Can we Drive the WORST Diesel Engine 600+ MILES and TOW A BOAT!?

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  • Опубликовано: 19 апр 2024
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    Today we bring an Oldsmobile Diesel back to life for better or worse!
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    #diesel #revival #junkyarddigs
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Комментарии • 3,2 тыс.

  • @JunkyardDigs
    @JunkyardDigs  Месяц назад +173

    Get your limited time I HATE HEADGASKETS shirt here!!
    www.junkyarddigs.com/shop/p/oldsmobile-diesel

    • @HalfSpongeBob44
      @HalfSpongeBob44 Месяц назад +4

      HEYYY NEW VID!

    • @iplayksplol9974
      @iplayksplol9974 Месяц назад +1

      hello gasket

    • @pezgoon1
      @pezgoon1 Месяц назад +1

      Which model/ year is the olds? I can’t find the first video. I wanted to see how it wasn’t recommended for towing like angus said LOL

    • @RustyZipper
      @RustyZipper Месяц назад

      @@pezgoon1- it’s an ‘81, unsure of model, my guess is Eighty Eight 🤷‍♂️

    • @zacmartel1007
      @zacmartel1007 Месяц назад

      According to your explanation, you put the wrong head gasket on the shirt!!!! Love it tho

  • @BigIronTexas
    @BigIronTexas Месяц назад +1155

    That car literally sounded like a 379 Peterbilt coming out of that shed! 😂😂

    • @peterpenberthy2918
      @peterpenberthy2918 Месяц назад +58

      My first Semi I drove had a 60 series gm in it. the bores were glazed up but you couldn't kill it with a stick. Looking back that That worn out Western Star was one of the best pieces of old shite I ever drove and it never gave me any trouble.

    • @calebmountz4554
      @calebmountz4554 Месяц назад +19

      @@peterpenberthy2918 worked on a 2000 freightliner FL series with a dodge magnum engine. never thought id see that

    • @toolzshed
      @toolzshed Месяц назад +3

      🤣😂🤣😂

    • @canadianintheukbrian
      @canadianintheukbrian 29 дней назад +3

      🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @alanprather8399
      @alanprather8399 29 дней назад +19

      peterbilt is a tad bit quieter.

  • @cattlerepairmancattlerepai9414
    @cattlerepairmancattlerepai9414 Месяц назад +583

    THANK YOU for not gas-swapping the engine and spending the time to fix it up instead. Much more interesting and you did a great job showing your work!

    • @Hoa-Mechanical
      @Hoa-Mechanical 27 дней назад +2

      👍👍👍👍👍👍

    • @davidwatson3063
      @davidwatson3063 27 дней назад +14

      My thoughts exactly. I love the fact they saved that engine even though it's awful lol.

    • @alan6832
      @alan6832 27 дней назад

      The car is way to ugly to waste a 350 gas motor on it. If you couldn't fix the diesel, I would suggest an inline 6 like maybe the one out of the Burnt Turd. Such a 6 would probably still tow faster than the diesel. Plus I hear inline 6s are the smoothest, which goes well with luxury cars.

    • @hendo337
      @hendo337 20 дней назад +1

      A gas swap would be really nice in that car...330, 350, 403, 425, 455...or a Chevy maybe

    • @alan6832
      @alan6832 18 дней назад +1

      @@hendo337 The diesel works fine now, plus the smooth 250 inline 6 from the Burnt Turd would be both smoother and more efficient in that boxy non-performance car.

  • @joeldowell5059
    @joeldowell5059 27 дней назад +172

    I'm a mechanic in the military, and let me tell you, that startup after the head gasket repair sounded almost identical to a Humvee

    • @noshsreqd
      @noshsreqd 25 дней назад +14

      Virtually the same injection system so they would sound the same.

    • @Amberlynn_Reid
      @Amberlynn_Reid 18 дней назад

      Did you kill someone

    • @grandwizard9088
      @grandwizard9088 18 дней назад +11

      @@Amberlynn_ReidGrow up child, mechanics aren’t on the front lines

    • @Amberlynn_Reid
      @Amberlynn_Reid 18 дней назад

      @@grandwizard9088 really what if there is a car on the front line that is broken down

    • @joeldowell5059
      @joeldowell5059 18 дней назад +9

      @@Amberlynn_Reid well I haven't been responsible for fixing a vehicle that actually goes out in combat. No, I haven't killed anybody, and if I did, why would that be important information when I was simply talking about a vehicle?

  • @stevehawley5618
    @stevehawley5618 27 дней назад +84

    In 1980, my dad speculated that gas prices were going to soar, so he bought an Olds Cutlass Diesel and the car *never* ran right. Besides the craptacular engine, the AC condensate outlet plugged up easily and would drain into the passenger footwell. In 1984 I got it into a car accident and after it was assessed, my dad had a conversation like this: "I'm really torn. You didn't quite destroy it enough. I could choose to not get it repaired, take a credit hit and let the bank repossess it or I could get it fixed and we're stuck with it." He got it fixed. Wrong choice.

    • @stuartbear922
      @stuartbear922 14 часов назад

      We had one, too. They kept making that turd until 1984. My dad kept heat lamps under the fuel tank in the winter to keep it from gelling. We stocked up on STP fuel treatment in the fall because truckers would take it all in the wintertime. With all the problems we had, it got 24 miles per gallon.

  • @tbidzzzz
    @tbidzzzz Месяц назад +502

    Kevin=optimism
    Angus=realism

    • @mrb.5610
      @mrb.5610 29 дней назад +40

      Dalton = fatalism.

    • @blext816
      @blext816 29 дней назад

      mook = nihilist

    • @scouttrooper1215
      @scouttrooper1215 28 дней назад

      Both = Autism

    • @Hoa-Mechanical
      @Hoa-Mechanical 27 дней назад +1

      👍👍👍👍👍👍

    • @Wiltshire_watcher
      @Wiltshire_watcher 27 дней назад +3

      Good working combinations !. I worked with someone an opposite outlook to me, it always worked out well…..great times.

  • @BenDinger
    @BenDinger Месяц назад +461

    When I was a kid we had a neighbor, old Jimmie - he was a old school trucker that worked for CF. Jimmie loved diesels and he absolutely loved picking up these GM diesels for pennies. This was mid 80s when they were a couple years old but people were dumping them for pennies on the dollar. He had a couple and he always laughed how cheap he got them and could do a couple basic things to them to make them run "great". I loved riding in them, and watching his dog when he was out of town driving and his wife was riding with him.
    RIP Jimmie, you taught me a lot. I'm not sure if you were right about early 80s GM Diesels but you sure loved the damn things.

    • @xtr3m3fLx
      @xtr3m3fLx Месяц назад +52

      With a name like Jimmie, he shoulda' been playing around with 2t Detroits.

    • @JunkyardDigs
      @JunkyardDigs  Месяц назад +90

      He sounds like a great dude!!

