1980 Pontiac Phoenix LJ Review - A Malaise Era Hatchback!

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  • Опубликовано: 5 фев 2025

Комментарии • 218

  • @UraniumBullets
    @UraniumBullets Год назад +35

    Zach thank you so much for giving my Phoenix a little limelight.
    The car has truly been a pleasure to daily drive and own. Unfortunately that is not the factory headliner because the headliner is missing 😅 my plan is to one day replace it with burlap.
    You did a fantastic job going over the history of the car! The unreliability issues of this car are truly inflated, especially when you ask the people who own them nowadays and drive them regularly.
    Many companies have to recall certain cars for certain issues, this was the case in the 80s and still the case today. Is any car that gets recalled a bad car? No. Is any car that isn't a performance car a bad car? No. The X-Body platform was the first of it's kind so it got the most attention with the biggest magnifying glass. Hell, I would say the N-Body platform is no better than the X-Bodies but you certainly don't hear about the waves of hate with those cars.
    One last note, notice how everyone is so quick to talk poorly about a car platform they probably never owned until they find out about the Citation X-11. For some reason because that car is "fast" it somehow is the exception 🙄
    I digress, thank you so much again Zach! It was a fantastic time meeting and working with you! Can't wait for the other videos of my rides 😁

    • @bldontmatter5319
      @bldontmatter5319 Год назад +1

      This thing is kinda "junk" but very interesting, seemingly reliable, and lots of style. Cool car man

    • @UraniumBullets
      @UraniumBullets Год назад +1

      ​@@bldontmatter5319thanks, I don't see how it's kinda junk though...
      Ugly =/= Junk

    • @bldontmatter5319
      @bldontmatter5319 Год назад +2

      @@UraniumBullets it's junk in the sense that no one likes these. I have a 1997 Ford escort wagon of similar reputation. It's cool to maintain it and drive it as a unique piece, but it's just for economy, saving money, fuel, and to beat up. These kinds of cars were never meant to last forever, just to be good enough for the mom or dad who needed it when it was built... No offense meant.

    • @UraniumBullets
      @UraniumBullets Год назад +1

      @@bldontmatter5319 I certainly see your point, these most certainly were not "forever" cars. People honestly love it though! It gets so much attention wherever it goes from car people and non-car people alike. The only people who truly have negative feelings for it is anyone who remembers them when they came out.
      This is of course my own experience so I can't speak for the very few other Phoenixes that are still on the road.

    • @Doctor_Robert
      @Doctor_Robert Год назад +1

      @@bldontmatter5319 It's so ironic how nobody likes a Phoenix/Citation or an Escort, but the Nova is a chariot of glory and a 1957 Chevrolet Bel Air? Why, that's God's car. It's hilarious to consider corporate at GM (or Ford) made every car from perhaps the 30s onward to be not a forever car, good enough for the mom or dad who needed it when it was built.... but somehow the little monkeys in the back seat latched onto those machines and decided "THIS CAR GOOD CAR" as they grew up...
      ...The same people who were probably going through miserable times personally in 1980 and "had" to drive a Citation deciding "THIS CAR BAD CAR." The weird cherry-picking of automobiles and collective deciding of taste never sat well with me.
      My only theory why American stuff post-1970s is considered "ALL CRAP HOSS" is that there was a cottage industry of performance bits that sprang up around the Model T and the A and throughout time, lasting to the present. That industry grew up around simple Panhard-system cars (front engine, rear-wheel-drive). By the time FWD came to the US car industry... new generations just couldn't be bothered (not to the same extent as earlier generations, obviously there's plenty of people hotrodding Escorts and FWD GM). Each generation after the boomers cares (on average) less and less about cars.
      So the fact that these cars are "too different" to carry on the "motorsport tradition" (the reality being not enough people could be bothered for it to stick) and also "Japanese cars are infinitely better" (this is only in-part true and it's ruined cars for everybody... Honda made their cars too good in 1990. We've been spoiled) just laps up the rest.
      My advice? Team up with like-minded dorks that dig Ford Escorts if you need some community around your car. They're out there. Otherwise, do what it sounds like you're doing: just enjoy it and admire how it's lasted this long. ^_^

  • @Andyface79
    @Andyface79 Год назад +12

    The thing is American's DID love the X-Car. They sold 800,000 something Citations alone in its first year (they did stretch it a bit and had a long model year but still.) But they were so unreliable that they plummeted in sales and were done by 85. They still make Accords today. Also, when they redesigned the platform slightly and released them as the new A-Body, they sold really well.

    • @nlpnt
      @nlpnt Год назад +2

      Yeah, there's definitely some survivorship bias behind Zach's judgement of this car. It's over 40 years old and still here so it's gotta be one of the good ones.

    • @andregonsalvez9244
      @andregonsalvez9244 11 месяцев назад +1

      Great show Zac ! These X bodies had a rough start but towards the end of their production they were pretty reliable and decent cars to own. I wouldn't hesitate in buying one of these X or A body cars today over some of these extremely hi-tech cars of today ( 2024 ) .

