Baby Ram

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  • Опубликовано: 8 янв 2025

Комментарии • 444

  • @garagedweller7159
    @garagedweller7159 Год назад +113

    Looks like that truck could easily be brought back to life.

    • @lilmike2710
      @lilmike2710 Год назад +12

      And with very little effort.
      Those little Mitsubishi 4 slingers were hearty little motors that didn't wanna quit.

    • @zackjay71
      @zackjay71 Год назад +8

      I thought that to till I saw the plant growing threw the floor and the driver front fender wall split can see when he shows the tire.

    • @rustbeltrobclassic2512
      @rustbeltrobclassic2512 Год назад +10

      usually it's the frames that go bad on these little trucks, can swear the body used better steel than the frame.

    • @wizard5637
      @wizard5637 Год назад +10

      It's in New England, the frame is toast

    • @57WillysCJ
      @57WillysCJ Год назад +8

      @@zackjay71 Plant was outside and the door closed on it I believe.

  • @taylorlengyel
    @taylorlengyel Год назад +70

    I’m still daily driving my 1982 D50, fully loaded 4wd with ac, it’s a great little truck!

    • @danfay4860
      @danfay4860 Год назад +3

      Your not in the rust belt 😂

    • @ScottDLR
      @ScottDLR Год назад +4

      Where I live in Washington state, it's the 4WD's that people lust after.

    • @onrdetailingnews802
      @onrdetailingnews802 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@ScottDLRparts hard to get for them now I got a 90 d50 any help for me

  • @gosselinkfinecarpentry9786
    @gosselinkfinecarpentry9786 Год назад +9

    I would have never guessed you ever had a drinking problem. Good for you for getting sober! 4/15/10 for me , 13 years it’s been.

  • @ditherdather
    @ditherdather Год назад +5

    Clean and sober? I love it!!!! God bless, brother.

  • @ram50v8
    @ram50v8 Год назад +8

    Couple of points I would like to mention. 1987 was the second generation RAM 50. This marked a huge departure from the first gen RAM 50. The 1st. gen had greasable control arm pivots instead of the 2nd gen rubber bushings. Most "We Be Lube and Shit" places had no clue and would not grease them. This caused some severe wear issues. But if you did grease them every 3 to 4K miles they lasted forever. The front brakes were massive solid cast rotors with healthy calipers and pads. Next point, the 1st gen long bed, with the 2.6, 2wd was a 1 ton rated truck (more on this in a minute) The 1st gen frames were box steel construction from bumper to bumper with well thought out large cross members through welded , no channel frames on them. Next 1st gen point was the rear axle. The rear axle shafts would embarrass a ford 9 inch, they literally filled the axle tubes which were fairly heafty. However the differential case center section for the cross shaft was definitely a weak point under power. Over time the cross shaft would beat the housing bore from round to oblong. Upside, once you got about 0.20" bore wear you would up with a locking diff under load. Down side, you better be headed to the salvage yard for a new center section (which by the way dropped out just like the venerable MOPAR 8-3/4!!) Now more on 1 ton rating. When the first gen came out I started converting them to V8 power for people who wanted a 1 ton rated truck that got great fuel economy, could easily pull and stop a heavy trailer, fit in a parking space (remember this was at the time when parking lots were being re striped for smaller spaces/more shoppers) and had enough power to get out of it's own way. By the 1979 model year Chrysler had pretty much killed the big block (Chryslers last big block vehicle (van chassis/cab) was produced in 1980 not 1978 as some less informed claim. I know this as I worked on quite a few) Anyway, I used all factory parts for the V8 conversion (except for custom fabbed front cross-member and heavily modified transmission cross-member and buick V6 water pump pulley, Eldorado air cleaner and modified 4 ro brass radiator) And for the front springs I used Ford Fairmont station wagon springs with 2 turns cut off. So I ordered quite a few parts when doing these from Shelby Dodge on Neil St. in Champain Illinois. One day when there to pick up parts, JB at the parts counter asked me if I would allow a hand full of engineers from the ST. Louis plant check out my truck. Well 6 engineers spent a few hours checking it out and driving it. They just shook their heads (out of disbelief and amazement) and asked "why"! As I stated, I wanted a 1 ton truck that got great fuel economy, fit in a parking place, could easilly handle a car trailer and reliable. And with the hood closed, you would have no idea a V8 lurked under the hood unless you noticed a pair of 2 inch tail pipes popping out behind the right rear tire. All this before the Dakota and that was why the engineers paid me a visit.

