According to You: Which classics were underappreciated when new?
We asked and you answered! Last Friday was Collector Car Appreciation Day, so we wanted examples of the breed that people don’t necessarily consider. We can all appreciate a hot Corvette, a plucky Porsche, or one of the many muscular American icons that had an instant following that only grew as time progressed. My initial suggestion of the Chevrolet Nova was well received by members of the Hagerty Community, as the compact was forced to play second fiddle to other Chevrolets in the same showroom. Your feedback went above and beyond my sample answer and covered all the bases.
Well, perhaps not every single base—but the submissions represent a good smattering of vehicles that will inspire you to think about underappreciated classics. So have a look!
1980–81 Buick Skylark Sport
Now this will get the ball rolling! Hagerty Community member @Gerald knows that GM snuck some gold into them there X-body hills, and not just in the form of the Citation X-11.
The 1980–81 Buick Skylark Sport Sedan looked like a Mercedes sedan of the period (sort of, if you squinted), and it had no hood ornament (rare for a Buick), a front air dam, the 2.8 liter (same as Mercedes-Benz’ I-6) V-6, and a four-speed transmission. I’d take it in for service and they’d have to find someone who knew how to drive a stick. Actually, not bad-looking for the period but, like all cars back then, it rusted like crazy.
The interior was bulletproof—luckily, because I discovered the passenger side floor was gone, held up only by the thick vinyl backing of the carpet. Patched it with fiberglass. Drove and handled nice for the period. Very few sold; people just didn’t associate “sport sedan” with Buick. Mine looked just like the picture except it was a four-door and wore no stripe.
1994–1998 (SN-95) Ford Mustang
@MarveH: People thought the 1994–98 SN95 Mustangs looked soft or something; I don’t know, because looks aren’t the number one thing for me. Many didn’t like the weight increase but that was from the reinforced structure over the Fox-body Mustang. (If you want any power from a Fox you have to do those reinforcements on your own anyway.) Another complaint was the 4.6 V-8—Ford left a lot of power on the table with its measly 210 hp. It doesn’t take much, however, to get even a two-valve mod motor up to some serious power.
Oldsmobile Jetfire
We couldn’t agree with @Frank more: It’s taken way too long for collectors to appreciate the Olds Cutlass Jetfire, which, he writes, “flat out flew, but like the Fuelie Corvettes, they were hard to work on as the ‘new technology’ was foreign to the average person.”
Lincoln Mark VII LSC
Perhaps the first production hot-rod Lincoln always had a following, but it was never as popular as the song that mirrored its mission. But @John couldn’t afford the most luxuriously aggressive Fox-body Ford product until now:
I finally acquired a car that I liked when new but couldn’t afford. I worked at a dealership where I was able to “test drive” a Lincoln Mark VII LSC. Fast forward to last January and I bought a black-on-black ’92 with 38,000 miles. It is not a race car, but a nice road-trip car that both corners and drives well. They have a small but strong following, but not mainstream by any means. To drive one is to understand, and you will become a fan.
BMW M Coupe
@Randy: Are we talking about just American cars, GM cars (with a concession to 5.0 Mustangs)? Because on a much—much—smaller scale, I’ll mention the 1999–2002 BMW M Coupe and 2.8/3.0 non-M coupes.
Admittedly a polarizing style, built by enthusiasts for enthusiasts! The dealerships hated them for lingering so long, and many were traded to among dealerships as an add-on with a car another dealership wanted to have; they’d trade you the one you want as long as you take the second-place coupe too! Nowadays, and particularly with the 2001–02 (S54 engine) versions, clean low-mile cars are going for 150 percent of their MSRP! The 1999–2000s aren’t doing too badly either, especially compared to their more numerous open versions (the Z3 and M Roadsters).
Ford Mustang II King Cobra
While the Mustang II sold like hotcakes, it just never got the respect it deserved from Mustang purists. @Hooch speaks up for the black-sheep Stang: “I love a hot-hatch compact car with a V-8.”
AMC Hornet Hatchback
While I am not sure that @Mitch is correct about the Hornet being the first hatchback on the market (1971 Vega?), there’s no doubt that this car doesn’t get enough recognition.
Underappreciated then, underappreciated now: 1973 AMC Hornet Hatchback. The very first of the hatchback trend, and the six-cylinder drivetrain was bulletproof. I drove mine 174,000+ miles with the original clutch. It finally “gave up the ghost” after the front suspension became too rusted to weld on, so my cousin pulled the engine and tranny and drove it in his Gremlin for several more years. Until that unibody rusted out. I bet that engine is probably still running somewhere!
Volvo 140/240 Series
@snailish: In North America, I vote for Volvos. I’m talking about the bricks from the late 1960s to ’80s. Sure, they had their niche cult following, yet wider appreciation wasn’t in the cards. But now you have all sorts of flavors of in the Volvo fanbase: original, LS-swapped, etc.