    • @porkchop689
      @porkchop689 29 дней назад +21

      Rest in peace Jimmie
      He sounded like a nice guy

    • @VSigma725
      @VSigma725 29 дней назад +16

      Worked for CF huh? Probably drove Freightliner cabovers with 8V71 Detroits at one point.

    • @agoodmeme4823
      @agoodmeme4823 29 дней назад +6

      Sounds like a real honest fella. God rest his soul.

  • @noshsreqd
    @noshsreqd 25 дней назад +22

    I still have a '79 Toronado diesel that has 160,000 miles on it, original block reringed at 120K. I'm surprised you made it that far with the pump going out! Back in the day my dad and I had a diesel repair shop and worked on lots of these. We always used the thicker head gasket whenever we replaced them to lower the compression a bit for durability but also to give more piston to head clearance as a common problem was carbon buildup that would do things like hammer the upper ring groove tight, knock out wrist pin bushings and even break cranks. This was usually an issue on city driven vehicles that didn't get up some highway speed and clean the carbon out once in awhile. A lot of times I'd do a service on one that wasn't running so great, take it out for a drive and pin it on the governor in second for a mile or so, the highway would dissapear in a cloud of soot behind me but eventually it would clean up, get back to the shop and it would be running like a million bucks. Couple suggestion I'd recommend is disabling the EGR valve so it isn't plugging up the intake with soot and run a fuel additive that lubricates the pump and injectors. I use both Diesel kleen and Lucas upper cylinder in mine.
    Great to see a few of these dinosaurs still alive!

    • @dietznutz1
      @dietznutz1 4 дня назад +2

      Egr is the last thing you need on something like this

    • @billdang3953
      @billdang3953 2 дня назад

      Disabling the EGR valve? I can just hear the screams of outrage from the environmental militants and the Consumers Reports demographic !

  • @brandonn2538
    @brandonn2538 28 дней назад +7

    My dad had a regal with t tops fully loaded with the olds diesel. The original sticker price was like 27k. It blew a headgasket not long after he got it, my dad was resourceful, the block had puckered around all the headbolts and he (probably could) couldn't afford taking it to the machine shop. So he bought good flat files and filed the deck flat, he said he pretty well had to go back and buy every file the store had, but he managed. He done this in the dirt driveway over a weekend I believe. I was little when he done this but I do remember him working on it. Then it spit out rods, so he bought another car with the same 5.7 diesel and swapped it in.... I was just a kid when they sold the car but I remember loving that thing

  • @camerontechstuffs
    @camerontechstuffs Месяц назад +311

    I am glad these 1h+ long videos do well, they are some of favorite content on youtube.

    • @TheHungryMammoth
      @TheHungryMammoth Месяц назад +8

      Best after a long ahh day at work relaxation content ngl

    • @Hoa-Mechanical
      @Hoa-Mechanical 27 дней назад +1

      👍👍👍👍

    • @BadAndUgly
      @BadAndUgly 23 дня назад +1

      It became 1h+ because the car was so slow :D

  • @justinp910
    @justinp910 29 дней назад +116

    That phone call to Wyatt and getting priceless information that gave you a roadside fix in 5 minutes to get you back on your way is a perfectly distilled example of what the car community is all about.

  • @michaeltutty1540
    @michaeltutty1540 28 дней назад +17

    Years ago my pipe organ teacher had a 78 Oldsmobile Ninety Eight Regency Brougham diesel. At 120,000 miles it was on engine number 3, the newest and last generation of the engine. This was in 86. My car was a 78 Buick Electra Limited with the Buick 350. As close a comparison as possible. Same year, same displacement, same GM platform. The Buick used significantly less fuel, as well having enough performance to get out of its own way. The 3 speed automatic in the diesel is a dreadfully weak Turbo 250. If this has been upgraded, be thankful.
    I also had an 84 Delta 88 Royale 2 door. The trailer towing package came with heavy duty springs and shocks, the Turbo 350 instead of the 200R4. Without the towing package, you were limited to a 2,000 pound trailer. My 84 also had the "Gage Paxkage" set into that recess where you have the rear defrost switch.
    Cars did used to have significant towing ratings. My one of one 89 Grand Marquis had a factory 351W and Trailer Towing Package that gave a 6,000 pound towing package. My 76 Thunderbird also had a 6,000 pound rating. 71-76 full sized GM sedans could be rated with a 7,000 pound rating.

    • @steely1neverwane
      @steely1neverwane 21 день назад +2

      They are significant tow ratings.
      As a comparison, in Australia from the 70's right up to 2010 our 2 full size Aussie built cars were the Ford Falcon and the Holden Commodore. The Falcon had a tow rating of 2300kgs (5000 pound) and the Commodore had a bit less at 2100kg.

    • @billdang3953
      @billdang3953 2 дня назад

      "Having enough performance to get out of its own way". That's a real rarity for a Malaise Era drivetrain !

  • @dennisbrown2571
    @dennisbrown2571 27 дней назад +6

    Glad to see Angus was prepared for the worst. He wore his safety glasses with the side shields for the whole trip!

  • @Land_Raver
    @Land_Raver Месяц назад +147

    Anybody can get an old GM gas engine running. Only mad men would run an olds diesel. And for that, I thank you.

  • @ogrooster69
    @ogrooster69 Месяц назад +97

    Lol Angus' casual suggestion of towing the boat home with the skid loader.
    380 miles of backroads would be quite the video

  • @hwertz10
    @hwertz10 21 день назад +3

    I've read several big issues on these diesels when they came out...
    1) Around 1980 there was a fuel shortage, and apparently it was much more common than average to end up with water in your diesel. There was a procedure for this on them, but you know, it left a bad impression when someone bought it and then ran into fuel problems.
    2) I've read the dealerships often just didn't know what to do with them in terms of service and repair.
    (That's in addition to it being a bad engine -- it's a gas 350 converted to diesel. And slow as hell.)

  • @drcovell
    @drcovell 23 дня назад +4

    I should hope so! I towed a corvette on a car trailer from Montery, CA to LA over Tejon Summit in July behind a 1979 Cad Seville with an Oldsmobile diesel in it.
    Rules for this diesel were:
    1. Replace head gaskets at about 60K,
    2. Replace head gaskets and injector pump at 120K,
    3. Change oil every 3K.
    Nothing else went wrong, except for belts and hoses.
    Drove that car for 300K miles.
    PS We owned *2 more* Cad Diesels during from 1988 through 2004. My mother drove an 81 Sedan De Ville and l also bought a 79 El Dorado. That one had an extra fuel tank in the trunk, so it could hold enough for a 1K Mile RT to LA/OC from the Monterey Peninsula: It ran at about 30 mog average at 65 mph.

