's made it pretty darn clear that he has no interest in that business and gave many reasons why on many occasions.

    • @dakotakline461
      @dakotakline461 Рік тому

      Easy to say from an outside perspective. He has a business to run and labor and bills to pay for. And to keep everyday customers, he needs to be able to get them in and out. Therefore he must keep his employees focused on the quick turnover vehicles. UA-cam is a side gig for him not his life. Wizard is doing the right thing.

  • @zhvonte
    @zhvonte 2 роки тому +6

    Old cars are like old people. We start fallin apart more and more. Unless you do a full 100% restoration, it will always have a problem somewhere. But then again, todays parts are purity shit. Even a full restoration these days may continue to haunt you with constant parts replacement.

    • @thebigpicture2032
      @thebigpicture2032 2 роки тому +2

      Even new cars go in for warranty work. It’s hard to beat the second law of thermodynamics.

    • @microminiskirt
      @microminiskirt 2 роки тому +1

      New car reliability and complexability vs. Style n unreliability with some of these old cars costing as much as a new car at initial purchase price.
      People have changed too so work ethics and pride of workmanship have gone and got worse compared to earlier times. Cost cutting efforts by car companies today Is an reflection in parts, assembly of vehicle and cheap parts made poorly. Work ethics are much higher in JAPAN as disclipine and pride is instilled in the culture. Old age and time kills everything.

  • @microminiskirt
    @microminiskirt 2 роки тому +2

    A 1983 Corvette would be worth something because they don't exist. This is the only year there was no corvette. SUPER RARE.

  • @blaketindle4703
    @blaketindle4703 2 роки тому +7

    Crossfire Injection was only on the 82 and 84 Corvettes. 81 was carbureted and 85 had tuned port injection.
    My dad had an 84 Corvette he bought new. Such a fun car!
    I’m looking to buy a C4 myself.

  • @RetroCarsForever
    @RetroCarsForever 2 роки тому +8

    Great video...Many people dont realize how destructive TIME to be on cars, not just mileage.
    Also highlighting the importance of a good relationship between shop owner and car owner for tackling projects like this.

  • @LADETROIT
    @LADETROIT 2 роки тому +5

    In 1982 I saw this Corvette in a Detroit Mall and fell in love. Hiring manager at my first big interview had the exact one for 30 days before it was stolen and stripped to the frame.. we spent most of the time talking about the car, which I feel got me the 18 year job. I've always hated the stories about this Corvette being the worst model to have. Still beautiful to me

  • @larsmanson9577
    @larsmanson9577 2 роки тому +9

    I'm a mechanic and a customer so I can appreciate you for being an honest mechanic and everyone should appreciate that but just as you know most people have been burnt by shady shops so that's why they talk crap about mechanic shops you're just like me you're honest

  • @mikezerker6925
    @mikezerker6925 2 роки тому +5

    I love the C3 Corvettes… the most beautiful in my opinion! Thanks for bringing this video to us!

  • @craigt4467
    @craigt4467 2 роки тому +7

    Wizard I I definitely get what you’re saying about older cars
    You said they didn’t make many of this 30 year anniversary vette
    I owned a 1963 corvette roadster I loved it how every it wasn’t built fro gandering or braking fun to drive in a straight line
    A cheap for repairs
    327 but with a 2 speed power glide automatic
    So many corvettes had been made since
    Except for special editions idk how collectible they are.
    Great video I will share
    Best wishes always from Las Vegas Craig
    This video is 8 stars
    ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
    Bravo wizard 👏🏻

  • @cooperfootball2748
    @cooperfootball2748 2 роки тому +2

    If you want to own an old car you better know how to work on it yourself. Otherwise buy something with a warranty.

  • @herrunsinn774
    @herrunsinn774 2 роки тому +3

    Don't have a garage to protect your hobby car during the cold Kansas winters? No problem... Just take it to the Wizard's for some hard-to-find parts and rest assured will be warm and toasty in the shop for those critical months. Hee hee. 🤣

  • @thymirusconfederatus
    @thymirusconfederatus 2 роки тому +3

    A wholesale refusal to work on older vehicles is imbecilic, to put it charitably.
    Charge whatever you must to ensure a profit. If a given customer declines to pay the necessary sum, part amicably. If a given customer agrees to the necessary sum, you gain work, receive the loyalty of a motorist for the future (assuming your workmanship is adequate), and serve a shopper in need.
    Unless you're so delicate of mind that you're terrified of negative comments from customers who don't like the quotes you give them, why reject older cars?

    • @oilman930
      @oilman930 2 роки тому +1

      Dave decided to give up on servicing old cars because of the poor quality of parts he was buying for those cars, and for the length of time it was taking to get those parts. He was getting tired of have old cars hanging around his shop for over a year just waiting for parts.

    • @rogerw3818
      @rogerw3818 2 роки тому +1

      Spoken like a person who's never owned or worked in a shop. Everyone starts out as a "It's my baby! Money isn't a problem." attitude that evaporates instantly when the reality of the parts, time, and price that it takes to do it right. That's when the "Could you just do enough to get by for now?" begins. Then it devolves to "THOSE GUYS ARE CROOKS!" because the shop isn't willing to work for free and give the parts at cost.
      There's a reason no one wants to take in that basket case you bought from the guy who told you how good it ran when he put it up a decade ago and that it will only take a few hundred to get it going. That's the moment you save yourself, and the shop that will have to listen to you crying like a petulant child, a lot of grief by asking "Then why haven't YOU got it going yet"?