@Dennis: I know I loved mine, @snailish! I had a 1970 Volvo 142 in dark blue (rather than white, red, or black). I think it was just me and Corvettes that had four-wheel disc brakes as standard equipment (of the non-exotics in that era). And it even had a mechanical system to provide some antilock brake protection. I swear it saved me from rear-ending someone. I could go on . . . but as the advertisement of the time predicted, I had mine for 11 years.
Fox-body Mercury Capri
@Scott: I wanted a Mustang GT for my first car, however, I was responsible for insurance and fuel. Insurance made it a no-go and I was disappointed until I discovered a most unappreciated alternative—the Fox-bodied Mercury Capri with the 5.0 engine and automatic transmission. OK, the last part wasn’t great but it dropped the insurance cost down to a level I could afford. We spent many weekends searching for one between Chattanooga and Atlanta only to find a copper-colored example with TRX wheels and tires within a half mile of my parents house. Man, those TRX tires gripped the road.
My dad bought the car about a week before he told me as he was waiting on a new set of Michelins he’d ordered. I’d fill the tank with Amoco Gold (white gas as my dad called it) and add a can of 104+ octane boost. The exhaust fumes would bring tears to your eyes but good Lord, that car would fly. I wore those tires out in 24,000 miles and had to buy the next set ($400). They must have changed rubber compounds as the second set lasted much longer.
1955–57 Chevy Task Force
This truck brought about an interesting thread about the rise in popularity of all work trucks in recent history. Tri-Five Chevy automobiles have been in the spotlight since 1955, but when did you really see the trucks going for big bucks? More to the point:
@DUB6: Sajeev, I agree 100 percent with you on the Nova but my vote is really for a truck rather than a car. The 1955–57 Chevy 1/2 pickup was just looked upon as a work vehicle (business or home or farm) when introduced. It lived in the shadow of the Tri-Five cars for years. Still does to some extent, but due to the surging popularity of light pickups in general, they certainly qualify as “classic” and “collectible” these days. I learned how to drive in a green ’55 long-bed Stepside and thus fell for them early in life, but I don’t think they were appreciated by the masses as much when new as they are now. I see them restored and shown all the time.
@Jeff: I would say that the Cameo version was always somewhat special.
“Bullnose” Ford F-Series
@Jeepcj5: My 1985 F-250 and 1986 F-150 were underappreciated. Even though Fords are usually the best-selling truck, older/classic Ford trucks still live in the shadow of Chevy trucks. Also, my 1968 Chevelle Malibu, because it’s a four-door post sedan. When I got the car years ago, most people turned their nose up to a four-door. It seems that a lot of people are coming around to the notion that any old car is neat in its own way.
Cadillac Roadsters
@TG: Allanté, anyone? I love mine . . . take all of the lingering 1990s-era complaints off the table, and it is a great car. It’s 30 years old and the styling is not terribly far off the mark of Cadillac’s current offerings. Plenty of power, handling is a little soft but as to be expected for a luxury-oriented car. Fun to drive and turns heads everywhere I go—particularly heads of people not involved in car collecting who don’t know they are supposed to hate it.
@David: TG, I’m adding another Cadillac . . . the XLR.
@audiobycarmine: The XLR is/was always a wow car. It’s the “Waldorf-Astoria” of Corvettes.
All of them!
@Justin: This is an easy answer: ALL of them! Remember, every high-dollar collector car was once a worn-out rusty junker that no one wanted. Most of them only become collector cars because they get expensive.
Most people want them because everyone else wants them, this is certainly the case with my early Broncos. Ten years ago I tried selling my ’73 Bronco, which had a 1990 EFI Mustang engine, a five-speed from a Dodge Dakota, power steering, and disc brakes, all for $5500. Only one person came to look, and they complained about the dings, dents, and faded paint.
Now that Broncos are expensive, I have random strangers stopping and wanting to buy mine. They don’t want it because they “have always wanted one,” rather because they think they can quickly flip it for a fast buck or use for a status symbol now that Broncos are expensive. Remember, some Dodge dealers converted the Super Birds and Daytona back to Chargers with the normal front end so they could sell them. And some of the Cobra race cars were given away because they couldn’t sell them. You never know what car is going to be the next one to shoot up in value.
@77GL: All of them. Cars have always been built to be disposable and that destiny came true for almost all of them.
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Why oh why do I waste my $$$ on car insurance with you people? DO YOU even know what a corvair is?
You should read the article. Specifically the first two paragraphs. To sum them up, this article was assembled by submissions (from people like you) on a previous article. The Corvair ins’t mentioned in the article above, did you mean to comment somewhere else?