  • @DrGero15
    @DrGero15 29 дней назад +249

    As a professional diesel mechanic who specializes in GM's and Detroit's I really enjoy when you get these as I can never find them near me. It's also vindicating when you have to call for advice with them since I often have trouble with carbs and have to refer to your videos. We are all good at different things! Sorry Angus but I want to see more diesels, Maybe a 1980's VW diesel soon? Those make the 5.7L Oldsmobile look like a powerhouse.

    • @txprospector
      @txprospector 29 дней назад +7

      My dad had an 80's diesel rabbit that was fun to drive. I bet all the 80's VW's are rusted to the ground in that part of the country.

    • @swamp-yankee
      @swamp-yankee 28 дней назад +8

      Om617 please

    • @richardbates2367
      @richardbates2367 28 дней назад +3

      My buddy in highschool picked up a 83 vw golf diesel 5spd they had swapped out the head but couldn't get it running after putting it back together car was metallic brown and it had some rust on the bottom of the car but after cracking open the air lines and a few vw diesel tech suggestions he drove his $300 car two years in highschool until he found a 70 Ford f100 two tone light on top dark blue on the bottom 302 automatic he drove non stop after he got the truck

    • @JackAttak
      @JackAttak 28 дней назад +6

      A Mercedes OM612 diesel would be awesome. Revive a 300D with a 4 speed manual and road trip it, those are such well built cars

    • @COM70
      @COM70 27 дней назад +7

      OM 606 with a billet pump and big injectors.

  • @gmlover82
    @gmlover82 Месяц назад +300

    I love these episodes with the Olds Diesel. So rare now and a flashback to a time GM would like to forget. Keep em coming, someone has to keep these old engine alive.

    • @wallacegrommet9343
      @wallacegrommet9343 Месяц назад +7

      It’s too late for that engine. If someone 40 years ago did all of the correct mods and fixes back then, I would agree.

    • @onefastslimjim
      @onefastslimjim Месяц назад +14

      We have to keep them alive, even if the engines themselves really don't want to 🤣🤣

    • @jessebrook1688
      @jessebrook1688 Месяц назад +11

      @@wallacegrommet9343 Since the correct fix was a whole engine block, I'm not sure that many people back in the day would have chosen it, given the expense.

    • @chrisoakey9841
      @chrisoakey9841 29 дней назад +2

      Needs a turbo or supercharger.

    • @NoName5589
      @NoName5589 29 дней назад +2

      There is no way the heads would stay on that poor motor if it was boosted

  • @CircleM20
    @CircleM20 26 дней назад +4

    I worked with a guy whose son had a job converting these back to gas in the 80s. Let's just say he was quite wealthy.

  • @Harri_S
    @Harri_S 27 дней назад +3

    I have 3 of these great engines. One in my -79 El Camino, one under construction and one in my 5.7 Diesel Boss Hoss motorcycle project. I love the sound, smell and attitude of these engines.

  • @craigbomer8962
    @craigbomer8962 Месяц назад +254

    Angus is not lying about specifically not towing with that engine. I bought a clean 1981 Chevrolet Scotsdale C1500 RCLB 5.7 Diesel to rob the body for my ugly, but reliable, 1985 K10. The engine puked fuel everywhere from a completely shot return system. The truck even came with it's owner's manuals including the 350 diesel pamphlet. I very plainly said DO NOT TOW with this vehicle and had some ridiculous limitation of how much weight you could put in the bed. The body was a lovely cream over metallic brown two-tone, however, and I got a kick out of everybody asking why my hood ornament said "Diesel" and the Scotsdale fender badges also said diesel.

    • @richardbaumgart2454
      @richardbaumgart2454 Месяц назад +25

      IDK what GM was thinking.....a diesel truck that you can't tow with, and they made awesome Detroit diesel engines at the time for HD trucks and equipment. It's customer's were so disappointed no doubt.

    • @Hotlog69
      @Hotlog69 Месяц назад +10

      It's like GM invented the cream puff truck 35 years in the past!

    • @firewalker1372
      @firewalker1372 Месяц назад +7

      They should pull a camper to the races this year with this thing!

    • @MattsRageFitGarage
      @MattsRageFitGarage Месяц назад +15

      @@richardbaumgart2454 Most diesel engines back then in cars and trucks were just alternative fuel engines meant for fuel economy and not performance.

    • @warrenmichael918
      @warrenmichael918 Месяц назад +10

      @@MattsRageFitGarage yep, they were looking into fuel mileage , not HP and torque for towing things. This little beauty poppin out 30 MPGs was nice, and that 16 towing the boat was a nice surprise also.

  • @iwantmyvanback
    @iwantmyvanback 29 дней назад +80

    Angus is so perfect on this channel. He's exactly what we needed. The content has been top notch

  • @thorstenku365
    @thorstenku365 13 дней назад +2

    Funny thing with the towing: here in Europe, especially in Germany, most of the towing happens by regular cars. Sure, there are Vans, Rangers and some Rams towing stuff but the vast majority happens by regular cars. Maybe because many people only have that one car as a daily grocery getter for the family and don´t have the fortune of having a yard full of alternatives ;)

  • @eazydraygames6356
    @eazydraygames6356 15 дней назад +1

    Mannn i started watching when you first started the page “less the 1.5k followers” when you were starting up old junk cars with buddy and i havent watched you in about 2 years and to click on this video and see how far youve come completely amazes me, you deserve it and keep up the hard work guys so many people look up to yall for keeping a good legacy going 👌🏻

  • @codymccrackin7518
    @codymccrackin7518 Месяц назад +765

    I believe Angus is looking for a new job. Seems the boss likes to pick on him in these last few episodes. Lol. Loving the content!

    • @Brock_Landers
      @Brock_Landers Месяц назад +64

      ​@@LeroyBigBoyAngus seems like a really good guy, and while your comment makes sense as far as notoriety is concerned, but I dont think that Angus wants to be "someone" as far as RUclips or the internet is concerned. I also don't think that Kevin would do anything to disrespect Angus or make him feel like he's not a friend. They joke and mess with each other, as that's exactly how my friends and I joke, but if Angus is ever unhappy or doesn't want to be part of the channel I have no doubt that he'd just bow out.

    • @kingnull2697
      @kingnull2697 Месяц назад +80

      @@LeroyBigBoy Comments in good fun dude, chill.

    • @yeahright302
      @yeahright302 Месяц назад

      its anus,you spelled it wrong!!!lol

    • @yeahright302
      @yeahright302 Месяц назад

      @@Brock_Landers name is anus!!!

    • @RandomGreymane
      @RandomGreymane Месяц назад +62

      Angus actually appears to be a very good actor and seems to take stuff in stride.

  • @duanesipe7526
    @duanesipe7526 Месяц назад +31

    Angus being full time is awesome. The dynamic between the 2 of you makes me laugh multiple times every episode!

