5 stick-shift classics for sub-$25K fun

Marketplace/Brian Middleton

Whether it’s a fun weekend cruiser or back-road runner, a manual transmission adds a whole lot to the driving experience. More direct engagement between driver and machine goes a long way. That’s especially true when our beloved collector cars are a tonic for the more clinical, modern daily driver.

In many cases, the personality of a car can shift considerably without a sluggish torque converter in the mix. A clutch and a third pedal don’t have to cost big bucks, either. No matter the number of speeds, we bet there’s something you can find out there that would make a fine next addition to your collection.

1997 BMW Z3

Asking Price: $8300

Whether you want to go top-town, top-up, or hardtop, this low-mileage Z3 has you covered (or uncovered)! The 1.9-liter roadster is finished in Boston Green with a well-kept beige leather interior and shows fewer than 100,000 miles on the odometer. Its flywheel, clutch, and pressure plate were apparently replaced about five years ago, and its slave cylinder was replaced about a year after, so it should have plenty of more miles of happy shifting yet to give. In this lightweight, four-cylinder roadster, the engagement from a manual is a key ingredient.

1974 VW/Corsair Stripper

Asking price: $11,000

According to the seller, this early ‘80s dune buggy is one of about 150 built by Corsair during the ‘80s. Those numbers make it rare, but the fact that it’s a VW-based dune buggy that isn’t trying to copy a Meyers Manx puts it in a completely different category. The unique concept behind the Stripper was that it used a steel tube chassis rather than lots of buggies that used a shortened VW Beetle floor pan as the chassis. The idea was that the car could be run on the dunes without the body as a sand rail, and the body could be installed for use on the street. We just like the way the swoopy creation looks, with its louvered rear hatch making a perfect late-‘70s and early-‘80s styling statement.

1988 Chevrolet Corvette

Asking Price: $11,500

C4 Corvettes are a bit underrated. They have clean styling, a competent chassis, pop-up headlights, and, most important, a digital dashboard. Who needs a mid-engine platform when you’ve got a digital tachometer that looks like it came from an arcade game? This 1988 Corvette has had significant maintenance, including a new clutch, pressure plate, and flywheel so that the next owner can enjoy shifting the 4+3 Doug Nash transmission for many miles to come. Most of the accessories and the serpentine belt is new, along with a new Magnaflow cat-back exhaust to help that Tuned Port Induction 350 sing. You could certainly spend a lot more money on a car that’s nowhere near as rewarding to drive.

1978 Chevrolet Camaro

Asking Price: $13,900

By 1978, the Camaro’s factory engine offerings weren’t much to write home about, with the top offering sputtering out just 170 hp. The body style was still quite sleek, however, making them just as good a project car as earlier second-generation Camaros. Luckily this car up for offer in Homestead, Florida, has a fresh 350 under the hood that replaced its 145-hp 305. Now with over twice the power, rowing the gears is even more fun.

Of course, we also have to mention the blue-on-blue, Canadian tuxedo look. We love it, and not just because Jay Leno is one of our writers. The paint has been refreshed, but that interior is original. We dare you to fight the urge to suit up in jeans and a chambray shirt when getting behind the wheel of this classic.

1989 Ford Mustang GT

Asking Price: $22,500

The lightweight Fox-body platform is like a Swiss Army knife and can be put into a variety of roles depending on the driver’s need. Their massive popularity and vast aftermarket of parts to choose from meant that they became the go-to chassis to build into a drag car, track toy, and everything in between. That also means that it has become increasingly more difficult to find clean examples of Mustangs from the ‘80s that didn’t turn into highly modified hot rods. Even this seemingly pristine example has been modified, in this case from automatic to manual transmission. However, if the right factory parts were used, and proper care was taken, this conversion could be seamless. We especially like this Cabernet Red over Titanium two-tone convertible because it does look like a well-maintained original as the interior as well as under the hood has aged quite nicely.

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Comments

    surprised hagerty admited to the existance of z 3s I own 2 of them,,great drives for what you pay for them..but if car shows are your thing..[ im not into them ] forget it..nobody is interested in them..but thats part of what makes them a good..dollar value

    Early Z 3s are a thief’s bargain nowadays. Yes, the early ones aren’t super fast and maybe they won’t take home a lot of trophies at the autocross, but darn, they are pretty. I saw one on display at the United Airlines concourse at Chicago O’Hare when they first rolled out. It was light metallic blue just like the one in the current James Bond movie at the time. I must have stood there and stared at it for ten minutes. It captured my heart.

    Someone warned me, when I was much younger about cheap strippers.

    If you like V8 rumbles, and what American born male doesnt at least get nostalgic… Mustang is the “grins per mile” winner. Plethora of aftermarket parts and simplicity of construction.

    #0 – Miata. It’s the one everyone already knows has a fantastic manual transmission. Plus great reliability and lower maintenance costs, cheap to insure, huge motorsports community, and near limitless options for customizing.

    We have a 97 Z3 2.8 presently. Great car, super engine, and never had a single problem. It’s a winner. I had a 69 350 corvette and at the price of the one in the article, it’s great fun and hard to beat!

    Any list of fun-for-the-bucks manual cars is not credible if it doesn’t include the BMW E82 128i sport/msport. Falling way under your price constraints and supplying the feel and performance BMW used to be known for before 4-cylinder engines with turbos, the 128i is beginning to achieve a reputation that even has Bring-A-Trailer for once allowing them in their auctions—and they are tearing it up. Call it a poor-man’s 1M if you must, I intend to enjoy mine for the rest of my life as one of my favorite BMWs, even after over 50-years of BMW ownership.

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