My first new car (and special ordered) was a 1970 Chevy Nova. It was Forest Green (or whatever the actual GM color name was in 1970) with a black vinyl interior. Only options were Rallye wheels with white-lettered tires, body side molding, bumper guards and AM radio. The drivetrain was a 307 with a floor-mounted three-speed tranny. Purchased it from AJ Foyt Chevrolet in Houston. It cost $2,600 drive out (tax/title/license). Paid cash with “grass money.” (No, not THAT kind. Ten years of mowing yards.) I had lusted after a 1970 Dodge Dart Swinger 340 4-speed but I couldn’t afford the insurance. (The three-on-the-floor was an insurance cost saver as was the 307 as opposed to the 350ci.) It served me well during the latter part of my college career. Now, I wish I still had it.
I “inherited” my wife’s 1971 307 2bbl. Changed oil every 3,000 miles. New owner punched it one too many times and blew the timing chain. Sold it at 140,000 miles; no ridge in the cylinder walls. Wish I had reupholstered the front seat and headliner and kept it. Great stylish car.
Hagerty’s new definition of a classic: every car ever built.
This article was assembled from suggestion of the public, so that means the general public (or at least the readership here) thinks these cars are classics. Usually I find it harder to comment here than read, so I’m surprised you figure out how to comment before reading anything…
Purchased a 1976 AMC Hornet X w/304ci and 3 speed manual on the floor, silver w/black stripes. Purchased used in 1977, just out of high school from a good friend. My friend bought it back a year later when my payments were getting tough for me to make 🙁 Loved that car then, still have fond memories of it to this day!
Great article! There are some great memories wrapped up in there and some cars I’d rather forget.
I always had a thing for that Lincoln, even though I was never a Blue Oval Guy, so I had to keep quiet about it among the Bow Tie Brigade.
I especially love and remember those ’55 -57 Chevy pickups. My first “real job” in the mid 60’s was at a rural City Service gas station/body shop/car repair/used car lot. Our service vehicle was a short bed stepside 1955 example that the boss had resurrected from an early grave.
A very tired I-6 was replaced with a freshened-up 283 he had bored out to 302 (?). With a 4 barrel and three-on-the-tree it was great for a fast trip to town to pick up parts. I was more than happy to take a break from my usual duties to take the wheel.
I’d trade my 4th Gen Ram for a nice example of that ’55 in a heart beat!
The BMW M Coupe is appropriately named “The Clown-shoe” because of its shape.
I find it “”Funny” that Soo many people who can’t afford a really popular (expensive) classic car But want one won’t start with one they can afford just like houses–They want to start with a McMansion rather than a Starter home & end up with Nothing-
1998 Ford Ranger is now a classic. They were loved but
I think the Lexus SC 430 is off the radar. It is a “Rolex on wheels”. Reliable, fast, comfortable, elegant. And a real bargain right now.
BMW “M” Coupe affectionately known as “The Clown Shoe”.
How about turbo Plymouth and Dodge mini-vans? These were only built in 1989 and 1990 and respond well to some inexpensive, easy modifications that will leave the stop light competition wondering what just happened.
Clean examples are getting harder to find. If you’re siligent enough, you may find one with a manual transmission.
https://www.hagerty.com/marketplace/classified/1989-Plymouth-Voyager-(Van)/6186fcef-c4d3-4433-ae7d-654e6eb94813
I’ve owned a few of the “classics” posted here. Living in California, rust was never an issue. Of the cars I still miss, my 57 Chevy 1 ton pickup is the top. They had a 9′ bed on them because of the wheelbase. Mine had a 4 bolt main 350 put in front of the stock 4 speed/granny gear trans and rear end. I made a wrong choice when my ex wife said “pick between me and the truck”.
For me one of the most underappreciated in period and today is the Corolla E70. This is the chassis that later became the AE86 but with a torquier, less powerful, engine (the 1.8). They handled great. I got to do a multi-mile(!) continuous drift in one (in the snow). I had to switch it from side to side as snow built up on the one going forward. It was just so easy to maintain that drift. I’ll never forget how fund that thing was to whip around. I drove a later AE86 as well and, while I did appreciate the higher revving engine, it didn’t squirt around town as well as the earlier car.
As the guy under the hood, body and frame in general, I don’t see the merit of owning most of these?
Long time mechanics are certainly biased and not yearning to see most of these cars… ever again.
The “more you know” is just so true. I believe it is mostly the $$$ flippers driving any and all of this.
Cars, like carpet, are generally expendable… as in terminal… like it or not.
Sorry for the common sense people, but this is a majority position, among professions.
Here’s a few I’d add that seem to have fallen through the cracks:
84 Buick Skyhawk Turbo – 150 hp turbo, 5 speed, baby GN looks
91 Isuzu Impulse RS Turbo – Was doing AWD/ 16v intercooled turbo long before WRX was stateside