  • @MrFreekyByg
    @MrFreekyByg 23 дня назад +1

    My dad almost bought my '78 Pontiac Parisienne with this engine. Thank god he changed his mind and got the chevy 350 in it! Made the 454 swap easy. Fun vid. In coil air bags are cheap and work very well on these cars for hauling.

  • @basshnter1997
    @basshnter1997 27 дней назад +2

    Owned two of these back in the day that I bought for peanuts.
    Both with Goodwrench replacement engines and racor water separators.
    This video brought back some memories.

  • @feron450
    @feron450 Месяц назад +53

    Idk how my grandfather did it. But he had one of these that when he passed away it had 430,000 documented miles( he did every single service at the dealer from new) never replaced the engine. Did head gaskets at 235,000 miles.

    • @tedbell4416
      @tedbell4416 25 дней назад +1

      God bless granddad he took care of his stuff

    • @JunkyardDigs
      @JunkyardDigs  24 дня назад +2

      Dam!!

    • @feron450
      @feron450 23 дня назад +4

      @@tedbell4416 he had to he traveled for work. That’s why he got the diesel. I took on that trait from him I’ve owned 4 vehicles that have made it past 400k miles so far current truck is at 501k last one was 543k

    • @bigdrew565
      @bigdrew565 19 дней назад

      He was one of the lucky ones.

  • @TheOneEyedWitchandAMouse3432
    @TheOneEyedWitchandAMouse3432 Месяц назад +41

    1:09:39 “The Angry Batch Of Bullfrogs under our hood has pulled it off… Le shop” Best JYD quote I’ve ever heard.

  • @BigEightiesNewWave
    @BigEightiesNewWave 4 дня назад

    I owned a 1980 Cutlass Supreme Diesel 350, my parents gave to me. The later engines came factory with upgraded studs, and pretty much solved the blown gasket issues. Studs were bigger diameter. Weak link is the TH200C trans. My dad was part of a class-action against GM. Really weak parts inside. Mine broke leaving a drive-thru window, parked it, car was really nice, so a car-buying place on Autotrader back then gave me $350 cash. This was 1988. When dad had it, the oil embargo was on big time, Japanese cars were just getting a foothold. Dad got well over 30 MPG driving the 325 miles to Mammoth to ski. Week in, and week out.

  • @misterhipster9509
    @misterhipster9509 10 дней назад +1

    The classic car collection is: 81 Olds Custom Cruiser wagon, 83 Olds 98 Regency 2 dr., 83 Eldorado, 84 Seville, very rare 85 Fleetwood d'Elegance w/half year computer controlled injection pump/engine. All 5.7 diesels. Recently sold a very original low mile 80 C-10 pickup 5.7 diesel. The Eldorado has pretty good off the line acceleration but none have the power to safely pass on a two lane road. They were a band aid solution for a huge problem of the day. Wife's favorite car was her 81 Bonneville sedan, drove it for 10 years, never let her down but one time relay stuck on the glow plugs.
    History has shown that the public is incapable of dealing w/challenges and most have little mechanical aptitude.

  • @ronjones1077
    @ronjones1077 29 дней назад +61

    My old college buddy bought an Olds 88 diesel with over 150,000 miles on it and drove it from Iowa to Alaska. Then drove it three more years with no issues ever. I drove it several as l times & a 600 mile trip. Never a problem. Very comfortable road car

  • @muzzcovw7674
    @muzzcovw7674 Месяц назад +77

    Actually, a GREAT engine that the cheap ass bean counters at GM ruined simply by lack of proper head bolts an no water separator. Get a little water injected, and there goes the head gasket. I drove a couple of these well over 200k miles just by installing ARP racing head studs, and a water separator

    • @kbschulze
      @kbschulze Месяц назад +23

      Exactly what these need. Then you can add a turbo. 👍🏼

    • @alantaylor353
      @alantaylor353 23 дня назад +2

      ​@@kbschulzemmmmmmm Turbo.! 😉

  • @BigEightiesNewWave
    @BigEightiesNewWave 4 дня назад

    I noticed in your manual, thankfully, the 1981 has an upgraded trans. due to the issues in 1980. Here is what internet told me about our 1980, and is spot on.
    "Yes, the 1980 Oldsmobile Cutlass Diesel did have a TH200C transmission1. The TH200C was a type of automatic transmission produced by General Motors. However, it’s worth noting that the TH200 “Metric” was considered one of the least robust rear-wheel-drive (RWD) automatic transmissions GM had designed. It was barely adequate behind a late 70’s/early 80’s V6, let alone any V8 of the era"

  • @gsfdallas3464
    @gsfdallas3464 28 дней назад +52

    Love this video! I have had 6 of these diesels over the years. The only reason the head gasket leaks is when the head bolts break. GM went weak on the bolts. Replace with ARP Stud kit for that engine and you will not have any issues. I have done 3 engines that were running good. Replace the head bolts with head studs one at a time in the torque sequence. You don't have to take the engine apart or even drain the coolant. Once studs are in you are good to go. I drove one 10 years over 110K miles with not loosing a drop of coolant after stud install. DX block is upgraded with roller lifters and stronger materials.

    • @garyfleming4101
      @garyfleming4101 13 дней назад +1

      Thicker main webs in the DX to after the Olds blocks took a hit in durability in 77 I believe it was with the windowed mains.

  • @nickhenderson3358
    @nickhenderson3358 20 дней назад +1

    My first and only engine rebuild was a 6.2 gm diesel. That’s also the engine I grew up with in my parents suburban. I’m not sure how similar or different they were from the 350 diesel, but a lot of that looked and definitely sounded the same. I’ll always love them

    • @vhfgamer
      @vhfgamer 2 дня назад

      The 6.2l detroit had nothing to do with the gm 350 gas engine. It was a diesel engine built from the ground up to be a diesel engine, and as such was very sturdy.
      The 5.7 detroit only had problems because it was a lame attempt to redo the 350 gas engine into a diesel. If there is any similarity to the 6.2, it's incidental.

  • @hawk6dm7
    @hawk6dm7 4 дня назад

    I had a GMC Pickup with one of these engines. I pulled a Uhaul trailer from Nashville to Tacoma WA in 1982. I put a fresh set of headgaskets on it before we left Nashville. Blew a headgasket in Central Oregon. Put some Block Seal in it and drove it the rest of the way to Tacoma. After I got moved in in Tacoma, I started looking at the wrecking yards for a 455. It was a bolt in conversion. Was a great truck after that.

  • @Trenton-om9qs
    @Trenton-om9qs Месяц назад +72

    Gotta finish up the new PBG video then I gotta come back over and watch this. All I know is it involves Angus's favorite engine ever😂....I will say that car was pretty damn mint for its age

  • @mikeparsons1905
    @mikeparsons1905 Месяц назад +78

    A little known fact about the beloved olds diesel... in 1984, GM started casting a higher nickel content block that had the 350DX cast into the side. Although no more horse power, these were the engines that were used to replace the earlier ones that were prone to failure. The DX block solved many of the issues the earlier diesels encountered.

