According to You: These rides were nothing but bad luck
Our last question to you, our readers, asked about cars that were seemingly cursed—vehicles laden with more bad luck than usual. Your answers went above and beyond, and it proves that Hagerty Media readers have many great stories in store. So have a look and feel free to contribute more stories of automotive bad luck in the comments section! Misery loves company.
55 years of torment from a ’55 Chevy
@DUB6: I had typed out a rather lengthy story about a ’55 Chevy I once had, (and since I type with one finger, that was quite the investment). Just as I clicked “post comment,” the internet went down and all my work was lost. I decided that cursed car was still working against me, even after 55 years! I’m now scared to try and retell the details, so you’ll just have to imagine how bad it was…
@T’Mak: More than the inconvenience, I’d be more scared about how it knew where you were after 55 years! Just saying…
Some Eagles do not soar
@TG: My sister bought an Eagle Premier at an auction and it nicked and dimed her to death. I took the car on and did all the repair work to get it sea worthy. Drove it to work and totaled it on the way home.
Taking the Thunder out of the Bird
@64 Mustang: My sister bought a new 67 T-Bird that appeared to have a sign on it saying “hit me.” She was never in the car when it was hit, it was parked, but she would return to a new dent. One hit caused the rear right fender to occasionally rub the tire so she made an appointment to get it fixed. The weekend before the appointment she flew out of town and when returning the cars rear right fender was it again causing it to bend in such a manner it no longer rubbed the tire so she canceled the body shop appointment. She gave up have the damages repaired and by the time she traded the car off it looked more like a prune that a T-Bird.
Problem Pontiacs
@JW: My father in law had a ’66 GTO that seemed to be possessed. It was a rust bucket but it had a Tri-Power 428 (I guess it added lightness?). The car would start honking as you walked away from it every so often. And then stop as you approached the car. Like your pet dog at the screen door as you walked away.
@MartinAston: My 1993 Trans Am: four Opti-Sparks distributors in 3 years thanks to GM putting it under the water pump. Requisite water pumps. A fuel pump. Never had both window regulators work at the same time for more than 3 months. The rear seat decided to unfold itself and chomped on my friend as he was getting in the backseat. It didn’t like my one ex-girlfriend at all. But then again, neither did I after less than a month. She had a R-titled Audi TT that leaked spare change.
Not exactly a Triumph
@Paul: I “adopted” a 1973 TR6 about 4 years ago and it’s been the child I never had. 1st week the fuel pump literally blew apart all over the road 2 blocks from my house on the way to work. Then found out fuel line was plugged at the same time. The next year 2nd gear synchro failed and I decided to upgrade to 5 speed. While replacing tranny refurbished starter and leaking rear diff. Last year, hit a pothole breaking passenger control arm off the frame. Replaced entire front end. Truth be told I knew it was all original (50 years) so doing it was good and with the new trans the car is tight and better than new! Expensive sure but when you drive it money doesn’t matter!!
A cruel Corvette summer
@David: I bought a 1981 Corvette from a hunting buddy of my dad. It was in Wichita Falls, and I could not undo my seatbelt. Honked the horn, and the attendant offered me a knife to cut it off after trying for half an hour. It released just as I was ready to cut. I burned through all 4 tires on the way back to GA. The computer fried itself, the suspension was crap. Mechanics expressed fear when they looked at it. The alarm went off only when parked, and at 3:00 AM. Had to be some nasty demons in that ride. I had it trucked back to Texas.
@Oversquare+Bore: My bad luck Corvette seemed to break regularly. A weird, unusual crank no start problem cause me to fire the parts cannon at it. I FINALLY got it running and then shortly after it bent two pushrods because of an unrelated overheating issue. I got it running and shortly after the fuel pump relay died.
Then I got it running and the positive lead the coil burned through.
Then I got it running again and it needed a battery (and later a starter) because of the constant abuse from trying to diagnose all these issues in my driveway…..