    • @thymirusconfederatus
      @thymirusconfederatus 2 роки тому

      @@rogerw3818 - 1) I don't know what asshole of a locality you live in, but those types of customers are decidedly a minority where I'm from.
      I've known enthusiasts with everything from 1,098cc Morris Minors to late-model C2s, as well as the shops which work on them, and the sort of hapless degenerate you're describing is uncommon, in my experience.
      Blanket refusals to work on non-modern vehicles is a definitive and serious demerit against an automotive workshop. I don't give a shit about how hurt his feelings get when he encounters miserly customers.
      2) I do everything on my cars myself - without a garage, and without a level surface.

    • @thymirusconfederatus
      @thymirusconfederatus 2 роки тому +1

      @@oilman930 Whatever floats his boat, I suppose.

  • @Raptor3388
    @Raptor3388 2 роки тому +12

    Having had at least 5 Corvette 76-up C3s in the shop in the past two years, I got to say I do not want to work on them again. All sorts of conditions, from nearly new to hacked up.
    The only thing I like about them is the ease to remove the oil pan...I'll take a C4 over a C3 anytime.
    By the way the cat bracket isn't bolted on, but I'm sure it's already taken care of.

    • @tokyojon4344
      @tokyojon4344 2 роки тому +1

      My friend had a C4 back when it was new. The lower radiator hose went on it. To replace it, took it to dealership and the engine had to be lifted (or, what's what he told me.) I assumed from there that the C4 a difficult car to repair.

  • @pops55650
    @pops55650 2 роки тому +16

    A few years ago you could find every part for this C3 and now you have do a lot of research online. I have a 2013 Caprice and parts have dried up for parts specific to the Caprice. Drivetrain is okay, and some parts were the same as other GM/Holden/Pontiac, but since Holden shut down it’s slim pickings

    • @nealperry8787
      @nealperry8787 2 роки тому +3

      Its still very easy to find parts for Corvettes. There is a shop in Texas that bought all of the used GM corvette molds and makes 100% GM Authentic panels and parts.

    • @rrf6747
      @rrf6747 2 роки тому

      Yeah I don't understand the c3 was in production 14 15 years parts shouldn't be a problem

    • @wigletron2846
      @wigletron2846 2 роки тому

      A lot of 5th gen camaro, G8, and SS parts are shared with the Caprice. I have a G8 and I'm in the same boat.

  • @andrewg2322
    @andrewg2322 2 роки тому +7

    Oh Wizard sucks to see the old car problems, i feel your pain indeed. As someone who works on old bmws and vintage dirt bikes. Very often if not every time on one of these mid 80s products have so much go wrong with them as your working on them. Didnt plan on doing fuel lines and brake lines but i shit you not i sneezed under the bay and tapped them with a ratchet. All three replaced from parts from germany set me back a month. My summer e30 turned into the autumn one just like that.

  • @_Frank_the_Tank
    @_Frank_the_Tank 2 роки тому +3

    Unless you're a genuine "car guy" who does all your own repairs, or a "collector" who can shell out thousands of dollars to pay someone else to maintain your fleet of museum pieces, then a classic car isn't for you... Go lease a new kia with a warranty. The automobile repair landscape has changed drastically over the last 30 or 40 years, long gone are the days of skilled mechanics who can actually diagnose an issue without a computer, modern technicians are just glorified parts changers, plug the OBD2 scanner in and follow a list of instructions from AllData.
    Speaking of changing landscapes it's odd to actually see an 80s C3 that someone wants to keep stock... In years past that entire crossfire nightmare would have been heaved into the nearest dumpster and replaced with a nice dual plane intake manifold and a 4 barrel.

    • @_Frank_the_Tank
      @_Frank_the_Tank 2 роки тому +1

      @@ElectronicMusicUnderground Preaching to the choir my friend, the newest vehicle I own is a 1997 F350. I've done various intermediate level repairs (timing belts, fuel pumps, clutch replacement, etc etc) for family and friends on vehicles much newer then I care to own. I always swear it's the last time I'll ever do it, but then I find myself getting bribed into something again a few months later. New vehicles are just soulless plastic appliances, driven by boring basic individuals. I spent a weekend not to long ago putting a set of aluminum heads, headers, and a Ford racing e303 cam in my 1991 Mustang, I enjoyed the work and I enjoyed taking an already fun car to the next level. Not too long after that I wasted an entire weekend doing a timing belt on my sister's hyundai elantra... I hated every minute of it, nothing about working on that turd brings me joy, everything on it is bassackwards and stupid.

    • @frythis809
      @frythis809 2 роки тому

      @@_Frank_the_Tank My oldest is an '83 MB 300SD w/248K miles, newest is a "05 Dodge Ram w/ 150K miles, my daily is a '98 E39 BMW 528i inline six w/226K miles - most reliable and trouble free car I've owned out of 40+ cars. Drove a brand new 2022 BMW 3 series loaner - complete crap!