    • @sparcnut
      @sparcnut Месяц назад +28

      I think I saw a "350DX" on the side of the block in this video :-)

    • @jacobmoses3712
      @jacobmoses3712 29 дней назад +15

      Tragic that GM didn't do it right the first time. It wasn't due to lack of expert advice

    • @rockymountainjazzfan1822
      @rockymountainjazzfan1822 29 дней назад +11

      I had a '79 Cutlass with the 260 V8 diesel--that engine was shot at 60K miles. GM replaced it for just the labor costs with one of the '84 Mr Goodwrench 350 diesels. It was going strong at 120K miles when I sold the car. My next door neighbor had a '83 Buick Riviera with the 350 diesel. A traveling salesman, he put over 200K on that car with no engine issues, and would get 30 mpg on the highway at the then 55 mph speed limit. Many gas engine cars couldn't get half that fuel economy and diesel fuel was about 20%-40% cheaper than unleaded gasoline at that time.

    • @PapiDoesIt
      @PapiDoesIt 28 дней назад +1

      Right. The DX block solved the "righty-tighty-OOPS!-righty-loosey" problem with the head bolt threads.

    • @davidtoups4684
      @davidtoups4684 28 дней назад

      Those DX diesel blocks were a popular base for building Olds race engines back in the day

  • @wazza33racer
    @wazza33racer 26 дней назад +1

    My uncle has a Cat 966 front end loader from the 1950's........and that turbo, indirect injection diesel engine was a major pain in the ass, because of head gasket leaks. He eventually came across the solution......he put anti-seize on the head bolt threads and did them up to spec.........which makes the bolts much tighter and the head gasket stopped leaking. Its been perfectly reliable ever since.

  • @simsjef
    @simsjef 28 дней назад

    Kevin, I like the way you and Angus play off each other - so hilarious. This was a fun and informative episode with a little of Mook thrown in to make it perfectly classy.

  • @randypritchard5961
    @randypritchard5961 Месяц назад +48

    I've owned 5 of these, and worked on many more as a GM dealership tech in 1981 for numerous years. 25 years ago I had a 1983 Delta that I drove round trip 900 miles from southern Minnesota to Lemmon South Dakota and pulled back a 1967 F-100 4X4 on a car dolly. Turbo 350 lockup and still averaged 16.2 mpg. I did have a Flowmaster muffler which helped on power, because as you know, the diesel is just a big air pump, so more flow helps! Many stories!

    • @narcissistinjurygiver2932
      @narcissistinjurygiver2932 Месяц назад +4

      is there a fix for them?

    • @clittle1559
      @clittle1559 28 дней назад

      I bet that made this car sound bad ass.. a nice 3.5 inch eaxust with a turbo😊

  • @eileenmurphy5718
    @eileenmurphy5718 Месяц назад +35

    Angus had me laughing before the first 10 minutes. Thank you after this week I really needed it.

  • @BigEightiesNewWave
    @BigEightiesNewWave 4 дня назад

    47:38 He is 100% correct, people who needed bigger, safer cars, or just WANTED a larger car, and get well over 30 MPG, is why my parents got one. I lived that era, and inherited the car, this guy is spot-on.

  • @empireOfLove2
    @empireOfLove2 9 дней назад +1

    Diesel cars and trucks had really huge fuel tanks back in the day because diesel was a lot harder to come by. Gas stations only ever had gasoline, you had to find truck stops or industrial fuelling stations that had diesel. The larger tanks made it a lot easier to make it station to station especially when roadtripping.
    My dad said he specifically ordered twin tanks plus had a under-toolbox tank in his old Ford F350 6.9 specifically for that reason. He kept over 70gal of diesel in that truck at all times.

  • @MH-bv9kk
    @MH-bv9kk Месяц назад +27

    Not gonna lie, that 350 diesel does actually sound good. You've got a decent (admittedly hated) engine, good transmission, frame is good, body is good, interior is very nice, I think you can get some good videos out of this car. Show it some love. Bullet-proof the engine to the extent it can be, give it a mild turbo, add power windows, probably window tint, make it a daily driver with a few update segments, then put out a "I spent 1 year with an Olds Diesel. You're not going to believe this!" video, where we get yours (and Mook's and Angus' thoughts) on it.
    Had I a big enough garage, I'd buy one just because the 350 diesel is so hated. You've definitely got something that doesn't have much coverage on YT.

    • @Kroooza
      @Kroooza 29 дней назад +2

      thats the rattliest sounding diesel I've ever heard

    • @rickydavis5541
      @rickydavis5541 29 дней назад +1

      Sound like it’s going to dies when sitting lol

  • @Rileygee0224
    @Rileygee0224 Месяц назад +48

    Having Angus in every one of these videos makes them 10x better to watch!

    • @PercyPruneMHDOIFandBars
      @PercyPruneMHDOIFandBars 29 дней назад +1

      Possibly, but a dash of Mook would be better!

    • @Me-zo8yc
      @Me-zo8yc 29 дней назад +1

      Angus seems like a great bloke 👍🏻

  • @johnelliott7375
    @johnelliott7375 12 дней назад

    Thanks again for your time and work on the 88 Diesel and it is a great driver restoration.

  • @kylemichaels3373
    @kylemichaels3373 7 дней назад

    My late stepfather was a huge fan of the 350 diesel. He had 3 Cadillacs and two Oldsmobiles with that engine. 2 of the Cadillacs and 1 Oldsmobile were mint low mile survivors. 1 of each was a daily driver. He put over 400,000 miles on one of the Cadillacs and on of the Oldsmobiles. He said as long as you added a aftermarket water separator to the cars and bought stronger aftermarket headbolts they will run forever. I know the water separator is crucial and have seen beefier aftermarket headbolts advertised. I wish I could have gotten one of the low mile survivors but they all went to an estate auction and sold for ridiculous prices.

  • @Brock_Landers
    @Brock_Landers Месяц назад +342

    Kevin please, please, PLEASE turbocharge, put a front mount intercooler, aftermarket injectors, fuel pump, and make a 350 diesel Olds a towing monster.

