My dad had the Volvo 122S, I loved that car and I cried the day it went, my dad had brought new cars and Fords till the day the Ford Consul 375 dad had bought brand new from Dales of Falmouth was 10 years old and dad thought it was time for a change as it was quite rusty. I don't know the full story but near were dad worked at the time in Carlisle there was a car dealership, The salesman showed dad a white Volvo saloon, it had about 70 thousand miles on the clock and dad said 'it's done a lot of miles', the salesman said 'it's a Volvo it's just run in'. It had only one previous owner, the owner of a local coach company, the bonnet had been replaced as apparently one of the coaches had backed into it. The car was very fast and I remember loving it as we passed other cars. Dad had it for about 10 years and I still remember that day when dad took it to the local Volvo dealer for some work to be done on it and being told it would cost much more than the car was worth to put right, I think it was something to do with the differential but the day before it had flown along as it always did. Dad took me and my two brothers in the evening to the dealership and through the closed gates we said goodbye to her, she really was part of the family. Her registration was FRM 333C and it is one of my wishes that one day I drive a VOLVO 122S or a 121 that then as a child I could not drive and remember dad driving and all the happy memories she gave us.
This is the car that inspired generations of army tank drivers to claim that their company vehicles were built like a Volvo Amazon. We're talking unbreakable here. I absolutely love em.
A car that's "the complete package": one that has lots of room, durable quality, comfort and is fun to drive. I also seem to have read somewhere that amazons were quite succesful as rally cars, it obviously shows in this review. Really loved this one, made me smile. Top work!
True, they used Amazons as rally cars. As a child I remember seeing them quite often, competing with the SAAB V4, Beetles and Minis (some Opels and BMW too). I think the SAAB V4 was a little better - but not much.
I think one of the best looking Volvos in the all history of the brand... My dream amazon is a 123GT (the coupe) dark green with charamel interior and some engine modifications. Beautiful video and car
Opening quarterlights disappeared long before air con became common. Security issues killed them, they were too easy to break & get access to the inside door handle/lock
Or "why didn´t I keep the ones I had", I had a couple in the early 80s, they didn´t cost anything, one was made into a pickup, really nice and very practical... 5 121 Amazons passed by too, my granddads mint `70 with 95000 kms was sold for like 1100 euros and I made a huge profit in the days... Cheers from Sweden!
Glad you're a Volvo fan now! I owned a 760 Turbo estate for many years, clocking up over 200k miles. Best car I've ever owned, reliable, rust free, and very comfortable.
Yes you are right they never had carpets like that (owners did a good job)..they left the factory with a plasticity mat that you could get in with snowy boots and nothing soaked in.
Thanks almost entirely to Matt and his furiousdrving video, I bought this Amazon a year and a half ago. It is a wonderful car, a dream to own and drive, starts first time, comfortable driving speed of 60mph, no issues. I am undergoing cancer treatment and have to buy a sensible automatic, so very sadly the Amazon is now for sale. I have put it in a car auction with Charterhouse Auctioneers/Sherborne held at the Haynes Motor Museum on July 6th. It is also online with Easylive. If you are seriously interested, please get in touch and even come for a spin. Bella
Very nice. Don't forget these did compete quite successfully in rallies. This is from an era when the elk test measured how many you could fit in the back. Very cool.
@@seancooke4127 yes Lada Rivas were the Eastern Bloc way of putting tanks across the evil West without causing all out war!! I still have the broken bones to show it 😁
@@johnedwards3198 I had a test drive in a 1988 Riva 1200 L with 58,000 miles in 1996. The old fellow wanted £300 and I wanted to pay £250 so we agreed to disagree, shook hands and parted. I bought an 87 Fiat Panda for £200 and had 2 years trouble free motoring. I have wondered to this day, should I have given him the 300 cos she was a peach with an unused spare and a full tool kit. I think I was the Tool.
"Overdrive works! Of course it does, it's a Volvo" Well, actually, it's the same Laycock-De Normanville D-type overdrive as fitted to the Triumph Spitfire and several other British cars...
That overdrive was used on 140 and 240 Volvos through until about 84. I believe they went to a 5 speed or 85, about the same time they started using the incredibly durable Aisan-Warner AW-70 3 speed auto with electric overdrive.
@@michaeltutty1540 that was the J-type overdrive, a later evolution. I remember 240's and 740's having the overdrive switch on the gear lever. From the 1980s onwards Volvo fitted five-speed gearboxes thus making the Laycock-De Normanville system obsolete.
@@volvo480 my dad's friend's 240 had the overdrive on the gearknob. I actually preferred it to a 5 speed in use. Drove an MGB with the switch on the gearknob and absolutely loved it. 65 mph cruising was a pleasure.
Originally the overdrive would have had a stalk opposite the indicator (just a little smaller). I remember ny uncle would flip it with his little finger while holding the cigarette with his index and middle fingers
We had one of those when I was a kid. It was so cool !! (unlike the 2dr sedans) I remember once I had to sit in the front, despite being 4-5 yo, because my dad had folded the rear seat to load some kind of machinery into the rear. I don't know what it was. And, I don't know how they got that machine in and out of the car, because that thing was huge! up to the roof! and made of metal, must have wheighed half a ton or so
Hubnut loved the Amazon when he tested one a year or two ago too...... Lovely video of a lovely old car. I saw one a few weeks ago, well worn but still going strong!
I believe, being a 1968, this got the steering wheel from the 140. Earlier Amazons has a different wheel. This car seems to have all the right mods, lovely! I'm more of a Saab guy, but a well fettled Amazon has got so much to offer. It's probably one of the best classics you can get, with their parts availability, lots of character, good looks, nearly indestructible mechanically, and just easy to own and live with.
Brilliant review! I grew with Amazons, my father was very successful with a 122s on the concours scene in the 90s. I now have a ‘breathed on’ 123GT. It’s the only classic I’ll ever own and ever need. Love the styling, the robustness, performance, common sense engineering and overall charm. This wagon looks like a great example. Thanks for the comprehensive review - brilliant!!