Crazy like a VW Fox
@Bruce: 1988 VW Fox GL sport sedan. The rear brake line melted by the exhaust pipe – thankfully the parking brake worked, water in headlights, and various electrical gremlins like the horn blowing when starting the damn thing. I bought it used (64K miles) for a commuter to keep miles off my truck and dumped it within 6 months.
Getting the full Monte
@JV: My first, and only, new car was a 1988 Monte Carlo SS. The check engine light came on when I drove it home from the dealer. I couldn’t run the A/C on the highway on a warm day without overheating. The A/C had to be recharged every year. The Metric 200 transmission was replaced 4 times under warranty. The damn things would blow out seals, and fluid would gush out onto the exhaust, and leave an oily cloud of smoke behind me. It left me walking 3 times while it was under warranty. I sold it and bought a ’94 Thunderbird Super Coupe, which I still have.
Blazingly bad luck?
@Rick: 1996 Chevy Blazer: Transfer case 3 times, transmission at 6000 miles, alternator/wiring burn, steering constantly having to adjust to stay straight. I could go on and on. All was covered under warranty but riding around in a loaner Geo on a ongoing basis was not what I had hoped for when I signed the lease on that thing. Drove off the lot brand new but luckily it was a lease. The lease company begged me to purchase it at the end of the contact. After 6 or 7 offers each lower than the last, I told them not to call me unless they were making plans to pick it up. The seats were really comfortable though.
The Land of the Lotus Eaters
@Exhausted Flyer: 1969 Lotus Elan S3: Bought with zero miles on it from the lawyer for the importer. Said importer went to Europe for a vacation and decided not to come back, liquidated everything. I paid about half the sticker price for the car and didn’t get my money’s worth. Everything you can imagine and many things you can’t imagine went wrong with that car and it was brand new. Lotus delivered the car in a car-shaped container with all the bits (or most of them), it was up to the buyer to assemble the car and hope for the best. Great fun when it ran, which was about once a payment. It isn’t a car, it is a career.
@William: I fell for a 1973 Lotus Europa JP Special #92 of 100. Beautiful gloss black with gold pin stripes and only 32,000 miles on it. It was 1976 and I had a pocket full of cash from being in school for 6 months. Bought it from the head of the school upon graduation. I was driving from Governors Island, NY to my new duty station in Washington, DC. Noticed it was using oil then first 3rd gear went. Then 4th gear went. I pulled into a service station and asked if the mechanic could help. I lifted the hood and the mechanic leaned in and put his hand on the small, fiberglass, storage bin cracking/crushing it. He apologized and admitted he couldn’t help.
Found a dealership who assured me that they had the knowledge and skill to rebuild it. They rebuilt the motor and transmission. It took them 3 months and cost almost as much as I’d paid for the car. Drove it home. I’d gone less than 30 miles when the engine just stopped. The left cam had broken because the cam tensioner had been screwed all the way down (e.g. over tightened). Found a English mechanic who had experience with twin cam motors to rebuild it again. Five months later it was ready. Drove it to Savannah, GA to ship it to my next duty station in Hawaii. It arrived months later in Oahu. Someone had left the windows down and the interior was ruined. Mold everywhere, the wood dash cracked, the carpets rotted. the panels warped. They refused to do anything about it. Took months to repair and replace. Beautiful, exotic, limited production seductress had enchanted and left me destitute. A life’s lesson that I’ve yet to learn.
Cadillac problems
@Dan: I bought a 68 Cadillac Convertible two years ago. Nice car but I never can quite relax when driving it. Every part needs to replaced twice. Every job results in another. On a road trip from FL to NC I got the first flat tire of my life. The car also boiled over without explanation on the way into Charleston. Had not been even warm before or since and the radiator is alway full.