  • @mirthenary
    @mirthenary Год назад +2

    My parents had one for 14 yrs, a gray one with a blue interior and vinyl seats, I think. It's been 30 yrs, replaced it with a 94 Mazda Protégé

  • @SeanRCope
    @SeanRCope 9 месяцев назад +2

    My first car 2 door. Bought a used one in Georgia after I got out of the Army. Drove from there to Canada and then California. I called it Pho.

  • @aenoymotors
    @aenoymotors Год назад +7

    It was fun watching this and comparing to my 1981 Plymouth Reliant wagon. Both hated in their day and, with at least this one and mine, both still here 40+ years later

  • @JimGrey
    @JimGrey Год назад +5

    I was 13 when the X cars arrived. I thought the Phoenix was the best looking of the lot. I rode in a number of X cars over the years and found them to be remarkably spacious for their small external dimensions.
    I was under the impression that the J car is an entirely separate platform from the X car, and the J spawned the L and N platforms. But the later A car (Chevy Celebrity, Olds Cutlass Ciera) is heavily based on the X car.

  • @jaimealvarez4722
    @jaimealvarez4722 Год назад +3

    You are so much better than what Regular Cars Reviews has become

  • @scrambler69-xk3kv
    @scrambler69-xk3kv Год назад +4

    Zach Push it slowly to the floor once then halfway to the floor and turn the key. Pushing it to the floor sets or closes the choke and the halfway down gives it just the right amount of fuel for a quick start. It was in the owner's manual under getting started.

  • @jasonschneider3715
    @jasonschneider3715 Год назад +4

    Definitely don’t see these on the road anymore! My great grandmother had one from this generation but I don’t remember the year. It was a blue coupe with blue vinyl interior and bucket seats. It was her last car. I remember it well. Thanks for sharing!

    • @UraniumBullets
      @UraniumBullets Год назад

      I absolutely love the coupes, they have arguably a more interesting shape than the hatchbacks.

  • @CJWriter0925
    @CJWriter0925 Год назад +18

    Justice for the X-Car! GM rushing it out to beat everyone to the beginning of the 80s is what did them in, honestly. If they wait til '81-'82, the built quality and reliability issues are probably non-existent. Great review as always.

    • @Andyface79
      @Andyface79 Год назад +1

      Agreed. They tried to rush it on the cheap and it was deadly. In 1980 (admittedly an extra long year for the model) Chevy made 800,000 plus Citations. In 85? Less than 70,000. That's what killed GM.

  • @mat13174
    @mat13174 Год назад +8

    I think the model designation goes back to John Delorean and the 69 Grand Prix. He wanted that car to capture the essence and spirit of the Duesenbergs of the 1930s. He even insisted Pontiac use the old Duesenberg model designations, J and SJ.

    • @Doctor_Robert
      @Doctor_Robert Год назад

      Honestly, that's a better explanation than any other one I've heard. Not even Pontiac's marketing could really tell us what LJ meant...

    • @chaseman94
      @chaseman94 Год назад

      I'm so used to Pontiac using trim names like SE, SSE, GT, GTP ,STE , etc.. it made me wonder what did SJ and LJ mean? Long jump? Super Jump? Who knows?

  • @shawnwhite2572
    @shawnwhite2572 Год назад +1

    We had an '82 Phoenix when I was a kid. It was a zero option car, so no a/c. The round "vents" next to the doors were fake, they didn't do anything. The center stack also had idiot lights, so none of those gauges shown here.

  • @FrankBrabec
    @FrankBrabec 6 месяцев назад +1

    I had the SJ with a v6 and I loved that thing! Not super fast but it sounded good, looked sporty and was pretty fun to drive.

  • @bill90405
    @bill90405 Год назад +1

    I drove a silver/white buckets 1980 phoenix coupe, iron duke, auto for four trouble free years. It was a late production build. Was great in snow got good mileage but sounded like a tractor. The brakes were no more squirrelly than many other pre abs cars. Mom had ‘81 Omega same story.

  • @t21229513
    @t21229513 Год назад +1

    I admire folks that preserve cars like. Cheers to you.
    And a nice review on top of it all!

  • @robertdiehl9003
    @robertdiehl9003 Год назад +2

    The Cadillac hubcaps fit perfectly on this car. Nice timeless look....

    • @UraniumBullets
      @UraniumBullets Год назад +1

      Thanks, my plan is to cover up the Cadillac emblem holes with the Pontiac logo eventually.

  • @jasonmcmaster3939
    @jasonmcmaster3939 Год назад +4

    I think I looked at one.of these as my first car back in the mid 80's!! lol ended up with a 79' straight 6 Mustang

  • @georgewilson1184
    @georgewilson1184 Год назад +2

    I went to Oswego High School Oswego Illinois back in the early 80s for Drivers education we had Pontiacs courtesy of the local dealership that was the Famous time magazine man of the year James K Detzler The Phoenix got the job done but the class I was in we just missed the use of a TransAm by one semester

  • @robertdiehl9003
    @robertdiehl9003 Год назад +2

    Awesome forethought about Zack mentioning how Gm started re-badging Japanese cars in place of their own in mid-80's..