    • @RealSteelFabrications
      @RealSteelFabrications Год назад

      Great info! I just bought a 1982 Ram 50 and got it running after being abandoned for 10 years

    • @onrdetailingnews802
      @onrdetailingnews802 9 месяцев назад

      ​​@@RealSteelFabricationsgood luck finding parts nonexistent now got a 90 ram 50

  • @michaelnazaruk4100
    @michaelnazaruk4100 Год назад +32

    I was in Service Management at a Chrysler, Plymouth, and Dodge dealership back in the late 80's, and I have to say that these Ram 50 trucks were very reliable. Hardly saw any of them brought in for problems - unlike the full size Dodge trucks and Dakotas. I also saw a few equipped with the Mitsubisbi 3.0 V6 engine and manual 5 speeds.

    • @ddellwo
      @ddellwo Год назад +1

      That 3.0 would turn a little D50 into a rocket ship………😮
      What were the issues you saw with the full-size Dodge trucks - by that time (almost two decades in production) I would have figured they’d have every possible “bug” in the thing worked out……??!!!

    • @michaelnazaruk4100
      @michaelnazaruk4100 Год назад +1

      @@ddellwo - I saw full size Ram trucks with some electrical issues (bad grounds), a few tranny issues, but the biggest problems were poor fitting doors and hoods, and broken body welds.

    • @TheGeorgiaMediaGroup
      @TheGeorgiaMediaGroup Год назад

      Great video

    • @Jaguarmaserati
      @Jaguarmaserati Год назад

      YES!! Love me a good manual transmission!! Never owned an automatic.

  • @Glenn_123
    @Glenn_123 Год назад +7

    That truck looks like it is still in descent shape. I had a 1989 RAM 50 5 speed. Loved that little truck. Got rid of it in 96 for a 4WD Dakota. Wish I still had both trucks. My RAM 50 ran great with 176K miles on it when I sold it for the Dakota. Wish we could go back in time.

  • @GoddessOfMisfortune
    @GoddessOfMisfortune Год назад +2

    Reminds me a lot of my 79 620 king cab I have now! 6 lug hubs, 4 cylinder, but only rwd and with a 5 speed on the floor. They're real trucks alright, and they all seem to last forever!

  • @nolarobert
    @nolarobert Год назад +2

    This video was a twofer for me. My stepfather owned a red Dodge D50. It was a great little truck until it developed rust issues. When you were flipping through the 1981 Dodge imports catalog, you showed the Dodge Challenger. I had the Plymouth version, aka the Sapporo. That was a peppy 4-banger coupled with the 5-speed manual. That's the car that got me through my final years of college, so I look back on it fondly. I haven't seen a D50 or a Challenger/Sapporo on the road in many years.

  • @57WillysCJ
    @57WillysCJ Год назад +4

    I had an 1985 4x4 with the turbo diesel. That little turbo would kick in when passing and really make it sing. That thing got 28 mpg on the open road. May not seem like much now but a 4x4 with that kind of MPG just didn't happen back then.

    • @srchester3504
      @srchester3504 Год назад

      Hardly ever see the diesels around anymore.

  • @brianbloom1799
    @brianbloom1799 Год назад +4

    Hi Steve, Good Morning, A friend of mine was giving one of these trucks it had low compression, So I did a in chassis, rebuild , what a pain, Should have pulled, But I did it in his driveway. Ran great when done, I think he drove it 5 years, He sad it did get great gas mileage,, Thought I would share, Great Video Steve.

  • @haljohnson5729
    @haljohnson5729 Год назад +10

    I miss mini trucks

  • @jeffreysproul9110
    @jeffreysproul9110 Год назад +1

    I had a 85 MItsubishi MIghty Max for 14 years 2 WD, 4 speed manual, air, sliding rear window, and 7 1/2 ft bed. It had the 2.0 I-4. Good little truck.