    • @JunkyardDigs
      @JunkyardDigs  Месяц назад +286

      Absolutely not an option for this 4 head bolt motor😂

    • @car9154
      @car9154 Месяц назад +36

      It would explode or sum shit

    • @RileyEib-we2bv
      @RileyEib-we2bv Месяц назад +82

      If as much touch that car with a turbo the head gaskets would probably spontaneously explode

    • @optimusprimer4392
      @optimusprimer4392 Месяц назад +31

      ​​@@JunkyardDigsmodern head gaskets and head studs and a water separator usually take care of these engines pretty good these engines were actually pretty reliable if gone through but not Factory though

    • @minekush1138
      @minekush1138 Месяц назад +10

      So it already cant handle its stock level n you wanna level it up😂 mad man! Would be fun to see but not 2 be😂 😂 the maf man in me can see the vision bit with a supercharger not a turdnogo like a 1980s sounding super charger the new like dodge ones kinda sound terrible when held up to that iconic whine makes me think of mad max shpuld rewatch

  • @flyingpeter
    @flyingpeter 29 дней назад +22

    This was great, I love when people fix weird things instead of ditching them, perfect example of the spirit of the diy guy

  • @therickman1990
    @therickman1990 День назад

    Video proves you don't need a pickuptruck to haul stuff. Also interesting to hear that it used to be normal for people to tow with cars in the US. We don't know anything else in Europe, we tow everything with cars. I just bought a 2019 Ford Focus hatchback that can haul 3750lbs, trading in by 20 year old Citroën that is allowed to tow 3551.
    Also awesome video, great shenanigans, you've earned yourself a subscriber!

  • @ericcardinal4788
    @ericcardinal4788 28 дней назад

    We had one of these when i was a kid. It was a 79/80 model year olds delta 88 with the dreaded 350 diesel engine. It came unwound on my mother one night on her way home from work. It sat in our garage for a couple of years before a different motor was dropped into it and it saw the light of day once again.

  • @p1zd3c
    @p1zd3c 29 дней назад +60

    Angus is absolutely fantastic. He's brilliant, hilarious and incredibly talented. Bringing him on full time was a huge W. Love this for you and your channel.

  • @mattparoz4246
    @mattparoz4246 Месяц назад +40

    57:00 Same in Australia, a caravan smaller then 18 feet was usually towed by a Falcon, Holden kingswood or a Valiant. I think the 90’s saw 4WD’s doing Work, family and holiday stuff. I was born ‘72 (yep, I’m old-ish) my family holidayed in the 80’s and early 90’s in a 16 foot caravan towed by a 289 XR Falcon wagon, then in ‘85 dad bought 60 series Cruiser. I still tow our 16 foot Millard with an AU falcon wagon. 🇦🇺🤙🏼

    • @vintagetintrader1062
      @vintagetintrader1062 29 дней назад +4

      My first car was a Ford Falcon 500 XR Wagon, huge powerful 200 Superpursuit 6 and BW35 auto :)
      I think we are all wishing it was late 1980s to 1999 again. (I’m a 69 model)

    • @tonierbuckle0202
      @tonierbuckle0202 29 дней назад +4

      Shame ford stopped production on the falcons. And gm shutting down holden entirely. Even though ive lived in the U.S. my whole life, i cant help but have a soft spot for those. Besides the cadillac ct5v blackwing, there arent really any rwd v8 sedans like that anymore

    • @slowlearner984
      @slowlearner984 28 дней назад

      @@tonierbuckle0202 Yeah, well when they did, it was twenty years since GM/Ford produced things people were actually buying down here. Ironically, if we'd had falcon/holden diesel wagons/sedans it might have saved them but US GM/Ford never twigged to that. The Barra probably should have been a diesel.

  • @BakerStudiosIndy
    @BakerStudiosIndy 8 дней назад

    I had a 1983 LeSabre with the 5.7 diesel... The final year, and the year GM finally got the bugs worked out. Picked it up with 75k miles for an economical commuter whip. Finally sold it at 255k miles due to a persistent charging issue, but it ran great. I wish I had kept it and fixed it up.

  • @sabbath7081
    @sabbath7081 28 дней назад +1

    There's supposed to be a vacuum modulation variable valve on your throttle that hooks up to the pump and it makes full vacuum when you let off the pedal partial vacuum when you got about half pedal and when you push down 3/4 of the way on the pedal just before the kickdown engages it will have no vacuum causing the car to shift at its highest points when you let off the pedal it adds vacuum to the modulator and dumps it out of gear into the high gears off, it works along with the governor.

  • @spddiesel
    @spddiesel 29 дней назад +20

    9:42 Oooh, Kev pulled out the protective mats, that MUST be a clean body 🤣

  • @BigMerkGee
    @BigMerkGee Месяц назад +28

    "A 88 delta, that shyt can't even get you to the shelter!" -8 Mile freestyle

  • @hickeyskustomresto
    @hickeyskustomresto 23 дня назад

    She's a sweet looking car conditionwise. They're wonderful to drive.
    I had an '80 with a 350 rocket in it. Looked just like that....until I painted it circle orange.
    She was what she was but I loved ripping around in it

  • @andrevasko9443
    @andrevasko9443 12 дней назад

    When you install the head studs, you have to put RV sealant on them because they go into coolant passages in these, you also want to torque it over 100 foot pounds or those heads gaskets will definitely blow soon. I have an Olds 350 Diesel that’s factory in my C10. I drive it a lot.

  • @firewalker1372
    @firewalker1372 Месяц назад +34

    Listen to that diesel knock 😂. It does sound like a d9. Gotta love that sound! That thing is MINT man. And angus, it’s a diesel, it’s suppose to knock 😂.

  • @ocdgarage
    @ocdgarage Месяц назад +17

    Put a Cummins in it 😭🔧 Poor Angus suffering @1:40 in lol.
    Well dang 27 mpg with 3 people is actually pretty impressive..

  • @jordanc3648
    @jordanc3648 26 дней назад

    I just wanna say angus is a fantastic co host and comedic relief lol and I think I speak for a lot of people when I say I love the way the channel is headed and we love the content keep it up guys and thanks for all you guys do

  • @Maxzillian
    @Maxzillian 16 дней назад

    Those governor rings can take a hike. All they do is isolate the governor cage from the torsional vibrations of the pump to make it idle better (this is per the stanadyne literature).
    You can replace the ring or even swap to a newer governor design, but personally I just tack weld the assembly solid.

  • @guido0582
    @guido0582 Месяц назад +39

    I remember watching an old retired mechanic who did his time on these diesels had his running mint. Got to love the clatter of an old GM diesel

    • @janeames1513
      @janeames1513 29 дней назад +5

      my coworker has the 6.2 in his pickup and that thing sounds like marbles in a garbage can...he said yep that's the normal sound..i was like dude you got a rod hanging out of the block yet?..he said nope it just a gm thing

  • @cliffordplasd8239
    @cliffordplasd8239 Месяц назад +13

    When Angus raised his hands in the air all I could think of is young Frankenstein. It's alive! Then you both yelled it. Lol

  • @billymcmanus9642
    @billymcmanus9642 25 дней назад +1

    I remember those loud obnoxious cars driving around back in the day lol I loved the ones you would see getting on the highway sometimes with a huge black cloud of exhaust coming from it to get up to highway speed 🤣🤣

  • @douglasarneson6845
    @douglasarneson6845 26 дней назад

    Man did this bring back memories. Back in the 80s, I owned a 1980 Delta 88 with the diesel engine.
    I had to change the head gaskets twice, because the first time I didn't think to have the heads milled and the fix didn't last.
    It was tough to find a machine shop that would mill them but I got it done. Unlike you guys I did the work with the engine sill in the car.
    I experienced the same type of fuel mileage when it was all said and done. All in all, it was a good car.