  • @Ramcharger85
    @Ramcharger85 Год назад +3

    Love these cars. Soft spot for Pontiacs. My 88 Grand Am had the Iron Duke. Great motor. ❤

  • @Doctor_Robert
    @Doctor_Robert Год назад +10

    9:50 One factor was maintenance of that drivetrain. Most people who bought these had never had a transverse front-wheel-drive car and most mechanics of the time had never serviced such an auto either....
    The oil filter is in the back of the engine. The Haynes manual for this car literally says "don't try to get it from above or below, you'll have to take the passenger tire off and reach in there." I've done an oil change on this particular car before and yeah, it was a little silly, but I'm also from the future and used to Japanese cars that are sometimes like this. Most mechanics in 1980 had gotten used to decades and decades of "reach down and yank out" and to suddenly have this little car that symbolized everything changing be so different... naturally, many complaints and much moaning happened. Adding to the cesspool of hate for these cars.

    • @TheNuje
      @TheNuje Год назад

      Funny. I didn't realize that was a holdover from the X-cars. I had a Chevrolet Corsica (the L-body, which was a platform used only for that car, its coupe companion the Beretta, and the Canada-only Pontiac Tempest which was a way for those dealerships to sell a sedan in that class because GM decided to only sell 2 door Grand-Ams in Canada for reasons impossible for anyone to understand). Same oil filter access. The more you know!
      Still, huge shame GM decided to rush the X-bodies to market. I will never think they were in any way spectacular, but they certainly could have been not a nightmare if they didn't rush it.

    • @Doctor_Robert
      @Doctor_Robert Год назад

      @@TheNuje The only thing I can say I'm not crazy about Dan's Phoenix about... I'd do an oil filter relocation kit like a fancy hotrod just for peace of mind...
      And yeah, I'm rather familiar with the "I-Can't-Believe-It's-Not-The-N-Body" L-Body. When you join the "GM Classic FWD Society" you learn all the flavors. ^_^ I myself had an N-body 1997 Olds Achieva... but I hadn't had it long enough to do an oil change.

    • @gregorymalchuk272
      @gregorymalchuk272 4 месяца назад

      ​@@Doctor_Robert Which engine did your Oldsmobile Achieva have?

    • @Doctor_Robert
      @Doctor_Robert 4 месяца назад

      @@gregorymalchuk272 The DREAD Quad-4. Honestly, it was just fine... except I was young and dumb enough to not know you absolutely mustn't let an Olds Quad-4 overheat.... and I let that happen.

  • @RenNakamura20
    @RenNakamura20 Год назад +4

    This reminds me of my A body 95 buick century I use to have. Wasn't the A body just an updated more modern version of the X platform?? I know they shared a lot of the drivetrains and electronics.

    • @UraniumBullets
      @UraniumBullets Год назад

      Technically the N-Body was supposed to be the replacement of the X-Body

    • @runoflife87
      @runoflife87 Год назад

      Of course it was. Even the wheelbase stayed the same.

  • @bwofficial1776
    @bwofficial1776 Год назад +3

    I like the shape. The brown on tan on brown is very American 70s holdover.

    • @UraniumBullets
      @UraniumBullets Год назад +1

      That's mostly why I love it so much as well

  • @ladellhill7103
    @ladellhill7103 Год назад +1

    I had a chevy citation that year same engine my first car in 1989 I was 19 at the time,I had the trunk model coupe,I'll never forget my first car and it was the same color as that pontiac

  • @barnabius
    @barnabius Год назад +3

    That interior’s got swag

  • @markhealey9409
    @markhealey9409 Год назад +2

    One of our driver's ed cars in high school in the early 80s was an automatic Chevy Citation,its sibling...we also had a manual Chevette,& an automatic Cavalier....i chose the Chevette to learn in as I have always preferred manual cars.

  • @michaelcoonce6694
    @michaelcoonce6694 Год назад +3

    My dad had several of them i found them to be very decent practical cars. I found your comments on the ac amusing. AC has been very common since the 50s

  • @stephencannon3140
    @stephencannon3140 Год назад +3

    Like a Phoenix rising from the ashes of Arizona…or in this case…Oregon”

  • @EnthusiastCarHangar
    @EnthusiastCarHangar Год назад +3

    Weird but interesting. I had a Chevy Caprice a 1979 that was extremely brown inside haha I miss it and wish I had it still.

  • @smc2673
    @smc2673 Год назад +3

    My first car! It ran great. Comfy seating.

  • @weegeemike
    @weegeemike Год назад +1

    Crazy to see an '80 model X body that still runs and looks decent. Their first year of 1980 was the biggest sales year for the X body but it was probably the worst model year for the X body, GM was notorious for rushing things through and then gradually improving them each model year until they kill it. That was the case for these cars, by '82/'83 these were actually solid little cars but by then the damage had been done and sales of the X body plummeted and they met their end.
    Sweet review and sweet car! I would totally own this.

  • @scrambler69-xk3kv
    @scrambler69-xk3kv Год назад +3

    I much preferred the notchback versions of the X cars.