  • @anibalbabilonia1867
    @anibalbabilonia1867 Год назад +3

    That little Dodge still restorable! Is in great shape! Hopefully someone will save it! Man I remember the Raider’s! I used to love the way those looked!

  • @kblinn68
    @kblinn68 8 месяцев назад +2

    the ram 50 & mitsubishi mighty max were good little trucks.

  • @bradhampton6457
    @bradhampton6457 Год назад +1

    The Mitsubishi Ram 50s were good little trucks. We sold these at our Dodge/Chrysler Plymouth store in late 70s and 80s.

  • @barrycuda3769
    @barrycuda3769 Год назад +3

    That Plymouth Champ was called the Mitsubishi "Mirage" in New Zealand and the plymouth Cricket was a Hillman Avenger . I would have had that aged Canadian Club down my neck on the spot ' it would be smooth.🙂

  • @anthonyacosta5336
    @anthonyacosta5336 Год назад +1

    I Had The Long bed D50 ..That little Truck was a Work horse.. Put about 350,000 miles
    on it She just Kept going..One of the best mini trucks ever made...
    Also had the Plymouth colt...Great little car ...

  • @dude7838
    @dude7838 Год назад +1

    Man I'd like to buy that little Dodge. Thanks for the content Steve. Love it all!

  • @Narrowgaugefilms
    @Narrowgaugefilms 8 месяцев назад

    There was more to the cap than sheltering cargo. In some states (example: New York), an open pickup couldn't get anything but commercial license plates and were restricted from driving on parkways and in the left lanes of some highways. If you put a cap on it, now it was more like a station wagon and you could register it as a car. This was also the reason for the rear quarter windows in private vans: solid walls=commercial vehicle, windows=passenger car.
    Since then, they changed the law and open pickups can be registered either as passenger cars or trucks.

  • @bobhill3941
    @bobhill3941 Год назад +7

    Great review as always. I was born in 1987 and dad bought a brand new S10 regular cab manual 4 cylinder with a white cap he bought from my uncle.
    This truck is a great value even today. Accounting for inflation, that $5,788 is only $15,800 today. Good morning and have a great day everyone.

    • @sidgreentherhymeofreason
      @sidgreentherhymeofreason Год назад +1

      The Chevrolet S10 is a good pickup truck. I had a 1994 S10 with a 4.3 litre Vortec V6 and it lasted for over 250,000 miles until the automatic transmission went out

    • @bobhill3941
      @bobhill3941 Год назад

      @@sidgreentherhymeofreason Yeah, the only reason dad sold his in 99 was the body had rusted out, the Iron Duke 2.2 and Toyota 5 speed manual were still strong.
      An uncle also had a Sonoma extended cab of the later generation and a later generation s10 green manual regular cab.

  • @dansapochetti6116
    @dansapochetti6116 Год назад +3

    The company that I worked for many years ago had 4 of these D50. My 1st truck was an 87 then later a 89.Gutless but extremely durable. They were up there with the Toyota for reliability.

  • @jeffpitzer8521
    @jeffpitzer8521 Год назад

    I had an 83 D50 and an 88 that looked exactly like that one except it was an extended cab. The 2.6L with a 5 speed was a BEAST! A buddy of mine bought a new 83 Silverado with a 350...I cleaned his clock. We both towed similar sized boats from Texas to northern Arkansas through the ozark mountains..he could not keep up. I started my machinery sales biz in 91 with my 88.. towed way too heavy of loads for years. Sometimes up to 10,000 lbs. Like from MN to Texas. I wish they made them still...I'd buy one in a heartbeat. Seriously more truck pound for pound than my Cummins dually..

  • @highwaymanpp05
    @highwaymanpp05 Год назад +2

    I had 2 Mitsubishi Mighty Max trucks loved them very dependable trucks

  • @MichaelD26
    @MichaelD26 Год назад +5

    This video is great, I was so hoping you were going to cover that D50 when I saw it in the background. My best friend in elementary school had a neighbor with one and I fell in love with it. I loved all of the mini trucks from the 80"s - 90's. I've owned a Dakota since 07 and have had great luck with both of them. Thanks again Steve and keep up the good work, I love these videos.