My grandfather used to have one like this (I am a Swede). He was a farmer, and the car did a lot of heavy work. He was also a hunter, so yes, there is plenty of room for bodies in the back. Easy to work on and repair, everything is accessable. This is one of the extremely few cars I would actually like to own. It is now a classic, but it can still handle heavy work - so it is also practical.
My father had the same creamy/white colour LHD Amazon estate in late 80’s. The twin carb B18B engine was so smooth and quiet, you wouldn’t hear it running and there was little or no rust on the body. Being old Volvo, LHD and on UK plates it was considered too much of an oddball in Ireland to be of any value and was sold off for a few hundred pounds. It ended up being a roadside sign for a pancake/tearoom café and I was sad to hear it was burned by vandals sometime later. A beautiful forest green Amazon estate came up for sale for €5k a couple of years ago about the week after I had just bought my Volvo 144. I wasnt allowed buy another Volvo.
Great review of an amazing car. That Red Block is the same as all the others through until the end of 940 production. In 74, it went to being an over head cam unit. Rather than reengineering the block, Volvo simply fitted a balance shaft in place of the cam. Simplicity at its best. When you take off the timing cover of your 740, the 3rd front seal is that shaft. If you don't know when last the front seals were done, best to do them. It only takes maybe an extra half hour to do the front main, front cam, and front balance shaft seals. These are the easiest of cars to work on and work with. Huge potential in them. For their time, about the safest car you could get. Friends of my folks had 2 from 1967. The first was wrecked when it was 2 months old. They were a 5 hour drive from home, in another province. The bought another to get home. That one lasted into the early 1980s. The rust finally killed it at 280,000 miles.
Damn, thats a nice car!!! I have had the pleasure of driving quite a few Volvos (PV544, P1880/SE and the moderns) - but never an Amazon. It look so cool, and that sound - Fantastic 👍🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪 GREAT video !
Germany: some moneybags bought one of these and had our local garage do a full resto on it. Took months. Beautiful car. Then it took it out on the Autobahn and blew the engine.
Could this be the best looking estate car ever? It certainly is a handsome piece of design. I have to say you really suit this and I love the way, albeit with some upgrades, it's still a very useable classic. What a great noise too.
I love it, perfect technical upgrades and the overall look 😍 I'm 24, I grew up around old Volvos in Finland :) I have literal anxiety about the electrification and the hideous taxes they plan for fuel driven cars. My Volvo history is three 740's and some rallies in a 200hp n/a redblock 240.
Me too my contry man, if theres full electrification the world wont feel the same, like electric is great for a lot of things, but so is compustion. As an example, Finland where lower end electric cars a lot of times dont have the same range as compustion below freezing. And anyways, if you want more clean transport, build more and better trolleybus, tram and rail transit you fools!
I used to have one of these in the mid 70s. It cost me £85. It had some bodywork damage when I got it, but engine was OK. I had to do the brakes shortly after I got it, but I couldn’t get one of the drums off to replace one set of shoes. It was pretty reliable overall. It’s big advantage was the amount of stuff you could get in it. And I could have slept in the back comfortably (but never actually had to). Eventually I sold it for a bit more than I paid for it, so I couldn’t complain - very useful for my needs at the time.
At the time the Amazon came out as an estate Wagon version, it followed on from the Duette. Many in Volvo asked why anyone would buy the Amazon Wagon when the Duette was so much better! I like both! Best wishes from George
Love the Amazon's. Lovely and durable cars. There was a police force in the uk who had one of these Volvo estates back in the day and there was some controversy because they bought a vehicle that wasn't UK built.
Someone may already have posted it below but hells bells Mr Furious even I know that DEFR stands for defrost and not deferral...Stunning car by the way...
What a beautifully maintained Volvo. In the early 1970s Dad owned a used 144 which was then replaced with a used 145 auto estate. Each car was incredibly tough and practical and the 145 Estate had the ultimate accolade for any of our family cars, Mum liked to drive it too! Ps What a wonderful sound too!
Interesting that you made a comparison to the P6. If I'd been asked I might have wondered if these were in the same market niche as the Landcrab. I've only once driven one, which I went to look at thinking of buying it. The car I went in was my 2000TC P6, and my opinion at the time was that the Amazon was very agricultural by comparison. It's probably a bit silly that P6s are valued at only half the money of an Amazon. I don't doubt that I would have grown to love the Amazon, but driving a P6 immediately beforehand is probably the wrong thing to do.
These must have been one of the very first cars to have adjustable lumbar support on both front seats as standard, and those seats are properly comfortable too. Headrests were available on the later Amazons, and you can see where this one has the fitting for them built into the front seat frames, but I believe they were only ever an option. A number of Volvo parts specialists, however, can supply the necessary parts to fit them if they're a requirement for you, and, if your car still has the original interior trim colour scheme, as replacement seat covers and interior trim parts are now available in colours that weren't standard back in the day, then there's a decent chance you can find a set in the right colour for your car... I love the Amazon estate, definitely my favourite of the range, and that one has all the right mods to make it a very useable and reliable car. An interesting point with the Amazon is that cars that came from the factory with the overdrive gearbox got a shorter rear axle ratio than the standard 4-speed cars, so converting a standard car to overdrive makes a lot of sense now as it makes them much happier to cruise at motorway speeds comfortably... Sadly, the days of cheap Amazons are long gone now, but this really is a car that you could buy now and still be driving when it's time to hang up the car keys for the last time. There really isn't much you can't get for these cars now, so as long as you keep the rust protection in good shape as they can rust in odd places, they're very capable of being eternal cars. And the styling is just achingly cool...
I've been drooling over this one for a few weeks now. Only eleven years ago there was a nice dark grey one for £4,500 at a local show,he who hesitates etc.Still,sitting in my nice old T5 wagon watching this.
After seeing Guy Martin's crazy wagon I am totally in love with these things. I have always been a wagon lover, in fact my dream car in high school 1997 was the 850 sportswagon. Thanks for this video. I thoroughly enjoyed it.
Absolutely splendid, it's in wonderful condition. A real gem of a vehicle, and a great practical classic. Thanks for doing this video Matt. I went on their website and notice as well as this stunner, they've also got a Mk1 Granada Ghia! Fans of The Sweeney like myself and I'm sure many other Furious Driving members, would be drooling also over such a rare find! I wonder if they'd be kind enough to let you film that one if it's a car that you'd be interested in? The downside is the steering wheel is on the wrong side, but being a French example it had a better chance of surviving, due to our rubbish winters here in Blighty!