  • @carmudgeon7478
    @carmudgeon7478 2 роки тому +32

    Missed Mrs. Wizard's interior tour. Misfire Injection earned it's name because nobody knew how to work on it and it was so much more sensitive to vacuum leaks and bad gas than carbs. I remember putting Collector lower stripe kits on several regular Vettes and matching the interior color with the upper pinstriping.

  • @zhvonte
    @zhvonte 2 роки тому +76

    Wizard, I definitely understand your dilemma with older cars and not wanting to work on them anymore. But, consider just doing the Chevy pickup and corvette from 1968 and newer. Plentiful parts and high end clients. Charge 50% premium on labor. Not restoration shop, just a high end repair shop for high end clients.

    • @webberfan1234
      @webberfan1234 2 роки тому +3

      I agree. I would say 1980 and newer.

    • @joshuagibson2520
      @joshuagibson2520 2 роки тому +5

      Bingo.
      Naaah. 65 and newer.

    • @yrasphong
      @yrasphong 2 роки тому +5

      The wizard doesn't work on cars unless u give him ur arm and leg

    • @canadaguy1234
      @canadaguy1234 2 роки тому

      @@yrasphong
      Lots of other older vehicles are just as easy to get parts for. The problem is where do you draw the line and out of those vehicles what projects do you actually take.

    • @akjohnny5997
      @akjohnny5997 2 роки тому +3

      @@yrasphong he's a small shop though, what's he supposed to do work for free? gotta take the highest paying customers to stay afloat

  • @judgegixxer
    @judgegixxer 2 роки тому +3

    THIS JUST IN: Classic cars are old.
    That might have something to do with them being in the shop all the time.

  • @MichaelJames-lz7ni
    @MichaelJames-lz7ni 2 роки тому +2

    Most "old car owners" have NO CLUE what it takes to keep a machine with 30+ years on it in safe, running condition. They forget that rubber and gasket material has a finite lifespan - it doesn't last 'forever'. Suspension systems "work hard" whether you drive the car or not - it supports the weight of the car whether you're driving it, or it sits parked in the garage. Few people look at the 'date-code' of their own tires, or understand what that means. Few fuel hoses exist that are formulated for today's ethanol-spiked gasoline. It costs BIG MONEY to address these issues, and there's a huge disconnect between purchase-price and needed maintenance upkeep.

  • @rogerw3818
    @rogerw3818 2 роки тому +2

    They spend so much time in shop because they need so much work to get sorted out to a level where they are safe to operate and reliable enough to get you anywhere there and back without worrying that it'll have to be towed home every time you take it out.
    The budget to do that kind of work, the work that is all hidden because you aren't doing any aesthetic work, is more than any person feels the entire project should cost.
    Every joker out there thinks their old car is worth big money because of those auction shows. They don't have a clue. It takes a good $40K to get the majority of them to a point they're worth $20K. If yo doubt that, then spend the money and then put the car on he auction block at No Reserve. You'll leave in tears.

  • @chrismarek7864
    @chrismarek7864 2 роки тому +5

    Technically there were a few 83 Corvettes manufactured, but they were all test productions that were condemned to the crusher, but only one escaped that fate thanks to mother nature at the time, and that 83 Vette ended up staying preserved and is part of the permanent collection on display at the National Corvette Museum in Bowling Green Kentucky

    • @kimblem.w9952
      @kimblem.w9952 10 місяців тому

      AND that it survived that infamous sink hole that claimed many collector corvettes by mere feet.

    • @rapid13
      @rapid13 2 місяці тому

      Built in 83, still not an 83 model year Vette. Technically.

  • @jamesrogers5783
    @jamesrogers5783 2 роки тому +13

    back in the day we did a lot of work on that model of vett , seems like we replaced a lot of rear leaf springs to restore the proper height. i had a 84 it had the crossfire engine , never had any problems with the engine, though the 4+3 transmission was a constant problem.

    • @pops55650
      @pops55650 2 роки тому +6

      I think it got a bad reputation because FI was kind of “new” at the time and many people didn’t know how to troubleshoot problems. Now there are UA-camrs who a great at FI, turbos and tuning, but totally fail at a troubleshooting a carb, and have to find a wise old man to help them lol

    • @jamesrogers5783
      @jamesrogers5783 2 роки тому +3

      @@pops55650 the 84 had the cross ram intake with very small runners , which was HP limiting but it had huge torque and quite decent MPG. seems like it had a sort of torque/RV ish cam that would run out of steam @ 5k rpm and the SBC guys liked to turn the "R"S wern"t liking that.

    • @MrTheHillfolk
      @MrTheHillfolk 2 роки тому

      Yeah I always remember seeing them with a saggy butt.

    • @MrTheHillfolk
      @MrTheHillfolk 2 роки тому +2

      @@pops55650 kids who buy a mk1 vw ,and don't understand Bosch CIS injection,rip it off and put a carb on.
      Stop, just stop,that's the dumbest swap ever.