    • @RealSteelFabrications
      @RealSteelFabrications Год назад +1

      I’m slowly falling in love with the mini trucks too. Have bought 2 so far and have got them running on my channel

  • @tanhelmet
    @tanhelmet Год назад

    I'm mesmerized in the 1st sixty seconds of line-up rebag-gio repertoire. You certainly know your stuff.

  • @TSC-Detroit
    @TSC-Detroit Год назад

    Keep up the good work Steve
    6 years clean
    Life is good

  • @mexicanspec
    @mexicanspec Год назад

    I had both the Dodge Colt twin stick 1979 model and a 1981 Plymouth Champ. I loved them both.

  • @hughjass1044
    @hughjass1044 Год назад +2

    Paint store I once worked for had one of those as a shop truck. Great little truck. That 2.6 was a great engine.

  • @jayer-su3hu
    @jayer-su3hu Год назад +1

    My first vehicle was a 91 Mitsubishi (same as this truck) bare bones. No AC, manual everything 5 speed manual transmission. And I absolutely loved that truck. And miss it to this day.

  • @googleusergp
    @googleusergp Год назад +6

    No, that's not correct. The Courier (not the Ranger) was the Ford captive import from 1972 to 1982. The Ranger was a Ford designed, built and sold unit, starting with the 1983 model year and replaced the Courier as the mini-pickup in the Ford line. Famously, Henry Ford II, aka "Hank the Deuce" ignorantly told Mr. Iacocca one day, "No way any vehicle with my name on the hood will be powered by a Jap. engine....". When Mr. Ford made that statement, Ford had been importing the Courier for several years. Mr. Ford II was not the brightest bulb in the string.
    No, 1980 was the year for the 85 MPH speedometer requirement, not 1977. Based on the dealer logo on the tailgate, this was likely sold used through Dillion Chevrolet in Greenfield, MA which is now McGovern Chevrolet of Greenfield at 54 Main Street. Correct, the imported Dodge Challenger (and cousin Plymouth Sapporo) were a rebadged Mitsubishi Galant Lambda coupe. No, 1993, not 1994 for the ending of the Ram 50 line. In 1994, the Dakota took over as the "mini" pickup in the Chrysler lineup. The Mighty Max (what the Ram 50 was based on) continued through 1996. I was never a fan of Mitsubishi. They made great electronics and TV sets and that's what they should have stuck with.
    I remember my neighbor who was a mechanic working out of his house at the time needing to get parts for a Mitsubishi Starion. I said, "Easy. We'll just call the Chrysler dealer and have them look up parts for a Conquest. Same vehicle". My neighbor was amazed that I could figure that out. This was before the internet and Rock Auto and the quick availability of information, and long before I worked for an automotive parts manufacturer where I had every parts book available within a 10 foot reach of my office. I still have a parts book for this Ram 50 in my collection, as well as most Chrysler products from 1982 to 2005 including 1981 to 2005 Jeeps.
    Kudos to you for being clean and sober. I don't drink and I've never smoked---not even once. My "addiction" is fixing things. I just pulled a 1998 American Yard Products 22" lawn mower off the curb earlier this week. It has a Honda engine, which I'm not a fan of. The sign taped to it said, "Runs well. Gas drained. Going out in the garbage on Tuesday". I put fuel in it and it fired right up. I'll do some maintenance to it and then decide if it's a keeper or to flip it. Even the self propelled feature works. I'm using a 2007 MTD mower that my neighbor tossed out in 2019 to cut my lawn. When my neighbor saw me using it the next day after he put it to the curb, he signaled for me to shut off the engine. He said, "Got it running?" (Very obvious I did.....). I said, "Yea, someone ovefilled the crankcase and it saturated the air filter and plug. I replaced those, leveled out the oil level and unjammed the engine and it fired right up. Runs great. He said, "Well, I didn't need it. I have an eletric now." I said, "Yup, everyone throws out a good running gas mower so they can buy an electric whereby the batteries will go bad in four years and total the machine out." LOL. If it's not yard equipment, it's tools, or toolboxes or other durable goods that I'm fixing up. But, I do thin the herd now and then, as I did this past winter with flipping a curbside snow blower. If you "shop the curb", you can often find what you need. My workshop garage is maintained with curbside/CL find tools, toolboxes and yard equipment. Most of it was put back into service with very little effort.
    Caps were also added because of laws so that they wouldn't be considered "commercial trucks" which often required higher fee plates and registrations, and some were not allowed on parkways in some states.
    No VIN, can't win, but the 10th digit of the VIN is an "H" for the 1987 model year and these were made in Nagoya, Japan. Possible code TX9 Black exterior paint (going by a domestic code that year. "Mighty Max" (not "Mighty Mite") for the Mitsubishi version. My grandfather's brother, Frederico aka "Freddie the Barber" had one. He and my grandfather were partners as barbers for 14 years (originally a "short time arrangement") from 1982 to 1996. Prior to that, both had been barbers on their own for over 50 years. In fact, all of my grandfather's brothers (Sam, Roger, Emil, Al, Freddie and my grandfather Emanuel) were all barbers. Yup, all old time Italian barbers. I've never paid for a haircut in my life. My uncle (my grandfather's son) now cuts my hair using my grandfather's Oster "Classic 76" trimmer and barber tools which I've repaired a few times. My grandfather lived to be 101.5 years old and was a barber about 75 years. My workshop garage I've referred to in several posts was originally the garage at the back of his property, which has been in my family since 1975.