Just subscribed. Just brought home a 1993 240 sedan- triple black with 157 k miles. Wow. What an adjustment. Looks fab, looks expensive in a retro way. Feels a bit slow on the highway up hills. Could use new tires. Steering drifts a bit. Has potential . Will be used primarily for rock band transportation. Wagons welcome. Vikings welcome. Greetings from mtw and 99 in LA. new Volvo drivers.
A Classic Volvo. I think that every Volvo will be a classic. They have been selling them with a 20 year guarantee since the 1980s and if you think about, they don't show rust until 20 years. That upholstery is indeed a very warm colour. Sounds very fruity too, twin carbs, that'll do nicely.
These were common in California, still in the 1980s. A friend of our family drove one, dark blue. The majority of cars I have owned have had Quarter lights/wind vents. Fords in the U.S. had seatbelts as an option in 1956.
What you missed in the safety description is the way the engine is mounted. It is designed so that in case of a frontal collision the engine slides under the car instead of into the cabin.
What a very tidy vehicle for its age. I suppose we got them in Australia. I'm not sure I've ever seen one, but I would think that such a robust machine would have been very suited to Australian conditions. I like the styling and, having been a Passat estate owner now for some years, there's a lot to be said for that practicality. I'd own one of these in a heartbeat. As always, a very interesting video. Thanks.
Thats a beautiful car. I'd love to own that. The interior is stunning...the seats, the dash. And the steering wheel gets a 10 out of 10 from this steering wheel fanatic! Cracking car 😊👍
I very much like the fact that Volvo used the same designer from year 1700 to 3000 and it can certainly be seen in their cars! Wonderful examples of motorhooding there.
Here in Canada, I own a US-spec 1968 Volvo 122s two-door that was built in Göteborg. I'm currently restoring it because some minor repairs revealed areas of the car that had been neglected or poorly repaired in a 1990s restoration. I'm not sure if this is a US-spec or 122s level related thing, but the lower portion of the dashboard has padded knee protectors. Mine also has factory headrests. The lever to open the door is a dark plastic instead of chrome, which is odd considering the window lever is chrome. Steering wheel is the same as in the wagon in this video, and the seatbelts were replaced with a later Volvo inertial reel set. I'm trying to go back to the original static belt to install for car-shows, but it's extremely difficult due to Volvo having only produced the "toaster" style for a very brief time before making them impossible to order even in service (the part number automatically re-directs to the later inertial reel design). The carpets the owner put in are the older "Amazon" branded design. My later car has a boring regular carpet without any branding. Even in stock configuration without all the suspension upgrades, these cars indeed have a very smooth ride. Even my modern car enthusiast friend who couldn't care less about classics was impressed.
The black toggle is for the overdrive and the yellow one is for the fog/spot lights. The DEFR logo is for defrost. The rev counter is as that fitted with the 123GT and was an extra on this car and the later 122S. There should also be what looks like the pull chain for a loo but is in fact a radiator blind to facilitate fast warming on winter days in colder climates!! I think that the engine upgrades are what was fitted to the 123 GT the car Volvo used in their rally team and as supplied to the Swedish Police Force in estate and coupe (2 door) form. The car brings back a number of memories as I knew it’s first owner. It would have been sold by Seymour Horwell main Volvo dealers in Newton Abbot, Devon and may have been registered to either Ken Watkins or Western Machinery & Equipment Co Ltd.
A guy I knew in Geneva had one of these when I stayed with him in 1970, in the same colour too. I remember it being a very comfortable car and nothing like as noisy as the one in this video. It was however a nearly new car. I remember the more modern boxy shape estate had just been introduced and the 121/122 was now old hat, but still a very nice car.
nearly bought one of these about 7 years ago for £900 - I passed because it was a restoration job and I was worried about the cost of spares etc. I grew up in the 70's and 80's with volvos as our family cars, loved the 240 estates, I like the car, but I really don't like that strip speedo, don't like it in any classic, but great video, thanks for posting
@Herr Johansson it wasn't made by DAF. DAF initially had a proposed new model. Volvo developed it and put it in to production. The safety features on my 345 are Volvo's idea.
That's my kind of car. I hope some day you'll do a review of the Peugeot 504 - preferably manual transmission - also preferably estate version... Great review, thanks.
Always interesting reviews mate, can't say Volvo's ring my bell but back in the day they made cars like this with...curves!😲 Who'd of thought? Stop the madness!
@Herr Johansson The 850 was always a car I wanted to like, but never could. I'm reasonably sure every single one of them developed rattles and squeaks in that enormous plastic dash within seconds of leaving the dealer.
What a early morning treat for my birthday! If you can send this stunning car to Edinburgh Please. Excellent review, another car to add to the garage of dreams.
That car looks like great fun. I really think you should buy it Matt. There is definitely something special about a Volvo. I had a 960 and a V70, and they are just such likeable and dependable cars.
I think that bench seat thing is a myth. The 140 also had the handbrake on the door side and so did the porsche 924 aswell as many english and italian older cars as I remember. I think it's mostly because they hadnt yet streamlined the production for both right/left hand drive. Might also be slightly easier to maintain if the cables are not obscured by the exhaust.
i have owned a few triumph 2000's ( some estates ) and a few rover P6's & i wish i'd bought one of these 20 years ago .. if there is one thing i would love to see make a return .. 1/4 lights
The Philips AC480 radio in this car is a late 1970s model. I know because my dad's Citroën DS had a similar one (next to the original 1960s LW/MW radio) in 1979. The Turnolock system was a crude mechanical preset, in the days before electronic tuning. These radios are highly sought after today, though a radio without FM is virtually useless...
It says 480 on it, so that's possibly the source? At any rate, it's got to go! My parents' US-spec 1965 wagon had a "Volvo by Bendix" AM radio--that's what this car needs. I've always found it hilarious how far from the driver Volvo placed the radio in these cars.