Porsche: There is No Substitute
@Exhausted Flyer: I had two 1972 (?) Porsche 914s, and made one (mostly) out of them. The steering was fabulous, razor sharp, the rest of the car was an unmitigated disaster. Seven different locks (front hood, ignition, both doors, glove box, engine lid, rear trunk), every one was different. I learned how to re-key wafer locks on that one. Rear calipers frozen (rust), rubber bands connecting shift lever to transmission, zero access to the engine, rubber weather stripping left black marks on my clothes if I even got too close, I didn’t have to brush up against them, ECU went on vacation at random, coast to a stop wait 20 minutes and it would run again (for a while), and you could WATCH it rust. Sold it, the guy wanted to pay me in weed, nope, the color’s right but it has to be money.
Discharged by the Charger
@Chuck: My ’69 Charger S/E that I bought around 1979. I loved that car and it left me stranded more times in the in the six months I owned it than the following 44 years. You name it, and I had a problem with it. Only 80 some thousand miles as I recall but what a mechanical nightmare. I sold it to a friend of mine who was fully aware of the problems I had with it. Three days later, it spontaneously combusted at a shopping mall and burned to the ground.
@Archie1954: I bought a 1976 Chrysler Cordoba brand new from the factory. Within 13 or 14 months the car’s hood became dull and I wondered why. A rep from Chrysler told me that the car had fallen off the moving truck when it was being delivered and needed hood work and a new paint spray (which was now dulling.) I asked him if the company would pay to have the hood repolished and he said no! Within a short time after that, the car refused to start and had to be towed to the dealer 11 times before the dealer would do anything about it. I was tearing my hair out by that time. Needless to say, I never purchased another Chrysler vehicle.
(Yes, I put this Cordoba under the Charger heading since there was a 1975 Charger based on this vehicle. – SM)
Healing after the Healey
@Les: OMG Yes I’ve had a nightmare car before, a 1967 Austin Healey 3000 BJ8.
Never did find a new windshield and wiper blades for it, even in England and that Wit-worth thread hardware and tools were almost as elusive as any other part for it. The Snap-On guy looked at me like I had a third eye when I asked about Witworth spec tools and even Fastenal had to order what ever hardware I needed. The tools and whatever hardware I had went with the car shortly after and think I only kept that car for about 1 1/2 years before I found someone more adventurous than me!
About the only thing I was able to find commonly was oil, spark plugs and filters then I normally had to special order the filters. Don’t get me wrong now, it was blast to drive and show off but man-oh-man what a bear to find parts for. As fun as it was, I’ll never own another one!
Sidelines by a sidecar?
@john: I’m enjoying reading these: Mine isn’t a car, but a 1974 Ural Sidecar Motorcycle rig, a Russian copy of a WWII era BMW sidecar rig with a very interesting story. I ultimately nicknamed it the ‘anti-Christ’. I’m fairly mechanically inclined and these are basic units, I carried spares and tools galore but the number of times that thing stranded me were countless.
Having to find my way home, get my truck, drive back, secretly hoping someone stole it by the time I got there, left the keys in it once. Then have to disconnect the sidecar, shoe horn it all into the back, bring it home and often enough to be frustrating as hell, have it fire up and run like a, well, tractor. It leaked gas purposely from the carbs, called ‘tickling them’ to get it started. I popped the valve covers off and peered into intake ports and have never seen rougher interior castings, how that thing ran at all is a mystery. When it did, it could pull a stump out of the ground. It would go through anything including snow banks but that was usually because brakes were SO bad.
My palms are sweating just typing this despite a parting smile of recalling “flying the chair” around corners!
Jettisoning the Jetta
@Robert: I sold my beloved 1986 Peugeot 505 Turbo due to the lack of proper French mechanics left in Toronto, and replaced it with a 1988 VW Jetta Slalom: pretty enough in Orly Blue, the 14″ VW mags plus a tail spoiler, but it lacked excitement (100HP), and on the occasions that we had snow, it was abysmal to drive. My wife and I enjoyed it, kinda, for a few years until everything started to go on it.