  • @0Heeroyuy01
    @0Heeroyuy01 2 роки тому +9

    old cars are in the shop a lot b/c they are old and need to be gone through and have all their bushings, hoses, etc replaced with new, as well as having the motor, trans, and rear ends looked at to make sure they are good have the suspension checked maybe even updated to better stuff

    • @joshuakhaos4451
      @joshuakhaos4451 2 роки тому

      But it also doesnt help that even fully restored old cars just sit and dont get driven. Doesnt matter if youve replaced everything if the car sits for years and maybe see's a few 100 or thousand miles over multiple years. To properly sort a car, you have to drive it and see what still needs some adjustment or fine tuning. But many guys who restore them only park them except for the few weekends a year they take them to shows around town, and then claim they want to do more, but dont trust the car to go hundreds of miles from home.
      Yet I follow some young guys that have old 50s and 60s american cars and daily them as if they are new cars. Sometimes they need repairs, but they mostly work as if they were new. Its really how you use them and how willing you are to keep up on maintenance.

    • @0Heeroyuy01
      @0Heeroyuy01 2 роки тому

      @@joshuakhaos4451 i daily drove my 73 elco when i bought it for like a year before i had to park it over the drive shaft and sadly no one close to me (as in 500 miles) doesnt do anything with drive shafts and b/c its set it needs more work.

    • @joshuakhaos4451
      @joshuakhaos4451 2 роки тому

      @@0Heeroyuy01 Thats the one downside to an old car, the lack of parts or the lack of skill to fix said car.

    • @0Heeroyuy01
      @0Heeroyuy01 2 роки тому

      @@joshuakhaos4451 anything else i could fix it with time (aside from welding if needed, but that i could learn) but i dont have the tools or knowledge to fix drive shaft

  • @dgarreis
    @dgarreis 2 роки тому +4

    This video caught my eye as I had one of these. I should have never sold it. Mine was purchased new by my cousins who put it in a barn with a cover over it 13 years. I bought it with around 17,000 original miles. Still had it on Jack-stands for about a year polishing everything even the exhaust pipes shined. Replaced a bunch of dried out stuff like valve cover gaskets and so on. I really liked the TBI. It ran flawlessly. Sold it to a neighbor with 21,000 miles who kept it 4 years then sold it to a collector in Oregon. I always have wondered where it is today. Guess this is not the one but sure brings back memories. Thanks for all you do.

  • @HowardJrFord
    @HowardJrFord 2 роки тому +2

    The reason so many classic cars spend time in the shop is because they have the wrong owner .

  • @evilbeaver267
    @evilbeaver267 2 роки тому +10

    Wizard I would enjoy a build video on what you guys repair on this vette!

  • @cooperfootball2748
    @cooperfootball2748 2 роки тому +6

    When I was in high school in the 90’s a friend of my dads had a car lot, he had a clean early 80’s Camaro that I wanted. Stopped bye and asked to take a test drive and he said he would never sell me that car. He didn’t want to get crossways with my dad.

  • @tbm3fan913
    @tbm3fan913 2 роки тому +2

    None of my six cars that are between 32 to 57 years old spend any time in a shop ever. One, is I do preventive maintenance and two I do all my major work. I just finished my 1990 Mazda 626 hatchback rear suspension was entirely rebuilt by me making it completely new to go along with the front rebuild two years ago. Shops do not do good enough work to meet my standards which I learned back in 1977.

  • @nellayema2455
    @nellayema2455 2 роки тому +4

    A GM engineer took me for a ride in the then new '84 Corvette. That thing rode around curves like it was on rails. it was a very cool car.

  • @johnnys8822
    @johnnys8822 Рік тому +2

    Loved my '84 also, cannot say enough about it, first one around here that sat covered on the display floor at the dealer until its release April 24 th. They use to let me sit in it under the cover. On the road the reactions were amazing, everyone loved the look. The Digital Dash had all the info you needed,. metric too. a radiator that defected radar signals, plastic springs, hidden storage under rear glove boxes, entire front end hood opening, gyroscopic head lights, and off course the Bose stero, One thing missing, an Ashtray

  • @mumwifeteacher
    @mumwifeteacher 2 роки тому +8

    I love the c4. My goal is a silver one with red interior and stock wheels

  • @austinfrazier7325
    @austinfrazier7325 2 роки тому +1

    Kinda sad the owner wants to keep stock. You can do soooooooooo much to these cars from the Corvette catalogs. Just a conversion to headers, dual exhaust, and high flow cats would gain a bunch of power. That Crossfire intake manifold is very restrictive. Hand port it or buy the Renegade manifold for 30hp gain. The ECU can also be tuned. Read up on the Corvette forum.

  • @davehoward2791
    @davehoward2791 2 роки тому +2

    Back when a ‘Vette looked like a ‘Vette, not some euro trash Lambo or some other modern crap. And props for keeping it stock, that’s the only way to do classics.