  • @malcolmhamilton5200
    @malcolmhamilton5200 Год назад +4

    Loved my 79'. Yellow with huge rainbow graphics, bumble bee buckets, yellow mag wheels. After I replaced the factory "rubber like" piston rings with an overbore and new pistons, it stopped consuming oil and behaved. Primary/ Secondary two barrel carb and the 5 speed manual 2600(exactly half the size of a 318, with huge pistons) could outrun my buddy's Mazda 2600 two for one in acceleration. First gens were too small inside the cab for this 6'-4 1/2" round eye and the weird box size made it tough finding caps. My brother had the 2.0 with the 4 speed manual. Half the acceleration of my 2600. Could NOT break the leaf springs no matter how I tried. Box rotted off the face of the earth, like so many Nipponese trucks of the era. Good one Steve

  • @butcher390
    @butcher390 Год назад +5

    I remember these small trucks 🚚
    Dodge Ram 50s ,
    Chevy Luvs , Ford Couriers etc .
    Great for hauling dirt bikes around 👍 Especially the long bed .

  • @martymiller4300
    @martymiller4300 Год назад +3

    As much as I appreciate your positive comments I think this time you’re being overly fair. The Mitsubishi 2.6 was a serviceability nightmare, no owner negligence required. Head cracking valve seat dropping impossibly complicated timing settings (name another engine where you can get a balance shaft 720* out of time) aside, Mitsubishi contributed to the problem with horrible parts availability. The plastic bodied Mikuni carburetor combined a “nobody ever did it this way “ arrogance with missing part #’s for the things that went wrong first. Mixture control/idle stop solenoids, choke pull-off diaphragms and wildly unique thermo waxes we’re all only (factory) available with the hideously expensive carburetor top assembly. Then competitive manufacturers fell in love with it and the thing ended up in everything from the weird ass turbo Starion to Mama’s Plymouth Voyager. Sorry but that motor wrote the book on losing.

    • @garyszewc3339
      @garyszewc3339 Год назад +1

      Never saw a single one with a head problem, other than one that ran one out of oil, when he changed his own oil, and installed the wrong filter. He melted the cam bearings, which were playing on the aluminum head. The timing chains were easy. Align the plated links with the marks on the sprockets. The only bad thing about the engine, was if the owner was too stupid to have a worn timing chain replaced, which would be extremely loud before it got that bad, it would stop driving the chain driven oil pump, and the engine would be toast.