I had a good mechanic located a block away from our house, for whom I paid for his swimming pool with that car. It seemed like a quarterly thing that there would be a $400 bill to fix something. Everything. Also, it kept getting in minor accidents: Never my fault, a dump truck crumpled the rear quarter at a light because the driver didn’t notice my car stopped there. Finally, with 155,000 km on the clock, as it was literally falling apart while I drove it, I traded it in at a VW/Audi dealer to get $2,500 off my URS4 Audi which lasted me for 18 delightful years before I sold it to another appreciative soul. (For $8,500!!!) I now have another Audi and a Volkswagen, with both of which I am smitten.
Wouldn’t you really rather have a…
@02 original owner: Our first new car in 16 years and our very first GM vehicle: an ’85 Buick Century, V6, custom ordered, dark blue, heavy duty everything–except reliability. Took the dealer two years to find a persistent thump from the engine–a defective serpentine belt. Never did find the random electrical glitch that caused the lights to dim, engine to hesitate and the radio to go bonkers. Worst of all, within 18 months the paint started to crack and flake.
Despite numerous requests to Buick, they wouldn’t make good on this new water base paint they were field testing on their customers. So we sold it to a co-worker and bought an Acura Legend which we kept for 18 years. Oh, within two months of selling it, the transmission died at 64k miles. It was our last GM car…
Motorrad Mishaps
@Roger: I took European delivery of two 600cc BMW motorcycles. First year of a new model. When my traveling companion bent his front fork tubes in a small crash, we spent June, July and August in a Munich campgrounds while we should have been touring. We waited for the parts they wouldn’t sell us – evidently they could sell more of these new models than they could produce so they weren’t about to squander some new parts to fix our problem.
My machine had countless problems with handling, clutch, diff lube leaking on rear brake, carb flowing gasoline onto my foot, un-openable seat lock. Worst of all, the ignition points would be burnt every 600 miles due to oil leaking around the camshaft seal. We also learned the bikes were hard starting in the cold since locals were calling it winter by the time we were finally able to get to Scandinavia. We experienced so much dishonesty and apathy at the source of BMW that I now often repeat my vow from back then: “I wouldn’t buy even a rollerskate if it said BMW on it”. The tale of my experience offends some fans of that marque. Sorry, not sorry.
Fix it Again…
@stephen: My 1970 Fiat 850 Spyder, supposedly an advance over the 1968 model that I’d enjoyed, developed an insatiable appetite for water pump shafts, replacement of mag (?) wheels (turned to chunks and dust on Ontario winter roads) and tires (Pirelli had allegedly sold Fiat a batch of improperly compounded tires). It was nice when it was running, I think. Fiat abandoned the North American market soon thereafter. You may recall “Fix It Again Tony.”
Customers with bad luck?
@Exhausted Flyer: Not a car, a person . . .
Nicest guy you’d ever want to meet, gentle, well mannered, worked as a chef on yachts. Not a hot-rodder, even though he was gentle to machinery, vehicles hated him. He bought a gently used MB diesel, had it checked out first, mechanic said this is a good one. Next day, the “good one” spectacularly blew the engine halfway between Miami and Naples on Alligator Alley.
He bought a BMW R60/2 with a sidecar, low mileage, well maintained. Two days later, the engine died (bad crank). I replaced the engine for him, two days later, the rear end blew (and that’s the ONLY /2 rear end I have EVER seen die.) I found him a replacement.
Then it got worse. The yacht owner wanted to have his boat delivered up north, he took the motorcycle and tied it to the deck of the yacht (tarpaulin to keep some of the salt air off it). They hit a sand bar about 20 miles off the coast of Virginia, the yacht came to a sudden stop, the BMW didn’t . . . it broke loose and cleaned EVERYTHING in front of it off the yacht, including our guy the chef. They fished him out of the water, he was OK, the motorcycle is still in a watery grave somewhere in the Atlantic. Someday some scuba diver/treasure hunter is going to come across a BMW with a sidecar 20 miles off shore from the nearest land and ask “What the (insert appropriate adjective here) happened here?”