  • @rEdHoUsE_1969
    @rEdHoUsE_1969 2 роки тому +2

    Understandable decision by The Wizard not to take on older car repairs and/or restorations ...
    It would mean a total change of business direction, not to mention additional facilities such as fabrication, paint, interior etc. A massive capital outlay with stop/start cash flow, parts supply & a current economy on the cusp of recession, not just in the US but worldwide.
    As the workshop stands now ... there is more than enough variety for Omega staff and money coming in ... even with an economic downturn ...
    I understand why people keep contacting Crazy D with their classics ... it's the trust factor ... people trust The Wizard and his staff with their classic ... plain and simple ... 🤔

  • @Alex-nh1hb
    @Alex-nh1hb Рік тому +1

    Looking at a project c3 79 right now, I’m curious how much money you think it’ll take to fix up. The motor and trans are rebuilt and in good condition, but the AC doesn’t work, headlights don’t go up, powers steering leaks/doesn’t work, and seats are in rough shape. Any thoughts?

  • @petej.8676
    @petej.8676 2 роки тому +1

    So...by no old cars..would you work on let's say early 1990s toyotas..or early 2000 windstars..they made millions of them.and many are still on the roads✌️

  • @engineerinhickorystripehat
    @engineerinhickorystripehat 2 роки тому +1

    When you have to remove the seats so you can remove the center console, so you can remove the instrument cluster and radio, so you can remove the dash, to get to the wiper switch. You might as well replace aaaaall those 194 light bulbs and, and, and, and.
    I was upside down on my back with my feet in the air where the driver seat should be Friday afternoon inna 79 , plugging the speedo and tack back in when the boss complimented me on my sexy legs. I would never work anywhere where I'm not sexually harassed at least twice a day.

  • @beri232
    @beri232 2 роки тому +1

    At least classic cars for the most part can be fixed and usually a lot less expensively than new cars. The new shit may as well be disposable. I’d like to see if a new BMW X5 M Class is still on the road in 40 years! Lol

  • @WhittyPics
    @WhittyPics 2 роки тому +2

    GM paint in that era was horrible

    • @hugostiglitz8465
      @hugostiglitz8465 2 роки тому

      Yep, my mother drove a 1988 Chevey Beretta brand new and the paint went in just 3 years.

  • @imdjc4
    @imdjc4 2 роки тому +1

    Why? Because car owners of this era and prior, usually take car of their vehicles as the problems arise......as opposed to careless, current car owners who drive cheaper, disposable cars with their dashboards illuminated with idiot lights.

  • @87Supra4runner
    @87Supra4runner 2 роки тому +1

    Hey Mr. Wizard, i enjoy your channel but if you cut the old cars out im going to have to make my own decision to stop following you. I dont want to but i am uninterested in high end cars and new cars.

  • @wernerdanler2742
    @wernerdanler2742 2 роки тому +1

    I almost gave you a dislike! Lol
    What happened to Mrs. Wizard and her interior tour. I really wanted to see it. Waa!! 😆

  • @chuckcts-v3460
    @chuckcts-v3460 2 роки тому +2

    I had a 1977 L-82 Corvette for many years, did all the work. Use Stainless Steel sleeved calipers to fix the leaks in the front/all brake calipers. You will never have to replace them again. Also, make sure the pistons have "O" ring seals. Also, replace that steel rear spring with a fiberglass spring. Two things that will make this replacement worth while. About 30 lbs weight savings, and the ride will be "much" better with the fiberglass spring, get the heavy duty spring, it will not be too harsh but, is better than the stock spring rate. The 1984 was the first year for fiberglass springs, both front and rear. Also, replace the emergency brake shoes if you do all 4 wheels. These calipers and spring should be available from, Jeg's, Summit Racing or other Corvette only type businesses. It was found that that slanted radiator helped to deflect police radar, they could not see the car until it was closer to the radar unit, fiberglass helped too. You should check the rear wheel bearings, if they have never been serviced the are way overdue, front bearings too. If you cannot get new/rebuild power steering cylinder, there used to be a rebuild kit.

  • @fredkaminski3668
    @fredkaminski3668 2 роки тому +1

    Talking about not making any money on old cars, maybe just maybe the shop owner need to stop buying Yachts 😅

  • @seanabel5394
    @seanabel5394 2 роки тому +1

    The old cars are worthy of watching. The new cars are just typical crap no one wants to see. The million dollar cars are equally boring as there is nothing to learn that most of us can use.

  • @heidihobear
    @heidihobear 2 роки тому +4

    I love how a car seems to sit forever then the owners seem to get shocked it’s going to take like 10,000$ to fix it and get running and replace almost everything

    • @dodgeplow
      @dodgeplow 2 роки тому +1

      If they didn't neglect things as they came up, it wouldn't build up to so much.

    • @joshuakhaos4451
      @joshuakhaos4451 2 роки тому

      Ive seen and heard this the majority of the time a person with a classic. Meanwhile, I follow a few guys in their late 20s and 30s who exclusively own cars from the 50s and 60s as their dailys. Sometimes they have to make repairs, but they keep up on maintenance and the cars run. 2 of them take their old American Iron on 1000 + mile roadtrips like their cars are brand new off the lot. But then again, they use them as they were intended, not as a vessel to gain extra income.