PV544 was the first Volvo to have the seat belts. Bench seats could be spec'd in 4 door cars and were popular in some markets, Africa, Cyprus etc, between '62 and'64 models. Column change so 4 in the front and 4 in the back, with no seat belts. LOL. Very few of those left now. Factory Estates never had overdrive but they had the low back axle. Were considered a Commercial in some ways. OD a popular conversion and now days essential if you want a bit of peace on the motorway and you prefer to cruise with normal traffic. Upholstery colour is "Tan". These comments from an owner. See the timing gear failure on my channel!
3:09 didnt know split tailgates were even a thing back in the 1960s! Thought that came from landrovers. This volvo looks very sturdy for such an old car.
Lovely example. Re: the stereo. I think that one of my parents' cars had one like it, maybe the 1980 Talbot Horizon. 🤔 Static rear seatbelts obviously have been added later, they look like they came from a 1980s/90s Mini.
In North America, rear belts were standard fitment in 66, I believe. Inertia reel belts were used on these early on, too. For safety, the 3 point harnesses from a late 240 will bolt right in.
Matt - your link to Percival Motors is broken. There's a few extra https// in there. Not a secure website ... hmm. Still looked at the Amazon though, and had the steering wheel been on the correct side, I would certainly have been tempted.
No tea shelf! You did not mention it or seem disappointed over the lack of. They were not important on 50's & 60's designed vehicles it seems. That one appears to have had a very relaxed life most that I've seen have the load space very battered even when fairly new.
In Scandinavia, where I come from, the Volvo Amazon was very common back in the day. It was not a luxury car, more a competitor to a Morris Oxford or Landcrab than a Rover P6, which was a luxury car here. Because the Volvos were sturdy cars that lasted long, in the eighties and nineties they were still relatively common as transport for people who needed a family car but couldn't really afford it. So you could see a lot of them broken down by the roadside. Also because of they way they are constructed (recirculating ball steering with a lot of rods - live rear axle control arms with dampers mounted mid-way between axle and body) when the rubber bushings get old, the handling which was never razor sharp, deteriorates into absolutely awful. So I've always regarded the Amazon as a pretty crappy car. It's funny, because in the UK the Volvo Amazon was always seen as a "cool car" and today, when only restored and well maintained cars are left on the roads I can absolutely see why. Back in my childhood my uncle had a 122S which he would regularly drive in excess of 100 mph on regular roads (legal back then), so I guess they handled quite well when new. I thankfully did not have a good view out of the window bacause of the high waistline but I was scared nevertheless, particularly since much of the driving was done on the wrong side overtaking the slower trafic.
The first foreign car to be used by a UK police force; Northants Constabulary in 1968 as I recall. The force had a big motorway commitment and wanted an estate car. As I recall it came down to two contenders, the Volvo and the Humber Super Snipe Estate. The Bobbies favoured the Humber but the Chief Constable went for the Volvo. The press went bonkers!
The safety roll cage which protects, all the people inside the car was first used in the 140 series, showing the strength, reliability of it*s cars, also I don*t know if it is still done, if there was an accident where a Volvo was involved, a crew would be sent to the scene to investigate as to how it happen, and how they can improve on their cars
I wasn’t sure. You know there are people on the internet who are really that uninformed. No disrespect intended. Sad face emoji. By the way, I grew up on British cars in the 60’s, and I know for sure that the British notion of defrost could conceivably refer to something else entirely.
What an absolutely wonderful car. It’s so appealing and a great example too - it’s in fabulous condition and the styling is beautiful amd even the mods are tasteful and worthwhile. Love the references to boot size and bodies lmao! Great video Matt!!
My dad had the Volvo 122S, I loved that car and I cried the day it went, my dad had brought new cars and Fords till the day the Ford Consul 375 dad had bought brand new from Dales of Falmouth was 10 years old and dad thought it was time for a change as it was quite rusty. I don't know the full story but near were dad worked at the time in Carlisle there was a car dealership, The salesman showed dad a white Volvo saloon, it had about 70 thousand miles on the clock and dad said 'it's done a lot of miles', the salesman said 'it's a Volvo it's just run in'. It had only one previous owner, the owner of a local coach company, the bonnet had been replaced as apparently one of the coaches had backed into it. The car was very fast and I remember loving it as we passed other cars. Dad had it for about 10 years and I still remember that day when dad took it to the local Volvo dealer for some work to be done on it and being told it would cost much more than the car was worth to put right, I think it was something to do with the differential but the day before it had flown along as it always did. Dad took me and my two brothers in the evening to the dealership and through the closed gates we said goodbye to her, she really was part of the family. Her registration was FRM 333C and it is one of my wishes that one day I drive a VOLVO 122S or a 121 that then as a child I could not drive and remember dad driving and all the happy memories she gave us.
Good anecdote, thanks for sharing!
This is the car that inspired generations of army tank drivers to claim that their company vehicles were built like a Volvo Amazon. We're talking unbreakable here. I absolutely love em.
I had a 1970 example for a year or so back in the 80,s - best damn car ever! It just worked!
A car that's "the complete package": one that has lots of room, durable quality, comfort and is fun to drive. I also seem to have read somewhere that amazons were quite succesful as rally cars, it obviously shows in this review. Really loved this one, made me smile. Top work!
True, they used Amazons as rally cars. As a child I remember seeing them quite often, competing with the SAAB V4, Beetles and Minis (some Opels and BMW too). I think the SAAB V4 was a little better - but not much.
I think one of the best looking Volvos in the all history of the brand... My dream amazon is a 123GT (the coupe) dark green with charamel interior and some engine modifications. Beautiful video and car
Hey, my 122 coupe is dark green with charamel interior. Its funny you say that!
Opening quarterlights disappeared long before air con became common. Security issues killed them, they were too easy to break & get access to the inside door handle/lock
If you went on a campsite anywhere in the UK the late 60s early 70s the campsite will be full of these Amazons very sturdy very well built cars
Yet another "Why didn't I buy one while it was affordable?" car lol.
MGF would be one of those one day...
Ford Puma and KA, if you can weld.