    • @UraniumBullets
      @UraniumBullets Год назад +1

      Those certainly have a neat look to them

  • @ezekielmorgan1042
    @ezekielmorgan1042 Год назад +3

    This car stole all of the vents from my non-AC chevette lol

  • @doug6191
    @doug6191 Год назад +2

    These cars weren't rejected because of RWD vs FWD. Quality. It was quality that gave them trouble. The X platform was a HUGE success out of the gates, but then the buying public caught wind of the terrible building quality. Initial quality was so bad that GM gave later Citations the "II" designation to fool people into believing it was updated.
    10:44 GM (and Ford and Chrysler) were selling Japanese vehicles before the X platform. The 1970s Chevette was co-developed with Isuzu. The 1970s LUV was an Isuzu, too. Ford's Courier was a Mazda. Chrysler's 1970s small cars (Colt) were Mitsubishis.
    The NUMMI arrangement which gave Chevy a Corolla Sprinter was GM's official acknowledgement that their workforce was building shit vehicles. They intended to learn "The Toyota Way" in the NUMMI deal. Obviously, that didn't happen. With nearly 30 years of NUMMI manufacturing, GM didn't learn a damned thing. They continued making subpar interiors and ancient powertrains in every vehicle not manufactured in Fremont.
    In short, US buyers were perfectly fine with FWD vehicles - the imports had no trouble selling them. The US buyers had no appetite for shoddy craftsmanship, and the X platform cars played a large role in why the imports grew so dramatically in the 80s.

  • @chaseman94
    @chaseman94 Год назад +3

    Back in the 80s my best friend's mom had one of these it was a 1983 model. She was having issues with it then traded it in for a 1987 Pontiac Bonneville SE with burgundy interior and exterior. Is it me or does the Phoenix bird emblem kind of look like one of the power up icons from the video game Contra from Konami?

    • @GeeEm1313
      @GeeEm1313 Год назад

      I wouldn't have even thought of the Contra powerups, but they do look similar!

  • @sponk2112
    @sponk2112 Год назад +3

    The louvers in the back mean it's sporty!

  • @Where2bub
    @Where2bub Год назад +6

    back in those days in New York, if you had a hatchback with a "privacy cover" you'd come back to the car the next day with a big broken window. so around here it was smarter not to use the cover to show everyone that your car was empty.

    • @UraniumBullets
      @UraniumBullets Год назад +1

      Genuinely why I took the cover off of the Phoenix. Where I live there is so much petty crime and the cover was getting in the way.

    • @robertdiehl9003
      @robertdiehl9003 Год назад +3

      The iconic days of N.Y. where stolen car shells were left along the side of the Cross Bronx Expressway on cinder block with Mayor Ed Koch riding subways asking ""How am I doing?"

  • @davinp
    @davinp Год назад +5

    When the Japanese automakers came to America, Americans noticed they were of better build quality than the Americans which is still true today. American brands don't follow the quality philosophy because they are more focused on making higher profits and cost cutting

    • @joe6096
      @joe6096 Год назад +5

      Which is a laugh because Toyota has been more profitable than GM for years lol

    • @bldontmatter5319
      @bldontmatter5319 Год назад

      ​@@joe6096because GM put all their "eggs" in china and russia... And china outdid them in every way, and Russians don't want their stuff. LOL.

  • @joey86bu1
    @joey86bu1 Год назад +5

    Yes brown on brown on brown on brown on brown on brown on brown on brown.

  • @scrambler69-xk3kv
    @scrambler69-xk3kv Год назад +2

    Love the headliner.

    • @lrich8181
      @lrich8181 Год назад

      There is no headliner! Only glue!

  • @gregg9672
    @gregg9672 Год назад

    The Sprint, Spectrum, and Nova all had major sales jumps when they were rebadged Geo Metro, Storm, Prizm and the new Geo Tracker. Geo did quite well during its first four or five years. Then GM focused on Saturn and the little Geo brand was absorbed back into Chevrolet where all the models were quickly discontinued one after the other.

  • @kc9scott
    @kc9scott Год назад +9

    The X-cars were actually wildly popular when first introduced. Chevy sold 811,540 Citations for the 1980 model year. But then they tanked as news spread of their awful quality and other problems. Sales got approximately cut in half each succeeding year, over the next few years.

    • @DS-wo8wr
      @DS-wo8wr Год назад +2

      Can you imaging GM selling 800,000 of anything today.

    • @ThePuffin77
      @ThePuffin77 Год назад

      ​@@DS-wo8wrGM has sold over 600k GMT T1XX pickups as of Q3 in 2023. So its definitely possible they produce those numbers in trucks yearly

    • @DS-wo8wr
      @DS-wo8wr Год назад

      @@ThePuffin77 Anything is possible, but history has shown that GM had a 46% market share in 1980. What’s it today?? Somewhere around 17%.

  • @OpinionatedOG184
    @OpinionatedOG184 2 месяца назад

    I owned this exact car which was gray exterior and blue interior. My first boyfriend tinted the windows so dark it was barely drivable at night. It was a great car. And Pontiac was well known to have more than decent to great sounding audio systems in all their cars. They were never subpar!

  • @jmi5969
    @jmi5969 Год назад +1

    35 mpg that's 6.7 l/100km? it's excellent for a petrol car even today, even if it's only easy freeway driving. I struggle to beat 5 l/100 km (47 mpg) average in a diesel car built thirty years later (roughly same weight).