    • @joshuakhaos4451
      @joshuakhaos4451 2 роки тому +1

      @@dodgeplow This is why I find the vast majority of classic car owners a joke. They own them more for the potential money they could bring, so they just let them sit for months or multiple years at a time before moving. Then the owners complain that they cant enjoy their expensive toys even a little because they dont trust the car to drive more than maybe 30 minutes around town or to the nearest car show.
      ANd when you just say that why dont they actually get them out, enjoy them and fix the ever growing list of issues as they come up so they CAN truly enjoy their classic. They say that they would love too, but its going to hurt its value.....

    • @dodgeplow
      @dodgeplow 2 роки тому +1

      @@joshuakhaos4451 They save up enough money to buy the car but never budget a maintenance program.

    • @dodgeplow
      @dodgeplow 2 роки тому

      @@joshuakhaos4451 cars from the 60s are the easiest to maintain. The design of the main functional parts reached a good level of maturity without complicating electronics. There are always a few exceptions here or there, but generally they are easy to maintain, many (most?) repairs can be done by someone with basic skills, and substitute parts can often be found if direct replacements aren't made - my '85 snow plow truck is like that - many generic parts but still on the road.

  • @davidjernigan8161
    @davidjernigan8161 2 роки тому +1

    The crossfire injection was as bad a design as the Bendix electro injection used on the Chrysler 300 letter series cars.

  • @Buses2Bikes
    @Buses2Bikes 2 роки тому +1

    I LOVE the C3 Vettes. I had a 1980 for several years until it was stolen. Police never found it. Pretty sure it ended up South of the Border in some drug lord's garage.

  • @Firestorm637
    @Firestorm637 2 роки тому +1

    I have owned 4 corvettes in the past, 73, 74, 85, and 90. Less expensive than European cars as lots of aftermarket. Plus just a Chevy engine

  • @jonbutzfiscina1307
    @jonbutzfiscina1307 2 роки тому +1

    The last of the real Corvettes.. C4 and newer suck. Plain and simple.

  • @will4688
    @will4688 2 роки тому +2

    You can’t polish a turd.

    • @hugostiglitz8465
      @hugostiglitz8465 2 роки тому +2

      Lol, first time I heard that was from the movie "Christine".

    • @DunceBashir
      @DunceBashir 2 роки тому +3

      You can LS swap a turd.

    • @tim3172
      @tim3172 2 роки тому +1

      No, but you can roll it in glitter.

  • @Firestorm637
    @Firestorm637 2 роки тому +1

    My motorcycle shop refuses to work on anything older than 20 years

  • @kenharty6016
    @kenharty6016 2 роки тому +1

    Shit fire injection cease fire you have to say nice things about customer cars so i will do it for you.

  • @MassiveTrackHunter
    @MassiveTrackHunter 2 роки тому +2

    Honestly my two TBI 350 trucks from the 90's were really reliable. Never had any problems up there. Simpler to work on too. You knew right away whether you were getting fuel!

  • @MrDDawson
    @MrDDawson 2 роки тому +2

    Classic cars need an acronym like B.O.A.T. Break Out Another Thousand. Wizard learned that one over the last while I'm sure.

  • @PlugInRides
    @PlugInRides 2 роки тому +3

    The Crossfire Injection system, was inspired by the 1969 Camaro 302 Z28 Cross Ram (2x4BBL) intake manifold, used in the Trans Am racing series. Chevrolet needed a low profile, higher flow intake, that could use off the shelf throttle body injectors. It provided a stop gap solution, until GM came out with the 1985, Tuned Port Injection system.

    • @mcqueenfanman
      @mcqueenfanman 2 роки тому

      But it's anything but high flow. It was a compromised set up to begin with, long thin runners and a big plenum. Every successful tbi system after that had decent ports and a small plenum. But they were saddled with swirl port heads.

  • @miketeeveedub5779
    @miketeeveedub5779 2 роки тому +1

    The 3rd gen Corvette was considered the 'worst' of the Corvettes series from a performance and quality standpoint (excluding the 68-72 years - those were awesome), and you know what? The worst of the 80s car is still better than the best of a modern vehicle. How can I say that? This car is almost 40 years old. There isn't a car made today that will last 40 years and still be operational, from either a quality or maintenance perspective.
    Today's vehicles are too complicated, loaded with electronics that are obsolete the moment they roll off the assembly line, and built to disintegrate within 10 years of usage. Replacement parts are unavailable, either by logistics or intentional. But this Corvette will still be here in another 40 years...if the overlords still allow fuel to be sold for it.

    • @mcqueenfanman
      @mcqueenfanman 2 роки тому

      And you can rebuild things like u joints, headlight motors, and bushings, hell on the early cars you can take apart the switches to fix them too.

  • @boomie3857
    @boomie3857 2 роки тому +2

    I called so many mechanic shops for my 71 VW Super Beetle. All of em were all like "nope we don't do that" I was losing hope, but then I was referred to the right shop.

  • @G34RH34D
    @G34RH34D 2 роки тому +1

    Boy the new Eurovettes are really ugly compared to the classics.

  • @Shawncombat
    @Shawncombat 2 роки тому +1

    I have a 75 Corvette. I need paint and a radio for it. I done new fuel tank, pump, sending unit, fuel lines, brake lines, calipers, side pipes, new carburetor, new white wall tires and new interior carpet. But now I'm out of money :( and having trouble tuning the Avs2 carb

  • @craigg4925
    @craigg4925 2 роки тому +2

    it's funny even back in the 80s, all the autos I owned leaked somewhere, it always seems to start around 45K.