Or "why didn´t I keep the ones I had", I had a couple in the early 80s, they didn´t cost anything, one was made into a pickup, really nice and very practical... 5 121 Amazons passed by too, my granddads mint `70 with 95000 kms was sold for like 1100 euros and I made a huge profit in the days... Cheers from Sweden!
In Sweden this now costs 350.000kr
Glad you're a Volvo fan now!
I owned a 760 Turbo estate for many years, clocking up over 200k miles. Best car I've ever owned, reliable, rust free, and very comfortable.
At that mileage, it was barely run in! The good driving was about to start.
Yes you are right they never had carpets like that (owners did a good job)..they left the factory with a plasticity mat that you could get in with snowy boots and nothing soaked in.
Thanks almost entirely to Matt and his furiousdrving video, I bought this Amazon a year and a half ago. It is a wonderful car, a dream to own and drive, starts first time, comfortable driving speed of 60mph, no issues. I am undergoing cancer treatment and have to buy a sensible automatic, so very sadly the Amazon is now for sale. I have put it in a car auction with Charterhouse Auctioneers/Sherborne held at the Haynes Motor Museum on July 6th. It is also online with Easylive. If you are seriously interested, please get in touch and even come for a spin. Bella
Very nice. Don't forget these did compete quite successfully in rallies. This is from an era when the elk test measured how many you could fit in the back. Very cool.
Or how many Elk you could plow through in your Swedish tank
@@johnedwards3198 a bit like Austin Cambridges and Lada Rivas. Kick the bodywork and you may break a toe before you make a dent.
@@seancooke4127 yes Lada Rivas were the Eastern Bloc way of putting tanks across the evil West without causing all out war!! I still have the broken bones to show it 😁
@@johnedwards3198 I had a test drive in a 1988 Riva 1200 L with 58,000 miles in 1996. The old fellow wanted £300 and I wanted to pay £250 so we agreed to disagree, shook hands and parted. I bought an 87 Fiat Panda for £200 and had 2 years trouble free motoring. I have wondered to this day, should I have given him the 300 cos she was a peach with an unused spare and a full tool kit. I think I was the Tool.
"Overdrive works! Of course it does, it's a Volvo"
Well, actually, it's the same Laycock-De Normanville D-type overdrive as fitted to the Triumph Spitfire and several other British cars...
But not installed by angry Brummies...
That overdrive was used on 140 and 240 Volvos through until about 84. I believe they went to a 5 speed or 85, about the same time they started using the incredibly durable Aisan-Warner AW-70 3 speed auto with electric overdrive.
@@michaeltutty1540 that was the J-type overdrive, a later evolution. I remember 240's and 740's having the overdrive switch on the gear lever. From the 1980s onwards Volvo fitted five-speed gearboxes thus making the Laycock-De Normanville system obsolete.
@@volvo480 my dad's friend's 240 had the overdrive on the gearknob. I actually preferred it to a 5 speed in use. Drove an MGB with the switch on the gearknob and absolutely loved it. 65 mph cruising was a pleasure.
Originally the overdrive would have had a stalk opposite the indicator (just a little smaller). I remember ny uncle would flip it with his little finger while holding the cigarette with his index and middle fingers
We had one of those when I was a kid. It was so cool !! (unlike the 2dr sedans)
I remember once I had to sit in the front, despite being 4-5 yo, because my dad had folded the rear seat to load some kind of machinery into the rear. I don't know what it was.
And, I don't know how they got that machine in and out of the car, because that thing was huge! up to the roof! and made of metal, must have wheighed half a ton or so
Hubnut loved the Amazon when he tested one a year or two ago too...... Lovely video of a lovely old car. I saw one a few weeks ago, well worn but still going strong!
The grab handle is called the “Jesus bar”
*oh shit handle*
I'd love one of these perfect daily classic
I believe, being a 1968, this got the steering wheel from the 140. Earlier Amazons has a different wheel.
This car seems to have all the right mods, lovely! I'm more of a Saab guy, but a well fettled Amazon has got so much to offer. It's probably one of the best classics you can get, with their parts availability, lots of character, good looks, nearly indestructible mechanically, and just easy to own and live with.
Brilliant review! I grew with Amazons, my father was very successful with a 122s on the concours scene in the 90s. I now have a ‘breathed on’ 123GT. It’s the only classic I’ll ever own and ever need. Love the styling, the robustness, performance, common sense engineering and overall charm. This wagon looks like a great example. Thanks for the comprehensive review - brilliant!!
My grandfather used to have one like this (I am a Swede). He was a farmer, and the car did a lot of heavy work. He was also a hunter, so yes, there is plenty of room for bodies in the back.
Easy to work on and repair, everything is accessable. This is one of the extremely few cars I would actually like to own. It is now a classic, but it can still handle heavy work - so it is also practical.
My father had the same creamy/white colour LHD Amazon estate in late 80’s. The twin carb B18B engine was so smooth and quiet, you wouldn’t hear it running and there was little or no rust on the body.
Being old Volvo, LHD and on UK plates it was considered too much of an oddball in Ireland to be of any value and was sold off for a few hundred pounds. It ended up being a roadside sign for a pancake/tearoom café and I was sad to hear it was burned by vandals sometime later.
A beautiful forest green Amazon estate came up for sale for €5k a couple of years ago about the week after I had just bought my Volvo 144. I wasnt allowed buy another Volvo.
Lovely, charming little car. Whenever I see an Amazon it puts a huge smile on my face.
Great review of an amazing car. That Red Block is the same as all the others through until the end of 940 production. In 74, it went to being an over head cam unit. Rather than reengineering the block, Volvo simply fitted a balance shaft in place of the cam. Simplicity at its best. When you take off the timing cover of your 740, the 3rd front seal is that shaft. If you don't know when last the front seals were done, best to do them. It only takes maybe an extra half hour to do the front main, front cam, and front balance shaft seals. These are the easiest of cars to work on and work with. Huge potential in them. For their time, about the safest car you could get. Friends of my folks had 2 from 1967. The first was wrecked when it was 2 months old. They were a 5 hour drive from home, in another province. The bought another to get home. That one lasted into the early 1980s. The rust finally killed it at 280,000 miles.