  • @jimmyjimjims7483
    @jimmyjimjims7483 Год назад +1

    I always tell the tale of my grandparents 1980 Citation which decided to spontaneously combust in a Taco Bell drive thru in 1997 (with me in the back seat). We borrowed it from the barn my grandparents kept it in because our Cherokee was getting worked on and they no longer drove it much. We went to a Taco Bell in El Cajon and my mom turned on the heater when out of nowhere flames erupted from under the dash and a minute later the car was fully engulfed, one of my funniest childhood memories lol

  • @nolarobert
    @nolarobert Год назад +3

    I had the misfortune of owning a 1980 Pontiac Phoenix in college in 1986. The Iron Duke 4 banger was rough as a cob and didn't provide much power through the 3-speed automatic. It would stall at red lights and had trouble starting back up. The starter finally went out and had to be replaced. I drove it for less than a month when the starter went out again. I couldn't get rid of that Phoenix fast enough. I traded it in on a 1980 Honda Accord which proved to be an excellent vehicle. The quality difference between the Pontiac and the Honda was considerable.

    • @UraniumBullets
      @UraniumBullets Год назад +3

      sounds like you had a carburetor issue that you just refused to get taken care of

  • @frothe42
    @frothe42 4 месяца назад

    I had a 1982 Phoenix LJ thirty years ago. I liked it; power windows FI 2.5 litre 4, stereo. Engine went south.
    Miss it.

    • @frothe42
      @frothe42 4 месяца назад

      Also had air conditioning.

  • @Doctor_Robert
    @Doctor_Robert Год назад +3

    2:10 3-speed, but super duper low axle ratio, hence 35 at highway speeds. 3rd is effectively an overdrive. That Duke ain't doin' much at 70.

  • @bezalelkosofsky7286
    @bezalelkosofsky7286 Год назад +1

    Is there a trunk button in the glove compartment?

    • @UraniumBullets
      @UraniumBullets Год назад

      Unfortunately no

    • @bezalelkosofsky7286
      @bezalelkosofsky7286 Год назад

      This is the video of another 1980 Phoenix where someone showed a picture of a trunk button hiding in the grove compartment.
      @@UraniumBullets

  • @davidkastin4240
    @davidkastin4240 Год назад +3

    The forgotten Pontiac, a rebadged Citation 🤮

  • @bapa6396
    @bapa6396 Год назад +2

    Does this use the same body as the Chevy citation ? I love it

    • @UraniumBullets
      @UraniumBullets Год назад +2

      You bet! I actually bought a Citation because it had the window louvers you see on this Phoenix. As soon as I took the louvers off I sold the Citation for what I paid lol.

    • @DS-wo8wr
      @DS-wo8wr Год назад

      Yep!

  • @williamsinger4124
    @williamsinger4124 Год назад +2

    There was a yellow version of this car in the movie Airborne

    • @UraniumBullets
      @UraniumBullets Год назад +2

      I now might have to watch that movie just to see it lol

    • @williamsinger4124
      @williamsinger4124 Год назад +2

      @@UraniumBullets it's an early Seth Green movie. And the car isn't in it alot, but it's in several shots. Early 90s movie.

    • @UraniumBullets
      @UraniumBullets Год назад +1

      @@williamsinger4124 good enough for me to check it out, there's barely a Phoenix in any movie lol

    • @chryslerelectronicleanburn1676
      @chryslerelectronicleanburn1676 6 месяцев назад

      Wasn't that a movie about hockey

  • @Doctor_Robert
    @Doctor_Robert Год назад +26

    THE TATER TOT HAS LANDED!! REPEAT: THE TATER TOT HAS LANDED!!!

    • @thirdpedalnirvana
      @thirdpedalnirvana Год назад +1

      ....tater tot? I don't know what a tatter tot is, potato doesn't have 3 T's in it.

    • @kc0lif
      @kc0lif Год назад

      audi tt.

    • @melissacarterpresley5786
      @melissacarterpresley5786 Год назад +2

      @thirdpedalnirvana, yet they clearly have more of a life than you do.

    • @scubemariononovsky-tb8js
      @scubemariononovsky-tb8js Год назад +1

      IT ALL STARTED WITH A DINE AND DASH FROM A COUNTER AT A FAMILY RESTARAUNT

  • @DrCharlesMontague
    @DrCharlesMontague Год назад +1

    These cars WERE a recipe for success on the surface, but they literally blew the greatest opportunity GM might have ever had at further cementing their hold on the domestic market, because of awful quality. Everyone I’ve known who owned one said it was an unfortunately sorry car overall. As others have said, Detroit makes excuses for Americans “not wanting” what they obviously just don’t *want* to build. Today it’s sedans. Where they’ve discontinued all of their sedans, I notice Asian and European automakers are still selling proper cars in droves, while domestics just want to sell bloated and overpriced trucks and SUVs.

  • @FTRVDenny
    @FTRVDenny Год назад +2

    I don't remember those. Are they equivalent of a citation?

  • @joe6096
    @joe6096 Год назад +3

    You skipped the most unique thing about these X-bodies and only for the 1979-80 model years - it has the cruise control switch on the gear shift lever! That was a rare option on these and AFAIK the only cars to have the switch on the gear lever. In '81 they moved it to the traditional location on the turn signal lever, and then for 1983-85 they had GM's multifunction "smart switch" with wipers, cruise, and brights all on the turn signal stalk.