  • @johnwycough1955
    @johnwycough1955 2 роки тому +1

    "Done with old cars."..... While standing in front of an OLD Ferrari. "OH, we can charge big time for that" "and it's mine"
    bwahahAHAHAHAHA

  • @corgiowner436
    @corgiowner436 2 роки тому +2

    Would be even more beautiful with paint correction/ceramic.

  • @antoniusp3295
    @antoniusp3295 2 роки тому +1

    Lucky me, I drive a '92 Cherokee - there's perks to having what amounts to a box of legos on wheels - lots of cross-compatibilty, simple electronics, and any bodywork can basically be fixed if you can weld.
    Gas mileage sucks tho

  • @jeffzekas
    @jeffzekas 2 роки тому +1

    Here’s the thing, if wizard’s shop had a 3-D printer, he could make parts for any car, any era, any model, just saying, it ain’t rocket science.

  • @wotrulke5868
    @wotrulke5868 2 роки тому +3

    That’s a beautiful looking car 🚙 , I see that the Nissan Juke is still hanging around 😮

  • @markiangooley
    @markiangooley 2 роки тому +2

    I had a 1988 GMC branded Suburban with TBI on its 350. Worked fine until I rolled the car in 2001…

  • @mikejohns3104
    @mikejohns3104 2 роки тому +3

    The rear main and front trans seal might be a bugger to fix. Even the Wizard gets a 50/50 shot at getting them both right first try. Wish you luck Wizard.

  • @petercoffin4978
    @petercoffin4978 2 роки тому +1

    Crossfire injection booooooo!!!..also the ugliest engine winner

  • @up-n-runnin377
    @up-n-runnin377 2 роки тому +2

    To start out, I really do love old cars. they are just cool. I feel your pain relating to old cars in a repair shop environment. You have to charge time and materials to make it worth your time. Any type of warranty is a whole other topic. A high percentage of customers have no clue what it takes to work on the "classics". Just trying to find quality parts that work/fit properly, can take hours and hours of your time. Often times finding parts take more time than the repair. Then, one problem leads to another and another, etc. Where do you stop!!!. Most customer don't understand. One thing I am guilty of on my UA-cam channel, Up-N-Runnin, is making it look easy. I can complete any job in just 20 minutes!!! In reality, it can take months to compete some of these jobs. I could write a book. Anyway.....great episode.

  • @terrypikaart4394
    @terrypikaart4394 2 роки тому +1

    Because your having a hard time fixing them..

  • @sesapup
    @sesapup 2 роки тому +1

    There were no '83 Corvettes. the C4 was supposed to debut that year, but they wisely let it ripen for an extra year.

  • @williamsouthworth5275
    @williamsouthworth5275 2 роки тому +1

    What about those front bushings on the front Anti-sway bar?

  • @domfer2540
    @domfer2540 2 роки тому +1

    My 68 Mustang is down when I work on it, not because of hard to get parts or money, it takes time because I want things done the right way. It may take a week just to put radiator hoses on correctly. It has been down sine June for new water pump, radiator and condenser. It will take another month or two just to get condenser lines put on my way. It is a hobby that I enjoy. My wife and I have many very generous offers, will never sell.

  • @brucegilbert7243
    @brucegilbert7243 2 роки тому +1

    I have a 1973 Eldorado and after driving it around I noticed sonething in the corner if the passenger side of the corner windshield. It was a recently deceased mouse. Now that's a ratted out car!

  • @rposton919
    @rposton919 2 роки тому +2

    GM's TBI, even the CrossFire Injection, can work well if you take time to understand it.

  • @mattm5786
    @mattm5786 2 роки тому +1

    You had me worried for a sec with the 1983 thing

  • @wanted-33
    @wanted-33 Рік тому +1

    I still have my Dad's '67 Camaro RS. You are so correct, when you go in for repairs it's never just one thing. I call it the "Domino Effect". When you tip one over, the rest fall one after the other. But, the old car has a home as long as I'm alive. It's in the body shop now for a little facelift. :)

  • @FernandoTRA
    @FernandoTRA 2 роки тому +3

    The steering arrangement look like the one on my early 90s Ford 6600 Ag Tractor.

  • @Barbarapape
    @Barbarapape 2 роки тому +1

    Even though i live in the UK, USA cars from the 70's and 80's are far more desirable
    than the boring tin boxes that we had to buy.
    Having owned a V8 Mustang and a Firebird at least i had a taste of what american cars were like.
    Todays EV's may be more climate friendly, but they are not desirable, and will never look and drive
    like these older cars do.
    Repairing them as David has said is another matter, in the UK most of the specialists for these cars
    have gone, my local one in Manchester closed a few years ago as they couldn't make any money
    from them.

    • @austinfrazier7325
      @austinfrazier7325 2 роки тому

      EVs are not more climate friendly than a modern ICE. That’s just propaganda.