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I bought a new 1977 Nova Ralley. The only Chevy product I bought new. The transmission lasted 900K’s (metric 200). The thing was in the dealer for warranty more than it was on the road. Eventually 3 years later it burnt up going up a steep hill, the trans overheated & blew trans fluid on to the exhaust…
Renault Fuego bought brand new – Among the litany of horrors: Cruise control burned out the 30 Amp fuse, driver’s seat back fell into the back seat, off the lot, it didn’t have retainers for the sun visors, the gray trim at the bottom of my white car was all streaked from the “protectant” applied for the overseas shipping, the left outside mirror just unglued from its frame, the engine would die when shifted into reverse as the torque loosened a connector (I guess the French saved a couple Francs by shortening the wire). So much for getting a deal as an AMC employee. At least, I eventually sold it for 61 crisp $100’s, then the truth got out and Fuegos couldn’t be given away!
I had three different ’80s Fords strand me at various very inopportune times with the dreaded ignition module full stop. The good part was the company got hit with class action lawsuit and years later I got reimbursed for all of the repairs.
It’s hard to buy a bad F-150 Truck new off the lot, but we managed. It had the much touted and celebrated V-6 Eco-boost that was supposed to be a tech marvel. We followed all the scheduled maintenance like it was a holy charter. Everything went fine for about 100K and then the timing chain went out. The injectors clogged up. Both the turbochargers packed in. It was almost too much fun until metal particles showed up in the engine oil analysis. We needed a new engine, but you couldn’t find a replacement anywhere. Even if you could it was a 20K job. We scotch taped it all together and traded it in on a new F-150 with a good ol’ Coyote V-8. I know some guys brag how they have over 200K on their Eco-boosts and goin’ strong. Well, I’m not one of them. I’ll take a pass. Thanks.
Thunderbird from Hell
I bought a 1987 Turbo T-bird in 1993. It was a one owner car with 55000 miles. It was beautiful – pale metallic red with a red interior. 5 speed with all the bells and whistles. I owned it until 1997. During that time the following events occurred:
1. On the FIRST DAY I owned it the catalytic converter failed and stopped up the exhaust system. The exhaust manifold was glowing cherry red when I (barely) got to my destination.
2. At about 57K miles the timing belt broke. Luckily it was not an interference engine.
3. The electronic ignition went out soon thereafter, leaving me straned.
4. The clutch went out and the transmission needed new synchronizers and blocking rings
5. The alternator failed, again leaving me stranded.
I had never had a car with so many problems in my life. Bought it for $5500 and was very pleased to get $3000 for it. Then being a Ford fan (or so I thought) I then bought a two year old Taurus SHO. THAT is a whole other story…
Sorry, but if a car left me stranded once it would be down the road. I have had several breakdown but it has always been in my driveway after I got home or before I went somewhere.
Don’t believe the Healey 3000 used any Whitworth in 1967. I bought a ’64 new; beautiful, sounded neat, but not well put together. Lots of rattles after a couple of months. Also, stock handling was a bit squirrely.
As posted above, bought a ’71 Porsche 914 — traded in a great Opel GT for it! Right after I got it I had to replace all four Koni shocks. Picked it up at the shop, went two miles and got stuck on a freeway on-ramp when the clutch gave out. Replaced the clutch (everything — the clutch had blown up). Back to the shop, and now I’m about $3000 in debt!
Now it’s running good (after $150 for four plug wires and a fuel filter) and it’s a kick to drive. I suddenly figure out the front and rear plates don’t match (one’s from a Ford Galaxy), so I have to fight with DMV over registration.
After six months I get rid of this thing — only I’m paying for repair bills for the next year!