    • @UraniumBullets
      @UraniumBullets Год назад +1

      I absolutely love having my cruise control there! It's hands down the most simple and convenient cruise control I've ever used. Even more of a reason why I only wanted an '80 Phoenix compared to the other years.

    • @markhealey9409
      @markhealey9409 Год назад

      Interesting!

  • @gcaprice406
    @gcaprice406 Год назад

    These cars are what made my old man stop working on cars for a living. Specifically a problem with the overdrive transmission models. My old man was rebuilding them under warranty and was having early failures, they fired him for too many transmission comebacks. A week later GM came out with an updated part for these failures, and the dealer tried to get my dad to come back. He left the auto industry for good, and was probably one of his best decisions as he made much more money in other professions.

    • @gregorymalchuk272
      @gregorymalchuk272 8 месяцев назад

      Only the manual had an overdrive. The 3 speed automatic had no overdrive (but low numerical final drive ratio) but did have an electric solenoid that controlled a lockup torque converter. It was known to have issues. It would stick in lockup even after the car slowed down below 35mph and would cause the car to stall when stopping after previously travelling faster than 35 mph.

  • @bezalelkosofsky7286
    @bezalelkosofsky7286 Год назад +3

    I found out from the Wiki that Pontiac made the Grand Am as a replacement of the Phoenix.

  • @1KonArtis
    @1KonArtis Год назад +2

    Im here for the BFB test.

  • @kc0lif
    @kc0lif Год назад +1

    the pontiac version of chevy citation. 3 speed transmission just fine. i knew people that drove Phoenixs nice car.

  • @TheGeorgiaMediaGroup
    @TheGeorgiaMediaGroup Год назад +3

    I had the 1980 citation

  • @KayakTN
    @KayakTN Год назад +2

    That headliner is terrifying.

    • @UraniumBullets
      @UraniumBullets Год назад +4

      It's actually non-existent 😂
      What you see is all the foam padding from underneath where the headliner was

    • @Doctor_Robert
      @Doctor_Robert Год назад +1

      @@UraniumBullets That's even more terrifying!!

    • @gregorymalchuk272
      @gregorymalchuk272 8 месяцев назад

      People shouldn't rip down falling headliners, and they definitely shouldn't use glue on them as it will wreck the fiberglass insulation pad. You need to use these corkscrew pins called "twist pins" that you can get at Hobby Lobby or JoAnne's Fabrics that screw into the fiberglass insulation pad.

  • @MintyFreshTurds
    @MintyFreshTurds Год назад +2

    Dammmmn it even has stainless rain deflectors on the windows 😮

    • @UraniumBullets
      @UraniumBullets Год назад +1

      Those weren't cheap lol. Took me a solid year to find a set of them for the Phoenix. They originally retailed for like $15 in the early 80s and let's just say I paid about 20 times that amount 😅

  • @5KpGD
    @5KpGD Год назад +2

    That car has no headliner, your looking at the bare cheeseboard.

    • @GeeEm1313
      @GeeEm1313 Год назад +1

      My dad's Citation probably had that.

  • @robertdiehl9003
    @robertdiehl9003 Год назад +1

    Nice car. Beautiful paint. Gm tried. Does have personality.

  • @chryslerelectronicleanburn1676
    @chryslerelectronicleanburn1676 6 месяцев назад

    Do the Plymouth Volare/ Dodge Aspen next. Made from 1976-1980. And did it hit it on as much as the 1980 front wheel drive X body GM cars

  • @thirdpedalnirvana
    @thirdpedalnirvana Год назад +5

    Hmmm.... 35mpg and a 3 speed auto? I doubt it did that stock. I bet (being in Oregon not California) that all the emissions equipment was removed and that's how it gets such good fuel economy. I bought a 533i in Portland and was delighted to get 27mpg on my drive home. Then I put a cat on it to smog it, and it melted the cat, because it was tuned to run lean to save fuel at the cost of high NOx emissions

    • @UraniumBullets
      @UraniumBullets Год назад +1

      Actually it still has all the emissions equipment. It gets such good fuel economy because it's only an Iron Duke and the way the transmission is geared.
      I bet when I take the emissions equipment off the fuel economy will be even better.

    • @gregorymalchuk272
      @gregorymalchuk272 4 месяца назад

      ​@@UraniumBulletsPlease don't take it off. It keeps it running good, and the early fuel evaporation and thermac are good for fuel economy and emissions.

  • @Doctor_Robert
    @Doctor_Robert Год назад

    5:05 Fun Fact: that fabric is available because that seat design was also found in the same-era Firebirds... I'm begging Dan to contact one of the manufacturers and just get a bolt or two of the stuff to reupholster that themthar hobnail!

  • @azaz911c
    @azaz911c Год назад +4

    What a beautiful example of 1980s automotive brownness.