  • @craigbathurst1185
    @craigbathurst1185 2 роки тому +1

    There is a shop in Lancaster, Pennsylvania on the corner of Prince & McGovern Street that works/ restores cars.

  • @chuckbroso
    @chuckbroso 2 роки тому +1

    For a classic, I'll keep my Quadrajet before any fuel injection/ECM system

  • @richardsmith2721
    @richardsmith2721 2 роки тому +2

    My dad bought a '79 new when I was 13. These C3's were at the height of the Malaise Era. The '79 was very similar, just not as gutless and has less useless body crap on it.
    There is an '83. GM was late with the '83, so they scrapped production. They made a dozen or so and ordered them all crushed. Someone at the plant decided to hide one and it now sits in the Corvette museum in Bowling Green. It looks like a C4 of course and not your trick with the C3.
    Also, during this time they moved Corvette production from St.Louis to Bowling Green. I believe that '82 you featured was one of the first produced in Bowling Green.

    • @midnightsun2483
      @midnightsun2483 8 місяців тому +1

      81 they started production at bowling green

  • @xoxo2008oxox
    @xoxo2008oxox 2 роки тому +4

    My friend got the bug...he finds and restores the 60-70's vettes. And wins awards at shows. Thing is, he once said he would never do an off-frame restoration. Now he's on his fourth. And its just a hobby. But yes, they are classics. Yes, they are difficult to get parts for.

    • @waterzap99
      @waterzap99 2 роки тому +1

      That's the best way to buy these cars. Let someone else spend his time, hundreds of hours at low rates to restore these things.

    • @rrf6747
      @rrf6747 2 роки тому

      The c3 was in production forever why would finding parts be such an issue

    • @Yankeededandy62
      @Yankeededandy62 2 роки тому +1

      @@rrf6747 It isn't. The problem is the delay to get them. Some take months. But you can get almost everything for a C3 (and a C2 for that matter).

  • @arthurleyba3549
    @arthurleyba3549 2 роки тому +1

    Looks like your front sway bar links are bad also.

  • @lancairw867
    @lancairw867 2 роки тому +9

    Comes with Cease Fire Fuel Injection ……😂 I though Wizard said he is done fixing old cars ??

    • @galil_6863
      @galil_6863 2 роки тому +3

      Classic cars are an addiction, just look what they did to Hoovie 😂

    • @rickcraver837
      @rickcraver837 2 роки тому +1

      He did say he was done 🤣

    • @markiangooley
      @markiangooley 2 роки тому +1

      If the Wizard is still fixing the old vehicles in another year I might start doubting he’s giving it up. Though… some things he’s already promised to do may still linger for another year, what with the parts situation.

    • @hotpuppy1
      @hotpuppy1 2 роки тому +4

      Re-watch the video again, He said he agreed a couple years ago to do the work over time when it was first in the shop>>before he cut off old car work.

    • @21Piloteer
      @21Piloteer 2 роки тому

      You didn't call out sh*t.

  • @whammond511
    @whammond511 2 роки тому +1

    I’m not a big fan of Corvettes but this one, the C3 is one of the few that I like. This particular model, the 25th Anniversary ‘Vette is one I could gladly own.
    I wouldn’t consider this as an “old” car, just a used one. You get something back in the early ‘60s and before and that I would call “old”. But I’m sure that parts ARE hard to get for almost any that I’ve mentioned.
    My ‘classic’ car is a ‘63 Cadillac Series 62 4 Window (Hardtop) Sedan deVille. I bought it in 1980. In 1981 I bought a Parts Car for it. I also began buying anything I could find NOS and mechanical. I wish now that I had tried harder to find NOS Rubber door seals etc. That’s really the best way to own an Old Car. I used to do nearly all of my own work on it. Now I only do that which I really enjoy doing.
    From a Business standpoint I get where you’re coming from but from a Customer point of view it really, really sucks. Finding a reliable Auto Shop eases one’s anxieties immensely. But to now lose it is crushing.
    I have a Brother-In-Law who lives on the Kansas/Colorado border. He has a Model “A” Ford. He just had a frame off full restoration done in it at an antique restorer in Denver. Cost him about $30,000. He’s ecstatic with it. You probably don’t have to go to the West Coast to get an Antique restored. There are such speciality shops really all over. Maybe you could figure out a way to do a new business venture of Antique Auto Repair/Restoration?
    There is a College in McPherson, KS which runs a degree program in Antique Auto Repair and Restoration. You might want to check them out if you haven’t already.

  • @vonscharf
    @vonscharf 2 роки тому +1

    Really looks like a cluster F… under the hood

  • @alanleclair1
    @alanleclair1 2 роки тому +1

    Great video. I love these C3 Corvettes.
    And congratulations for crossing 3/4 million subscribers! Been with you since 50k! 👏🎉💪

  • @videobob
    @videobob 2 роки тому +1

    Mine came-off the show room floor, love it !

  • @ShanesAutos
    @ShanesAutos 2 роки тому

    There’s a good few C3’s imported to Ireland where I live. In fact a local man I know literally five minutes from my house has one, I got a clip of it on my channel.

  • @LilYeshua
    @LilYeshua 2 роки тому +1

    Front sway bar bushings looked bad