Damn, thats a nice car!!! I have had the pleasure of driving quite a few Volvos (PV544, P1880/SE and the moderns) - but never an Amazon. It look so cool, and that sound - Fantastic 👍🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪 GREAT video !
My grade 11 Geography teacher, Mr. Richardson, at FWCI, in Thunder Bay, Ontario, had a 66 Volvo 123 GT. What a car, what a teacher!
Germany: some moneybags bought one of these and had our local garage do a full resto on it. Took months. Beautiful car. Then it took it out on the Autobahn and blew the engine.
My Grandfather had that very car, fond memories
South Devon car, I'm sure I remember it driving around a few years back.
Could this be the best looking estate car ever? It certainly is a handsome piece of design.
I have to say you really suit this and I love the way, albeit with some upgrades, it's still a very useable classic. What a great noise too.
I love it, perfect technical upgrades and the overall look 😍 I'm 24, I grew up around old Volvos in Finland :) I have literal anxiety about the electrification and the hideous taxes they plan for fuel driven cars. My Volvo history is three 740's and some rallies in a 200hp n/a redblock 240.
Me too my contry man, if theres full electrification the world wont feel the same, like electric is great for a lot of things, but so is compustion. As an example, Finland where lower end electric cars a lot of times dont have the same range as compustion below freezing. And anyways, if you want more clean transport, build more and better trolleybus, tram and rail transit you fools!
I used to have one of these in the mid 70s. It cost me £85. It had some bodywork damage when I got it, but engine was OK. I had to do the brakes shortly after I got it, but I couldn’t get one of the drums off to replace one set of shoes. It was pretty reliable overall. It’s big advantage was the amount of stuff you could get in it. And I could have slept in the back comfortably (but never actually had to). Eventually I sold it for a bit more than I paid for it, so I couldn’t complain - very useful for my needs at the time.
6:23 They used a compressed fibre timing gear from the factory, not plastic. They didn't go out of time so much as they would just crumble one day!
This happened to my Saab V4.
At the time the Amazon came out as an estate Wagon version, it followed on from the Duette. Many in Volvo asked why anyone would buy the Amazon Wagon when the Duette was so much better! I like both!
Best wishes from George
Love the Amazon's. Lovely and durable cars. There was a police force in the uk who had one of these Volvo estates back in the day and there was some controversy because they bought a vehicle that wasn't
UK built.
Someone may already have posted it below but hells bells Mr Furious even I know that DEFR stands for defrost and not deferral...Stunning car by the way...
This is the video that made me want an Amazon. I bought a 130 (the 2 door) in January. I’ve been enjoying driving it all summer. Thanks Matt!
That is awesome!
Love this video and your channel - never miss an upload. I do find the bodies in the boot references jarring though.
What a beautifully maintained Volvo. In the early 1970s Dad owned a used 144 which was then replaced with a used 145 auto estate. Each car was incredibly tough and practical and the 145 Estate had the ultimate accolade for any of our family cars, Mum liked to drive it too! Ps What a wonderful sound too!
Interesting that you made a comparison to the P6. If I'd been asked I might have wondered if these were in the same market niche as the Landcrab. I've only once driven one, which I went to look at thinking of buying it. The car I went in was my 2000TC P6, and my opinion at the time was that the Amazon was very agricultural by comparison. It's probably a bit silly that P6s are valued at only half the money of an Amazon. I don't doubt that I would have grown to love the Amazon, but driving a P6 immediately beforehand is probably the wrong thing to do.
Looks like a genuine useable classic, love seeing someone respectfully upgrading a car.
These must have been one of the very first cars to have adjustable lumbar support on both front seats as standard, and those seats are properly comfortable too. Headrests were available on the later Amazons, and you can see where this one has the fitting for them built into the front seat frames, but I believe they were only ever an option. A number of Volvo parts specialists, however, can supply the necessary parts to fit them if they're a requirement for you, and, if your car still has the original interior trim colour scheme, as replacement seat covers and interior trim parts are now available in colours that weren't standard back in the day, then there's a decent chance you can find a set in the right colour for your car...
I love the Amazon estate, definitely my favourite of the range, and that one has all the right mods to make it a very useable and reliable car. An interesting point with the Amazon is that cars that came from the factory with the overdrive gearbox got a shorter rear axle ratio than the standard 4-speed cars, so converting a standard car to overdrive makes a lot of sense now as it makes them much happier to cruise at motorway speeds comfortably...
Sadly, the days of cheap Amazons are long gone now, but this really is a car that you could buy now and still be driving when it's time to hang up the car keys for the last time. There really isn't much you can't get for these cars now, so as long as you keep the rust protection in good shape as they can rust in odd places, they're very capable of being eternal cars. And the styling is just achingly cool...
Totally agree on the speakers, I would have to find some period speaker grills, even some 70s grills would look better.
I've been drooling over this one for a few weeks now. Only eleven years ago there was a nice dark grey one for £4,500 at a local show,he who hesitates etc.Still,sitting in my nice old T5 wagon watching this.
Saw an Amazon and smashed like before even watching the video. Great stuff Matt!
After seeing Guy Martin's crazy wagon I am totally in love with these things. I have always been a wagon lover, in fact my dream car in high school 1997 was the 850 sportswagon. Thanks for this video. I thoroughly enjoyed it.
As a modern v70 volvo estate owner...I bloody luv the split tailgate n hinged number plate...why didn't they keep this feature on modern Volvo's?
3:25 - Actually the top hatch can be locked at various angles including nearly shut with the hatch support on the right hand side. :)
Isnt DEFR, “Defrost”?
That was the joke.
Ay I assumed he was being sarcastic, so I didn't comment.
yeah but who wants the actual answer?
Defibrillate surely😏
@@jacklane6076 quite possibly!
Absolutely splendid, it's in wonderful condition. A real gem of a vehicle, and a great practical classic. Thanks for doing this video Matt.
I went on their website and notice as well as this stunner, they've also got a Mk1 Granada Ghia!
Fans of The Sweeney like myself and I'm sure many other Furious Driving members, would be drooling also over such a rare find!
I wonder if they'd be kind enough to let you film that one if it's a car that you'd be interested in? The downside is the steering wheel is on the wrong side, but being a French example it had a better chance of surviving, due to our rubbish winters here in Blighty!