  • @JFlorida-p9w
    @JFlorida-p9w Год назад

    Can you review a 2023 Nissan Altima

  • @howebrad4601
    @howebrad4601 Год назад

    The gm x cars were a huge design change for gm and the industry. I personally feel that they were the perfect size. Small car but with tolerable interior dimensions and very good space utilization. Due to the impending massive increase in federal cafe standards they were rushed into production before some of the final engineering and proving steps were fully done. The result was quality control issues, etc.
    As a design though I think they hit the mark. Just wish the actual execution would have been more complete.
    As to quality, find me a 1980 honda or Toyota that still has its factory upholstery and plastics intact. The imports were very well assembled but material quality such as fabrics, plastics, and the steel itself was very subpar compared to the americans. The americans did have drivability issues though as they hadnt yet perfected the smaller engines. People bought a lot of x body and a body cars innthe early 80s, but by mid decade honda and Toyota had again upped their game.
    Also in 1980, the only fwd car offered by Toyota was the tercel. Corolla and corona were still rwd. Datsun was rwd as well except for the 310. Honda has always primarily been fwd.
    I own a 80 buick x car and its way more luxurious and substantial than my early accords and Toyotas.

  • @RyanGallager
    @RyanGallager Год назад +3

    Ohhh yeahhhhhh! Peak malaise!

  • @phillyspitta8147
    @phillyspitta8147 Год назад

    Had a neighbor who had a think for the worst Gm 80s cars he had one of these , a citation x11 coupe , celeb Eurosport wagon and a white 6000 awd which I thought was cool but think was none of this guys cars moved actually . He daily drove a metro and had these in his yard rotting away .

  • @carlhilton4747
    @carlhilton4747 Год назад +3

    I had one of these back in the day. For some reason, girls actually liked that car. I guess from certain angles it was kind of classy looking?😂

    • @UraniumBullets
      @UraniumBullets Год назад

      I'll say this, the Phoenix has gotten me laid more than any of my other cars ;)

  • @kevinpatrickmacnutt
    @kevinpatrickmacnutt Год назад

    That was the most reliable car? What did he own mostly Fiats before? I had the Buick version (Skylark) with the 2.5 and that engine is gutless. They did offer that car with 2.8 liter.

  • @msmoniz
    @msmoniz Год назад +2

    It's a forgotten car for a very good reason! I remember these POS models as a kid in the early 80's! A step up from a Vette, a Chevette! But not much!!

    • @UraniumBullets
      @UraniumBullets Год назад +1

      Ah yes, because as a child I'm sure your assessment on a new car was surely accurate and calculated.

    • @bwofficial1776
      @bwofficial1776 Год назад +1

      @@UraniumBullets Children are smarter than you'd think. I had pretty accurate opinions of all of my family's cars. My dad's Grand Cherokee WJ was pretty all right. My grandfather's Mazda Tribute was a piece of crap. My grandmother's Buick Regal GS was very nice. My other grandmother's Chrysler Town & Country was a good people-hauler but otherwise unremarkable.

    • @UraniumBullets
      @UraniumBullets Год назад +1

      @@bwofficial1776 lol have you heard what comes out of children's mouths most of the time? Unless it looks sporty and fast, most children couldn't give a damn. And hey, some people haven't grown out of that mentality in their adulthood 🤷

  • @kwaza8574
    @kwaza8574 Год назад +1

    Great car to review.

  • @Foxonian
    @Foxonian Год назад +1

    One word to describe this cloth interior: "vulgarlar"

  • @althunder4269
    @althunder4269 Год назад +2

    It seems to have a high stance. Almost like a 4WD.

    • @UraniumBullets
      @UraniumBullets Год назад +3

      It had a slightly lower stance when I still had the factory wheels on it. Had to upgrade from the 13s to 15s simply because 15 inch tires are so much easier to find.

  • @geeksimmer2488
    @geeksimmer2488 4 месяца назад

    35mpg???? Where do I get one

  • @jeffreyrigged
    @jeffreyrigged Год назад

    learned to drive in a early 80s sj 2 door

  • @dave11686
    @dave11686 Год назад +1

    Sweet!

  • @bazilwreckerloughead
    @bazilwreckerloughead Год назад +2

    That's a cool & querkey little car!

    • @UraniumBullets
      @UraniumBullets Год назад +1

      Thanks man! It always gets thumbs up and people always wanna chat about it

  • @scott8919
    @scott8919 Год назад +5

    Imagine looking at the Japanese competition and deciding THIS was the best option. 🤔

    • @UraniumBullets
      @UraniumBullets Год назад

      What would YOU have done? They made what the people demanded. Something roomy, cheap, and economical.
      GM did their best but could've done better with more time and less bean counters.

    • @Doctor_Robert
      @Doctor_Robert Год назад +2

      I do own one of them Japanese competition vehicles: a 1980 Mazda 626. It's blown up on me three times in 7 years. Meanwhile, Dan's Phoenix has just.... worked.

  • @ceriabestsb3023
    @ceriabestsb3023 Год назад

    I watched a RUclipsr talking about this particular model . Can't remember the plate number though but somehow it's the same colour and coincidentally that RUclipsr is based in Oregon..

    • @UraniumBullets
      @UraniumBullets Год назад +2

      Now I'm very curious who it could've been!

    • @ceriabestsb3023
      @ceriabestsb3023 Год назад +1

      @@UraniumBullets just say he's into small cars😄

    • @UraniumBullets
      @UraniumBullets Год назад

      @@ceriabestsb3023 I genuinely don't know 🥲😅

  • @garyodle5663
    @garyodle5663 11 месяцев назад

    I had a 1980 Pontiac Phoenix in 1983 and it was by far the worst car I have ever owned. The rubber boots around the CV joints were constantly splitting and allowing dirt and road debris up into the joints. The CV joints would grind up that dirt and debris and get destroyed, causing me to constantly having to replace them, and that was not cheap. I simply could not afford to keep the car; it was killing me financially. It drove great but man alive, what a money pit.

