These 6 Oddball Classics Got a Little Pricier This Year
We track thousands of vehicles in the Hagerty Price Guide. Many of them fit into nice, mainstream segments—muscle cars, British classics, trucks, Ferraris, etc. Others don’t fit so neatly into standard buckets, but these oddballs are also some of our favorites. And although the audience for them isn’t as big as something like, say, Corvettes, the prices for weird and wonderful classics also fluctuate and it’s important to track them, too. Below are some of the oddballs that have had the best start to 2024.
1959-65 BMW 700: +63 percent
BMWs aren’t typically oddballs. In fact, they’re pretty mainstream. By sales volume, BMW sold the ninth most cars out of any company in the world last year. In the early 1960s, though, things were different, and the brand with the beachball badge was in search of identity. In the postwar years, its upmarket models weren’t successful, while small offerings like the Isetta microcar kept the lights on at Bayerische Motoren Werke. Seeing that buyer tastes were shifting away from microcars and to larger, more comfortable offerings, BMW responded with the 700. Like the Isetta and the BMW 600 before it, the 700 used a rear-mounted motorcycle engine—in this case a 697cc version of the flat-twin found in the R67 motorcycle—and four-speed gearbox. Riding on BMW’s first steel monocoque frame, it was available as a coupe, a two-door sedan with a taller and more spacious roofline, and a convertible.
BMW itself has dubbed the 700 “the car that saved the company” and sold over 188,000 units when it desperately needed the sales, but they never moved in large numbers in this country. They don’t often pop up for sale now, but some big recent results, including a $33,867 coupe and a $40,533 convertible, showed we were a bit behind on pricing for these obscure but important Bimmers. Condition #2 (excellent) values now range from $34,600 for a base two-door sedan to $75,500 for the rare convertible.
1964-70 Honda S600/800: +21 percent
Another unconventional but important car for a major automaker is the Honda S600. While not technically Honda’s first four-wheeled vehicle, it marked an important shift for what was then primarily a motorcycle company, and had some quirky but impressive elements of its design. Its 606cc four-cylinder is cast aluminum, leans left at a 45-degree angle, has double overhead cams, revs to a 9500 rpm redline, and drives the rear wheels not via shaft but via chain. It makes just 57hp and 38 lb-ft of torque, but only has 1600 pounds of Honda to push around.
Its size, styling, and performance are roughly similar to the MG Midget and Triumph Spitfire, but the Japanese upstart only lasted from 1964-66, and the similar S800 that succeeded it only lasted until 1970. Its British rivals, however, lasted another decade. Even so, the Honda is more sophisticated, more significant, and much rarer, particularly in the U.S. where it was never officially sold. They’re also much more valuable. S600s/S800s have been steadily increasing in value for over a decade, but some recent sales like a record $109,000 result earlier this year have pushed them even further. Current #2 values for an S600 range from $48,600 for a coupe to $66,000 for a convertible, and for an S800 a similar $58,100 for a coupe to $65,900 for a convertible.
1969-74 Volvo 142: +15 percent
The 140 series, introduced in 1966, marked a few of firsts for Volvo. It marked the company’s shift away from the ’60s curves of cars like the Amazon and 1800 to the boxy brick era for which the company is probably best known. It also introduced Volvo’s three digit nomenclature, with the first digit indicating series, the second digit the number of cylinders, and the third digit the number of doors. So, a 142 was part of the 100 series, with a four-cylinder engine, and a two-door coupe body style. The 140 series also came in 144 (4-door sedan) and 145 (5-door wagon) styles.
Volvo sold over 1.25 million 142/144/145s in eight years, and nearly 413,000 of those were 142 coupes. These were utilitarian cars. Few people bothered to save them, and 140s were very much overshadowed by the 240s that came after them. Several big results for 140s, but particularly for the coupe-bodied 142s, have come up over the past several months and resulted in a significant price bump. That said, these boxy Swedes have been inexpensive for a very long time, so a significant appreciation in percentage terms isn’t all that much in pure dollar terms. Depending on year and spec, #2 condition values for 142s still only range from $15,100 to $17,500.
1949-52 Crosley CD: +12 percent
When postwar America tooled up for a decade of tailfins, chrome and big V-8s, Cincinnati-based Crosley thought smaller…much smaller. Although Crosley was the first US carmaker to offer a mass-market overhead cam engine and among the first carmakers anywhere to use disc brakes, it is mostly remembered for its pint-sized Hot Shot sports car, the toy Jeep-like Farm-O-Road, and the small but surprisingly practical CC/CD.
The 1949-52 CD was available in wagon, sedan, convertible, panel delivery, and pickup body styles. The two-door sedan body style is the cheapest but has appreciated the most in recent months with a 20 percent increase. Their #2 value is still just $10,800, though, while the most expensive station wagon models are still just $20,800.
1985-91 Subaru XT: +17 percent
In the 1980s, long before love made a Subaru a Subaru, the brand was known mostly for yawn-worthy family cars or quirky, fun vehicles like the BRAT pickup. Arguably even quirkier than the BRAT, though, was the XT, Subaru’s take on the compact Japanese sports coupe market that was booming at the time.