Regrding the Austin Healey: No wonder you had problems………..your “mechanic” friend told you to get Whitworth …………NOTHING in an Austin Healey is anything other than standard inch fine thread , except for standard NC threads on large items like suspension and steering bolts. Another common misunderstanding is the British cars were metric…….NOPE. I’ve had seven of these, four I’ve restored from the ground up , including swapping in the terrific Jules Frame which is made outside of Guelph Ontario and is exactly the way Healey frames were made of very rigid square and rectangular tubing before Austin changed to stamping out sheet metal to make flimsy fast rusting frames. They are fabulous handling, very torquey and drove circles around a new Datsun 240Z I owned then went back to Healeys. Driven across Canada and US east coast several times with no problems at all as long as you use fresh double sided female bullet connectors in the wiring harness connections. Used ones become loose connections. I still have three.
1984 Fiero. On the first oil change, the bung for the drain broke off in the oil pan. And the water pump was leaking. Blew head gaskets. Cluster failed. Exhaust melted bumper. Brakes and tires gone in 20k. Lemon law case. Another engine. A crash. Cost me my job at Pontiac, a girlfriend, got me evicted and ended up dumping it back on GMAC. At over 75, the headlights raised themselves, and the windows would bow out. Never stopped overheating. One car, and it almost destroyed my life.
I feel for you. By the mid eighties, effects of cost cuts by GM affected all their products. I bought a new ‘85 Grand Am with the Buick 3.0L engine. Synthetic oil from new yet at 21,000 kms the oil pressure relief valve stuck on their poorly designed external oil pump. After that costly repair, the rest of the car prematurely rotted away.
Reading these posts I’ve decided I am indeed a lucky man. I’ve had some cars rife with minor problems that added up to “I’m never gonna buy another (X)!”, but ultimately I’ve only had two cars leave me stranded. In both cases I could have avoided the tow truck if I’d been alert to an impending problem or smart enough to fix it before it stranded me. The one stranding me the most was my $100 ‘68 Barracuda, but in truth I think that car was sent my way for a reason. I learned to work on cars with that one, and maybe more importantly, that living with some inconvenience can be the road to success. Friends my age often saddled themselves with monthly payments higher than the total cost of my car; about the time they paid off the note I was buying my first house.
As mentioned in the article… Fiat 850 spyder… First Fiat owned and last Fiat owned… it took less than 8 months to realize to never, ever, ever, ever, EVER own one again. 40 years later, still holding strong.
I noticed a lot of badly built Malaise-era cars, domestic and imports, in this discussion. No surprise there. My worst car was a 1990 Porsche 911 C4 that I bought for only CDN$14K in 2010 or so. It had had a hard life — rust-free but Florida sunburned and cheaply repainted, with dubious maintenance and repairs. I had the ABS module rebuilt but it did not solve the problem, which was in the wiring, clearly. My wife hated it with a pallid fury, so when the engine blew, I simply GAVE it to my mechanic. Ka-ching! There were no more sports cars in my life for a decade.
Evidently Les (Healing after a Healy) didn’t belong to a Healey club, nor heard of Moss Motors.
I missed the call for bad car treatises so here is a very short review of the brand new ’87 Camry we bought: Day 1 – Opened trunk, carpet is out of alignment by about 3 inches. Unscrewed trim plate, punched new holes in carpet, replaced trim. Day 2 – noticed trim around windshield was blistered. Dealer replaced. Year 2 – car was surging at 50 mph. Dealer service manager said my diagnosis of injector problems was wrong because I wasn’t a Toyota-trained mechanic. Two months later after 4 more visits to dealer, I corralled the Zone Service Manage. Spent a few hours with him driving, testing and they finally replaced the fuel injectors. The last straw was when it just died in about year 4 for the 3rd time leaving us stranded miles from home. Got rid of it and bought a used Saab. Loved that car. It became the first of 3. We’ll never again buy a Toyota. Now in a pair of Porsches.