  • @bldontmatter5319
    @bldontmatter5319 Год назад +2

    Have a 1988 f250.
    Dark Brown main color, light brown secondary, brown seats. Brown headliner. Ect. I dont get it. Repainted it blue.

  • @cardiffchris
    @cardiffchris Год назад +2

    You review the coolest cars

  • @Dankcatvacs
    @Dankcatvacs Год назад +3

    When zack says a cars not fast. This one is really not fast.

    • @UraniumBullets
      @UraniumBullets Год назад

      It's surprisingly the fastest car I own 🫣😂

    • @bldontmatter5319
      @bldontmatter5319 Год назад +1

      YEAAAH... I'm ok with 0-60 in 15 sec or so, maybe a little more... But with an automatic and such a small car, it's really annoying driving such a slow car. Looks like the owner has some even slower cars though...

    • @UraniumBullets
      @UraniumBullets Год назад

      @@bldontmatter5319 it does 0-60 in under 20 and maybe even under 15 if I stomp on it. The real issue where speed comes into play is trying to pass someone on the highway. That's when it's just miserable.

    • @bldontmatter5319
      @bldontmatter5319 Год назад

      @@UraniumBullets it's not too surprising
      I'd drive this around town only, personally. Without an overdrive, I'm sure it's pretty annoying, and the engine probably can't do much on the highway. I don't think it was built for that.

    • @UraniumBullets
      @UraniumBullets Год назад

      @@bldontmatter5319 the way it's geared it makes for a great highway cruiser. Without the louvers I get a solid 35mpg doing 65mph. I've driven it all over the PNW and as far easy as Salt Lake. Sure there are better highway cruisers but this certainly does the job.

  • @jacobgreenmanedlion1863
    @jacobgreenmanedlion1863 Год назад

    My mail, like a lot of American mail, was delivered by a Mercedes-Benz M274 2.0 liter direct-injection turbo four cylinder, in a Mercedes-Benz Metris.

  • @damilolaakanni
    @damilolaakanni Год назад

    That design of cloth seats are cool looking when they're new, but they're pretty uncomfortable. I once sat in a 3rd gen 4runner with similar cloth seat design and I really disliked it.

  • @samblensdorf7384
    @samblensdorf7384 Год назад

    Official car of wood paneled 80s

  • @BenyKorenberg
    @BenyKorenberg Год назад

    Am I insane or is this the old 70s-80s gen Opel Kadette/ascona with some weird add-ons?

    • @markhealey9409
      @markhealey9409 Год назад

      No. The North American Chevy Cavalier was a cousin of the European Vauxhall Cavalier/Opel Ascona. North America had the Chevrolet Chevette,which was a cousin of The European Vauxhall Chevette/Opel Kadett

  • @lincmerc1581
    @lincmerc1581 Год назад

    Hobnail? That's what happens when you stub a toe in the dark.😂

  • @StillPlaysWithCars_
    @StillPlaysWithCars_ Год назад +1

    I took my driver's test in one of these. When you'd turn the wheel all the way left or right, the engine would stall.

    • @UraniumBullets
      @UraniumBullets Год назад +1

      Sounds like someone didn't take care of their car 🤷

  • @Dankcatvacs
    @Dankcatvacs Год назад +2

    They were pissed when it broke
    Then gm created Saturn then killed it

  • @jordanj9233
    @jordanj9233 Год назад +2

    Grew up in a Citation Family. Dad had a blue coupe and mom a red sedan. I was always embarrassed to get dropped off at school, even in 1989 😂

    • @Billn1971
      @Billn1971 6 месяцев назад +1

      We had a 1981 light blue Citation 4 door hatch. Had 200,000 miles before we got rid of it.

  • @Doctor_Robert
    @Doctor_Robert Год назад +2

    11:20 Also, this car was the basis for EVERY front-wheel-drive car to come out of GM for the next 30 years. Cavalier? Shortened X-body. Buick Park Avenue? Extended X-body. Your grandma's Buick Century/Oldsmobile Cutlass Ciera? The same platform, repackaged because hatred. The transmission in this car was in production until 2002... unchanged. The engine delivers your mail every day. GM had great success with this experiment... the trouble is, they made a ton of mistakes later (fiddling with Overhead camshafts and, more alarmingly, aluminum to create the Northstar and the Quad-4.... which were decidedly less reliable than an Iron Duke).
    ...I'm sorry, Zack, I'm bracing myself for all the X-Body hate this video's gonna get.

  • @seankirby1327
    @seankirby1327 Год назад +2

    It was part of the original X car. The carburetor was really fussy. The pontiac was more 'Upscale" version. For a car in 1980 it was very well optioned. It was originally a great design until the "Bean counters" got involved. It was considered a midsized car. These cars were MUCH bigger than anything the Japanese brought in. The X car had more interior room than the cars it replaced. All of GM imports were smaller than the X cars.

  • @sanfordbogage9370
    @sanfordbogage9370 4 месяца назад

    That headliner is ripped out you’re seeing the underside of the fabric.