  • @SpitfireFortyFour
    @SpitfireFortyFour 29 дней назад +16

    You guys have really hit your stride (again) with these past few "taking a shit car on a roadtrip" videos. You and Angus seem to be having a riot and it really translates into the show.
    It's fantastic! Keep it up!
    PS: You're to blame for me buying two barn find MG TFs this week so I hope youre happy with yourselves.

  • @madcat4563
    @madcat4563 29 дней назад +12

    That startup made me belly laugh.
    As well as leaving the shed.
    The best engine jack is that mitsubishi forklift you have in the workshop.
    "Angry batch of bull frogs", that's a new one f9r describing how a diesel sounds.
    I love it.😂

  • @larryschenk696
    @larryschenk696 24 дня назад

    A friend of mine had one of those. It used alot of oil. He was always working on it. It is a pretty cool looking car though, for a 4 door. Very entertaining episode, thank you.

  • @AndrewStevens-fw1zn
    @AndrewStevens-fw1zn 26 дней назад

    5:00 CLEARLY there's LOADS of content, seeing as this video is 1 hour and 12 mins!!!🤣 LOVE IT!!! Keep up the great content!!!!!

  • @lavernmcnitt138
    @lavernmcnitt138 Месяц назад +16

    I owned a 5.7 litre Oldsmobile diesel. With the injector pump in the valley between the heads, it heats up the injector pump and cooks the gaskets inside the pump. The aluminum rocker studs wear out at about 50K miles, so I had to rebuild the injector pump and rocker posts about every 50K miles. It's a turtle in city traffic, but loves the open highway. I got about 35 MPG on long trips. Good luck.

    • @JunkyardDigs
      @JunkyardDigs  Месяц назад +3

      Pretty sure diesels still run the injection pump there today, also the rockers are stamped steal, just like all the other motors. Definitely problem prone though!

  • @markbunge2457
    @markbunge2457 Месяц назад +10

    Had a ‘83 Buick with that engine. I had the transmission fail 3 times. The final rebuild was done using motorhome trans kit and it finally worked. That Standyne injection pump was a piece of crap and a constant source of problems and adjustments. The head gasket finally let go at about 87 thousand miles.

  • @podunkpennsylvania292
    @podunkpennsylvania292 28 дней назад +1

    My buddy Bean face had an 82 royale...very nice. He put in an olds 455 from a tor.That car was insane. he left the diesel torque converter in it. It would destroythe back tire for blocks and top end was a crazy 135 mph

  • @raycurbee6106
    @raycurbee6106 26 дней назад

    I worked in a small junkyard outside of chicago in the 80's, we did alot of oldsmobiles for the gas engines to replace limo's diesels,I would cut engine out with exhaust, leave engine whole, alt,cmp,starter , wire loom , a complete bolt in for a diesel , plus if they were diesel titled they didn't have to go thru the emission test crap,, I also sold alot of vega/monza v-8 conversion kits , suspension,cooling.exhaust etc, for the hot rodders

  • @4instruments0talent
    @4instruments0talent Месяц назад +7

    Kevin, if you haven’t already consider it, please consider scanning that manual and uploading the file to where like the Internet Archive. That way it would be way more accessible to the regular Joe Schmoe than in the middle of a RUclips video.

  • @FrederikSchumacher
    @FrederikSchumacher Месяц назад +11

    Angus moving to be closer to Kevin, poor Moog just third-wheeling the bromance 😂

    • @andreasroosvall7203
      @andreasroosvall7203 28 дней назад +1

      I'll bet you that she's pregnant and thats why they hired Angus

  • @baquwards
    @baquwards 2 дня назад

    My grandparents hauled a heavy 1970's camper with a mid 70's Ford Torino sedan. I can't imagine that it was great experience, especially on hills, but the car did it. Definitely had to have the electric trailer brakes installed.

  • @armadilllo
    @armadilllo 8 дней назад

    My dad had two Olds diesels, a Delmont 88 and a two door Cutlass Salon, The Delmont ran forever with the newer diesel in it and the Cutlass died pretty early. Turns out Olds was replacing the motors that had blown up for free but my dad never found out about it and waited 20 years before having it towed, being an aircraft mechanic he always said he was going to fix it but he got too old to do it. Our neighbor had a Cadillac he used to tow his fifth wheel trailer with, he had a roof mounted hitch on it.

  • @ashleetrack88
    @ashleetrack88 Месяц назад +7

    I know absolute 0 about cars, don’t work on em or nothing but I LOVE watching your videos! My family owned an old 55 Chevy in fire engine red that we had in car shows for years, so the love is there. The Junkyard Digs group is hilarious and fun to watch. Thank you for sharing the knowledge and keep it up!

  • @maxbialystock254
    @maxbialystock254 Месяц назад +30

    New TShirt idea... A Blown Head Gasket is a Happy Head Gasket

    • @JunkyardDigs
      @JunkyardDigs  Месяц назад +15

      Keep watching 😂

    • @bradley7723
      @bradley7723 Месяц назад +5

      Fuel injection is nice but I'd rather be blown. 😮

    • @maxbialystock254
      @maxbialystock254 Месяц назад +3

      @@JunkyardDigs Or perhaps, Naturally Aspirated, LIKE ME!

    • @warrenmichael918
      @warrenmichael918 Месяц назад

      @@JunkyardDigs well lets hope we dont see a shirt with his " penis in a pickle" saying he said while changing the trans part lol

    • @Derf1313
      @Derf1313 Месяц назад +1

      My t-shirt from 1979, while drag racing was "I'd rather be blown, than injected!". Of course an 8-71 in a Gremlins helped, lol!

  • @johnmckeighan1527
    @johnmckeighan1527 15 дней назад

    Great video brings back memories my uncle's had several of these cars amazing that something that big got 27 mpg awesome 👍

  • @tommyowens5022
    @tommyowens5022 28 дней назад

    Adding Angus has been a win. This is truly the only channel I watch every second of each week...I watch this channel like my wife watches Below Deck or Magnolia Network. Also loved seeing Mook again...although her Mookiness was lower than usual. I watch this for all of your personalities as much as for the crazy car content. Keep it up Kev, Angus, and Mook (and occasionally Dalton)!