Styling-wise, the XT was ’80s wedge taken to the extreme, with aircraft-inspired wraparound rear glass and wheels that looked like a sheet of graph paper. The basic shape, and clever touches like door handles that fit flush to the body helped make the XT the most aerodynamic car sold in America at the time. Things got even stranger inside: The XT had a digital gauge cluster that looked like a contemporary arcade game, a shifter that looked like the yoke of a fighter jet, checker-pattern cloth seats, and a goofy two-spoke, asymmetrical steering wheel that would make Citroën blush. But among all the weirdness were a lot of features that were ahead of their time or at the very least very uncommon, like height-adjustable suspension, central locking, available all-wheel drive (activated via a button on top of the shifter), and a gauge cluster that adjusted with the steering wheel. “The kind of car Mercedes might have built if they were a little more frugal and a lot more inventive,” said one ad.
What wasn’t cutting edge was the performance, and the 1.8-liter flat-four, even in turbocharged form, made less than 120 hp. A 1988 facelift brought a six-cylinder XT6 model with 145hp, but the facelift brought more conventional looks that ditched many of the quirks enthusiasts find charming today.
XTs never sold well and few people bothered to pamper theirs, so clean examples are rare. One did pop up late last year, however, and it sold for over 18 grand. Which doesn’t sound like much, but it’s the most expensive XT we’ve seen sell by a long way.
1962-63 Studebaker Lark: +11 percent
In the early 1960s, Studebaker was still one of the most recognizable names on American roads, but the Indiana-based company was living on borrowed time, and wouldn’t survive to the end of the decade. The Lark was the brand’s volume-selling compact, first introduced in 1959. When the Big Three introduced compacts of their own compacts at the dawn of the 1960s, Lark sales suffered, but a restyle by designer Brooks Stevens for the 1962-63 generation Lark helped, and sales improved. Larks of this period came with either a 170-cid six-cylinder, or V-8s of either 259 or 289 cid, and in sedan, station wagon, coupe, or convertible body styles.
Generally, cars from this period and especially ones from defunct brands like Studebaker haven’t done much price-wise in recent years, but Larks are an affordable way to get an unusual, stylish V-8 classic, and strong sale prices have pushed them up 10 percent across body styles and model years. They’re still inexpensive, though, as the most costly 289 convertible is $29,000 in #2 condition, and a six-cylinder sedan doesn’t even hit 10 grand.
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How about the Subaru SVX (1991-96), the successor to the XT? The side glass with the window-in-a-window was “unique”, to be kind, and there were issues, such as the lack of a manual transmission, as the flat-six put out more torque than Subaru’s manual transmissions could tolerate, and even the early AT cars were prone to eating torque converters. But with aerodynamic styling and a level of luxury unique for a Subaru at the time, they sold well initially.
We had a Lark Wagonaire when I was a kid. We all loved riding in the “way back”. It was a later year than listed here 65 or 66.
Studebaker kept going for awhile in Canada using GM based drivetrains.
The original Saab turbo – pre 1994 should make your list. Quirky and lots of fun with the convertible!
Early 70’s Ford Capri would certainly be an oddball by now. Would be interesting to know want the market is like for them now.
No one can make Citroën blush.
Somebody once commented….There’s no accounting for taste. Here are some perfect examples
Can’t say I’ve owned any of the vehicles shown . . might be a good thing? There’s a beautiful red Lark 4door for sale near Nelson BC, been there at the side of the road for over a year…Hmm?
My brother-in-law owned a respectable Triumph TR3 with robins egg blue paint for a number of years. I drove it a couple of times and would have liked to see it in my garage now. . . Maybe the TR was the reason my sister married the guy?
Never owned a Volvo but many years ago I remember a Volvo advert showing a beautiful (blonde of course) young lady bare chested, with a big blue bruise diagonal across her chest. . .(after the accident?) the first advert for three point seat belts?
All in all, I love this column. . . you get so many points of view. An education for us all?
I helped restore a 700 convertible. Interesting little car.
Years ago, someone was talking about the first Honda’s being convertibles. Until now, I had never seen one and had no idea what he was talking about. I don’t think I’ve ever seen one of those BMW’s either. I’ve been immersed in this hobby since Hershey 1971, mostly in Studebakers.
I have a 1989 XT6, and it is the most fun car I have ever owned, and I’m well past the 300 vehicle mark at this point. It’s not the fastest or most powerful I’ve had, by far, but the smiles per mile are off the chart. Her name is Blanche, and she’s never leaving!
I worked at a Subaru dealer in the XT days. All the goofy crap on the XT (air ride,electro dash etc) made more enemies than friends. Stude wagons are great especially the Lark based models. The worlds largest advertising sign is still visible from the air in South Bend. STUDEBAKER -it’s now a park.
Your getting hard up for interesting stuff to write about, the only good page is the one with the gal in the yellow top, print more like her.
I would buy a Subaru XT in a heartbeat if it was in pretty decent shape and not too overpriced (manual transmission only though). They just aren’t anywhere, anymore.
Some of this list might be divisive, but the Volvo 140s are lovely cars. Late in its life it got the iconic Volvo slashed grille. I had a ’69 142 for several years, and it was a completely gutless car but had tons of character. It was a rust-free SoCal car and I sold it for way too cheap (under $1k) over a decade ago. Now I wish I had a Wagon for my family… no 145, but oh look, there’s an Amazon wagon for sale locally… where’s that on the list? 😉
I love articles on oddball cars, they are always worth a look. I was a Corvette owner for years, but always liked to check out the 2CV’s or other unusual cars at shows. At races the Cobras and Corvettes were great, but I was totally amazed at how guys could make those little Fiat Abarths go like stink! The car hobby has lots of room for everyone, whether you own 911S, a Hemi Roadrunner, or a Metropolitan, they’re all fun!
A quick comment on BMW’s, owned a 2002 in the early 70’s, never heard anyone refer to a BMW car as anything but a “Bimmer”, not a big deal, but that was my experience.