Just subscribed. Just brought home a 1993 240 sedan- triple black with 157 k miles. Wow. What an adjustment.
Looks fab, looks expensive in a retro way. Feels a bit slow on the highway up hills. Could use new tires. Steering drifts a bit. Has potential . Will be used primarily for rock band transportation. Wagons welcome. Vikings welcome.
Greetings from mtw and 99 in LA. new Volvo drivers.
A Classic Volvo. I think that every Volvo will be a classic. They have been selling them with a 20 year guarantee since the 1980s and if you think about, they don't show rust until 20 years. That upholstery is indeed a very warm colour. Sounds very fruity too, twin carbs, that'll do nicely.
18:20 On the heater controls DEFR is not deferral but defrost. Gorgeous car, perhaps the ultimate practical classic.
These were common in California, still in the 1980s. A friend of our family drove one, dark blue. The majority of cars I have owned have had Quarter lights/wind vents. Fords in the U.S. had seatbelts as an option in 1956.
What you missed in the safety description is the way the engine is mounted. It is designed so that in case of a frontal collision the engine slides under the car instead of into the cabin.
What a very tidy vehicle for its age. I suppose we got them in Australia. I'm not sure I've ever seen one, but I would think that such a robust machine would have been very suited to Australian conditions. I like the styling and, having been a Passat estate owner now for some years, there's a lot to be said for that practicality. I'd own one of these in a heartbeat. As always, a very interesting video. Thanks.
Thats a beautiful car. I'd love to own that. The interior is stunning...the seats, the dash. And the steering wheel gets a 10 out of 10 from this steering wheel fanatic! Cracking car 😊👍
My old boss back in the 1980s had one of these great car built like a tank the thickness of the steel body panels was amazing
I very much like the fact that Volvo used the same designer from year 1700 to 3000 and it can certainly be seen in their cars! Wonderful examples of motorhooding there.
Here in Canada, I own a US-spec 1968 Volvo 122s two-door that was built in Göteborg. I'm currently restoring it because some minor repairs revealed areas of the car that had been neglected or poorly repaired in a 1990s restoration.
I'm not sure if this is a US-spec or 122s level related thing, but the lower portion of the dashboard has padded knee protectors. Mine also has factory headrests. The lever to open the door is a dark plastic instead of chrome, which is odd considering the window lever is chrome. Steering wheel is the same as in the wagon in this video, and the seatbelts were replaced with a later Volvo inertial reel set. I'm trying to go back to the original static belt to install for car-shows, but it's extremely difficult due to Volvo having only produced the "toaster" style for a very brief time before making them impossible to order even in service (the part number automatically re-directs to the later inertial reel design). The carpets the owner put in are the older "Amazon" branded design. My later car has a boring regular carpet without any branding.
Even in stock configuration without all the suspension upgrades, these cars indeed have a very smooth ride. Even my modern car enthusiast friend who couldn't care less about classics was impressed.
Oh gosh Matt, that would be one of my alltime dreamcars! A truly interesting video as always.
Always loved the Amazons. So stylish.
@11.20 Heater controls had a deferral option? I'd have stuck with a simple defrost!
The black toggle is for the overdrive and the yellow one is for the fog/spot lights. The DEFR logo is for defrost. The rev counter is as that fitted with the 123GT and was an extra on this car and the later 122S. There should also be what looks like the pull chain for a loo but is in fact a radiator blind to facilitate fast warming on winter days in colder climates!! I think that the engine upgrades are what was fitted to the 123 GT the car Volvo used in their rally team and as supplied to the Swedish Police Force in estate and coupe (2 door) form. The car brings back a number of memories as I knew it’s first owner. It would have been sold by Seymour Horwell main Volvo dealers in Newton Abbot, Devon and may have been registered to either Ken Watkins or Western Machinery & Equipment Co Ltd.
A guy I knew in Geneva had one of these when I stayed with him in 1970, in the same colour too. I remember it being a very comfortable car and nothing like as noisy as the one in this video. It was however a nearly new car. I remember the more modern boxy shape estate had just been introduced and the 121/122 was now old hat, but still a very nice car.
nearly bought one of these about 7 years ago for £900 - I passed because it was a restoration job and I was worried about the cost of spares etc. I grew up in the 70's and 80's with volvos as our family cars, loved the 240 estates, I like the car, but I really don't like that strip speedo, don't like it in any classic, but great video, thanks for posting
lovely car. I remember riding in one of these, that my uncle owned. He had it for a good twenty years!
I am a Volvo fan and have a 345DL. I love the Amazon.
@Herr Johansson it wasn't made by DAF. DAF initially had a proposed new model. Volvo developed it and put it in to production. The safety features on my 345 are Volvo's idea.
Never drove one, but the saloon, always looked 'right' in my eye.
YES!!
I've always wanted to see a review of this. I had a ride in one in Norway when I was on holiday as a kid.
That's my kind of car. I hope some day you'll do a review of the Peugeot 504 - preferably manual transmission - also preferably estate version... Great review, thanks.
That has a B18B, A meant single carb, B was twin carb when it comes to the 4cyl engines
Always interesting reviews mate, can't say Volvo's ring my bell but back in the day they made cars like this with...curves!😲 Who'd of thought? Stop the madness!
If you think this has curves, check out the P444 and P544!
I've got the Volvo bug after purchasing my Mk2 V70 2.4 Turbo. Literally the best car I've ever owned...❤
@Herr Johansson The 850 was always a car I wanted to like, but never could. I'm reasonably sure every single one of them developed rattles and squeaks in that enormous plastic dash within seconds of leaving the dealer.
These videos are becoming dangerously professional 😄
17:35 the 6 cylinder eventually ended up in the 164. But afaik they weren't that well regarded as the 4 cylinder engines.
What a early morning treat for my birthday! If you can send this stunning car to Edinburgh Please. Excellent review, another car to add to the garage of dreams.
Happy birthday 🎂
Happy birthday! Hope your family clubbed together and got you a decent '60s car!
@@furiousdriving a P6 was just out of their price range.....