  • @bladenrexroth2555
    @bladenrexroth2555 29 дней назад +16

    I swapped a 94 caprice wagon with a gov rebuilt 6.2 turbo diesel. It got 37 mpg with just me and my dog. It got 28 mpg towing a 18 foot camper, had 4 people, 2 dogs and the back loaded down with camping gear and 2 loaded coolers. Air bags are definitely a good investment. You lose mpg when the car sags like that.
    I'd suggest a 4L80 with a 4.10 gearing. When you don't have a lot of torque. The lower gearing helps get you off the line. The overdrive helps compensate for cruise speed. In my experience. The older diesels run more efficiently between 1900-2100 rpms. They like a little heat in them.

    • @bladenrexroth2555
      @bladenrexroth2555 25 дней назад +4

      4L80, 4.10 gearing and a 31 inch tire. Gave me 66 mph @ 2200 rpms. Even with an aerodynamic big bodied b!tch of a station wagon with a 1 inch body lift and a 2.5 inch suspension lift it was getting very good mpg.
      Granted it took a half hour to get up to highway speed. It had no problem staying and cruising at 66 mph and sipping black diesel like it was death wish coffee.

    • @taxirob2248
      @taxirob2248 7 дней назад

      @@bladenrexroth2555 sounds good but wouldn't a (built for towing package) 700R4 bolt right in and work with that pigtail for the lockup converter? I mean, it came into service within a couple years of this car being built, and you can put them in earlier G and F bodies with no issues.

    • @bladenrexroth2555
      @bladenrexroth2555 7 дней назад

      @@taxirob2248 I had a 4L80 from a previous project that I had already put money into. The 700R4 went to the scrap bin. It had too many issues that I didn't want to invest in.

    • @ROBIN_SAGE
      @ROBIN_SAGE 7 дней назад

      @@bladenrexroth2555 that’s where a 700R4 belongs…..

    • @JeffreyRust-oq7rw
      @JeffreyRust-oq7rw 6 дней назад

      Yeah I swapped out my girl friends Dido out with a gov 6.2 got good results.

  • @joannaatkins822
    @joannaatkins822 28 дней назад +27

    Okay, you're not supposed to make me fall in love with a 350 diesel olds! Damn it now I want one

    • @tomasnokechtesledger1786
      @tomasnokechtesledger1786 11 дней назад

      2 happinesses: once you get one and other when you get rid of it.

    • @mattlf9120
      @mattlf9120 6 дней назад +2

      Been in love with mine for 15 years.
      I've never touched the head gaskets on my 5.7 diesel, and I drive it daily.

    • @mikechevreaux7607
      @mikechevreaux7607 5 дней назад

      ​@@mattlf9120
      Always An Exception

  • @madrew2003
    @madrew2003 21 день назад

    A lot of those came with a TH350-C which is a basic TH350 with a lockup converter. No OD. I had a co-worker with a Cutlass running all stock with that setup in the early 90's. I bet the connector was for that.

  • @user-qj9nv4sy9n
    @user-qj9nv4sy9n 25 дней назад

    I had one of those. It was in an oldsmobile station wagon. I could put accelerate it on my bicycle. It would tow a boat though, no problem. I had a 76 glastron bass boat that we towed all over texas with it

  • @RossCleveland42
    @RossCleveland42 Месяц назад +7

    38:40 "it's a book, kevin." Loved it. Thanks for the content Angus

  • @Drewzer154
    @Drewzer154 Месяц назад +7

    My parents bought a '79 Delta 88 Diesel from my father's uncle. He had meticulous service records for this vehicle and and my dad kept up on the maintenance. It died at 79,000 miles in 1987. When we pulled the engine we found out that the crankshaft had broken in half and one of the main bearings pierced the oil pan.

  • @Coatchawa
    @Coatchawa 2 дня назад

    I've been driving a new-to-me Caddy Seville with the 5.7 diesel to work a few times every week, and I have actually been pleasantly surprised with the power and ride quality, when compared to the motor's reputation. It has I think 45k or so on it, and it fees like it has quite a bit of life left to it. Doesn't even have any detectable blowby. My biggest gripe with the experience so far, is glow plug replacment. Mine were swollen BAAAAAD. Looks like you got pretty lucky with yours.

  • @chrisstromberg6527
    @chrisstromberg6527 12 часов назад

    Parents used to tow a fully loaded Star-Craft pop camper loaded with our gear, 2 adults, 3 kids, and an aluminum boat on top of the camper with an 84' 87' Oldsmobile Delta 88 for our yearly summer camping trip. Gas engine not the diesel.

  • @2coolwheels139
    @2coolwheels139 Месяц назад +12

    I can't believe you even found one of those Olds Diesels. I thought they had all been scrapped by now. I was a mechanic at an Olds dealership in those days. Most customers opted to swap in a gasoline engine after the diesel engines broke 5 or 6 times in a row.

    • @mikebelcher5111
      @mikebelcher5111 Месяц назад +1

      Yeah, cash for clunkers killed.Most of these big beautiful boats

  • @MileyonDisney
    @MileyonDisney Месяц назад +12

    I had a 1979 Cadillac Seville with the Olds diesel, and I absolutely loved it!

    • @ricardofierro7041
      @ricardofierro7041 Месяц назад

      I had a 1979 Cadillac Seville with a Olds diesel engine and I absolutely HATED it . I gave up at around 62,000 miles and took out the diesel engine and put in a 350 gas engine in it. Drove great from then on. Basically a beautiful car. An old neighbor man really loved the Cadillac so I sold it to him for nothing. He drove it for 6-5 years until a quick oil change place messed up the engine. ( rhymes with jiffy ) . Thanks

  • @montebrodie4086
    @montebrodie4086 14 дней назад

    We had a couple delta 88's with the 350 conversion diesels in both, got 300,000 miles out of one of them. That one was my father's work vehicle and he had to drive down country roads in all sorts of weather. Replaced a few starters, a injection pump a few times, Glow plugs, went through a few sets of tires, rotors, brake pads, one had a bad head gasket at the 100k mark the other soldiered on. They had barely adequate power. Sounded like marbles shaking in a coffee can, smoked excessively on startup. They were big and could carry 5 people in comfort, and got really good fuel mileage, averaged 34 mpg on a long 800 mile trip. My dad had a extra fuel tank hidden in his and ran offroad fuel that he got free from work and kept the undyed fuel in the normal tank in case the state patrol checked.

  • @MrLoretano77
    @MrLoretano77 9 дней назад

    I had to chime in. The first car I ever bought was a 1981 Delta 88. It was the same color but not as clean. I paid 600 bucks for it in 1997 and my friend and I learned a lot buying parts at the Junk Yard and fixing the parts as they rusted off lol. When I sold It, it was to a guy who used it in a demolition derby. I regret having sold it to this day. I have a lot of great memories with that car and i loved watching the video you posted. Thank you from a long time subscriber who appreciates all you do.

  • @cheaptricked
    @cheaptricked Месяц назад +6

    I worked for Olds dealers from ‘79 to ‘82 and experienced my share of these diesels. Parents even had a Toronado diesel. They made improvements in later years, but I gotta say this video brought back some nice memories.😎🍺