Matt, you missed a trick not wearing the knitted Swedish jumper! 😃 I do love these cars and will be checking used prices.
What I should have work was my Amazon face mask!
That's a keeper, a truly exciting and usable classic. Plus it can only go up in value!
That car looks like great fun. I really think you should buy it Matt. There is definitely something special about a Volvo. I had a 960 and a V70, and they are just such likeable and dependable cars.
Love these estates! Can you also review the mk2 Mondeo? I grew up with that
Great video, my aunt still has the saloon version.
The sound of that engine ! Learnt to drive on a 1980 200 series If you dont know the old Volvos you would not understand
I think that bench seat thing is a myth. The 140 also had the handbrake on the door side and so did the porsche 924 aswell as many english and italian older cars as I remember. I think it's mostly because they hadnt yet streamlined the production for both right/left hand drive. Might also be slightly easier to maintain if the cables are not obscured by the exhaust.
i have owned a few triumph 2000's ( some estates ) and a few rover P6's & i wish i'd bought one of these 20 years ago .. if there is one thing i would love to see make a return .. 1/4 lights
The Philips AC480 radio in this car is a late 1970s model. I know because my dad's Citroën DS had a similar one (next to the original 1960s LW/MW radio) in 1979. The Turnolock system was a crude mechanical preset, in the days before electronic tuning. These radios are highly sought after today, though a radio without FM is virtually useless...
It says 480 on it, so that's possibly the source? At any rate, it's got to go! My parents' US-spec 1965 wagon had a "Volvo by Bendix" AM radio--that's what this car needs. I've always found it hilarious how far from the driver Volvo placed the radio in these cars.
Thanks for the heads up on Nordic Noir, good call. Great video as always 👍
PV544 was the first Volvo to have the seat belts. Bench seats could be spec'd in 4 door cars and were popular in some markets, Africa, Cyprus etc, between '62 and'64 models. Column change so 4 in the front and 4 in the back, with no seat belts. LOL. Very few of those left now. Factory Estates never had overdrive but they had the low back axle. Were considered a Commercial in some ways. OD a popular conversion and now days essential if you want a bit of peace on the motorway and you prefer to cruise with normal traffic. Upholstery colour is "Tan". These comments from an owner. See the timing gear failure on my channel!
3:09 didnt know split tailgates were even a thing back in the 1960s! Thought that came from landrovers.
This volvo looks very sturdy for such an old car.
Loved this. More Volvo please. If you can track down a 262C you'd be a super hero! (actually you already are - brill channel)
Lovely example.
Re: the stereo. I think that one of my parents' cars had one like it, maybe the 1980 Talbot Horizon. 🤔
Static rear seatbelts obviously have been added later, they look like they came from a 1980s/90s Mini.
In North America, rear belts were standard fitment in 66, I believe. Inertia reel belts were used on these early on, too. For safety, the 3 point harnesses from a late 240 will bolt right in.
Matt - your link to Percival Motors is broken. There's a few extra https// in there.
Not a secure website ... hmm.
Still looked at the Amazon though, and had the steering wheel been on the correct side, I would certainly have been tempted.
No tea shelf! You did not mention it or seem disappointed over the lack of. They were not important on 50's & 60's designed vehicles it seems. That one appears to have had a very relaxed life most that I've seen have the load space very battered even when fairly new.
forgot!
What a lovely car Matt, bags of character and personality.
Always liked the Amazon could see myself having one of these along with a rover p5 coupé in the garage
Hi Matt,nice drive video a very clean classic Volvo Amazon, certainly don't see these on the road now.a tidy example.
In Scandinavia, where I come from, the Volvo Amazon was very common back in the day. It was not a luxury car, more a competitor to a Morris Oxford or Landcrab than a Rover P6, which was a luxury car here.
Because the Volvos were sturdy cars that lasted long, in the eighties and nineties they were still relatively common as transport for people who needed a family car but couldn't really afford it. So you could see a lot of them broken down by the roadside.
Also because of they way they are constructed (recirculating ball steering with a lot of rods - live rear axle control arms with dampers mounted mid-way between axle and body) when the rubber bushings get old, the handling which was never razor sharp, deteriorates into absolutely awful. So I've always regarded the Amazon as a pretty crappy car.
It's funny, because in the UK the Volvo Amazon was always seen as a "cool car" and today, when only restored and well maintained cars are left on the roads I can absolutely see why.
Back in my childhood my uncle had a 122S which he would regularly drive in excess of 100 mph on regular roads (legal back then), so I guess they handled quite well when new. I thankfully did not have a good view out of the window bacause of the high waistline but I was scared nevertheless, particularly since much of the driving was done on the wrong side overtaking the slower trafic.
The first foreign car to be used by a UK police force; Northants Constabulary in 1968 as I recall. The force had a big motorway commitment and wanted an estate car. As I recall it came down to two contenders, the Volvo and the Humber Super Snipe Estate. The Bobbies favoured the Humber but the Chief Constable went for the Volvo. The press went bonkers!
Volvo's biult like tanks, FANTASTIC, love them,drive and last forever if you look after them.
The safety roll cage which protects, all the people inside the car was first used in the 140 series, showing the strength, reliability of it*s cars, also I don*t know if it is still done, if there was an accident where a Volvo was involved, a crew would be sent to the scene to investigate as to how it happen, and how they can improve on their cars
Been enjoying yourself again, sir? Those brakes were quite something. My favourite bit was the colour of the interior, though. Most pleasing...
The brakes are surprisingly sharp, this was enjoyable in every way!
@@furiousdriving , looks as if we have both been enjoying some classic Volvo action over the last few days.
A British driver might not know this, but "DEFR" means defrost, as in windshield.
it was a joke..
I wasn’t sure. You know there are people on the internet who are really that uninformed. No disrespect intended. Sad face emoji. By the way, I grew up on British cars in the 60’s, and I know for sure that the British notion of defrost could conceivably refer to something else entirely.
@@altaclipper fair point, its just my odd sense of humour!
What an absolutely wonderful car. It’s so appealing and a great example too - it’s in fabulous condition and the styling is beautiful amd even the mods are tasteful and worthwhile. Love the references to boot size and bodies lmao! Great video Matt!!