    • @runner3033
      @runner3033 Год назад

      lots of people waxing poetic about that 2.6, I remember it as being regarded as a weird, unreliable POS to be avoided. Chrysler got rid of it ASAP and replaced it with the 2.5 variant of their 2.2, and also the 6G72 V6 when a little more power and refinement was needed.
      I remember the noise of the timing chain, from basket case cars on their last miles, waiting to be replaced by the next $3000 beater (when $3k bought you a drive-able if not awesome car)

  • @dexburwell
    @dexburwell Год назад

    -have a 1988 2.6L 5spd 4X4 . 258K miles…smokes a little on start up… body is rusting - still runs great 👍

  • @chrishunziker4780
    @chrishunziker4780 Год назад

    I just bought a 33 Studebaker Rockne and it has this 2.6 engine and an automatic transmission. I love it! So far so good. They did. Great job putting it in. Plenty of power for the car!

  • @brotherduane36
    @brotherduane36 Год назад

    I had an ‘82 Plymouth Sapporo with the 2.6 and a 5 speed. I traded it towards an ‘84 2WD D-50 with the 2.0 and 4 speed. Added a cap, American Racing wheels and a lift kit from John Baker Enterprises. I used to haul gear for my band and the stock suspension was weak. Sold that and got a ‘91 Power Ram 50 LE (3.0L 6 cyl, 4WD, 150 HP). Added a cap and brush guard. Drove that until 2004. They all rotted quickly in Massachusetts. Good value at the time. My neighbor’s Toyota rotted before mine.

  • @waynebuzzell2483
    @waynebuzzell2483 Год назад +3

    I had a Ram 50 that I bought brand new in 87. $7,100 @ Bonneville Dodge in Manchester New Hampshire. It had the 2.0 litre 4G63 engine in it. I ran that truck up to 280k and sold it and that guy ran it for another 2 years. It rusted out. I once rolled off the scales at a scrapyard with 1320 lbs. on it. It was on the rubber spring stops 😊. That was a great little truck.

  • @DanEBoyd
    @DanEBoyd Год назад +2

    So true about the Trans Am leading the black and gold revolution - although I believe that the John Player Special predated the black and gold on the Trans Am.
    I still have a picture of a black Ram 50 on a highway in the mid '80s. The reason the picture was taken was that the female passenger was showing us her, uh, you know... This was somewhere in Kentucky, perhaps on I 75.

  • @jeffclark2725
    @jeffclark2725 Год назад +1

    Oh the memories those 2.6 liter mini trucks, great video, yes it still looks pretty solid

  • @ericesterby2895
    @ericesterby2895 Год назад +12

    The company I worked for had one of these as a parts-running pickup for a time. It had the most uncomfortable seat I’ve ever sat on. It was like a board covered with upholstery.

    • @garyszewc3339
      @garyszewc3339 Год назад +3

      Late 80s gms were just as bad. A milk crate was more comfortable.

    • @patdesrosiers6423
      @patdesrosiers6423 Год назад

      The springs on the driver’s side of my Ranger’s bench seat broke so I got a pair of buckets from some imported car in the junkyard and put them in

    • @daryllynhutchins8459
      @daryllynhutchins8459 Год назад

      Blood oath mate

    • @RealSteelFabrications
      @RealSteelFabrications Год назад

      So true

  • @patdesrosiers6423
    @patdesrosiers6423 Год назад +2

    In the petrochemical plant I worked at we had a Mitsubishi lift truck with this same engine. I’ll tell you that it took a beating and came back for more. We had a bare cylinder head in our spare parts and it was a hemispheric or semi hemi. I also daily drove an 87 Ranger for almost 34 years and the Ford/Mazda was a great little truck. Excellent video, Steve does a great job

    • @patdesrosiers6423
      @patdesrosiers6423 Год назад

      The topper is identical to the one I got for my Ranger a couple of months after I got the truck. It was made in Denver by “Magic Toppers”?but I’m sure the same six foot unit was built all over the country by local manufacturers

  • @evi1dav3
    @evi1dav3 Год назад

    I have an 83 4x4 Power Ram 50 with the 2.3 turbodiesel. Kinda a rare find. Intresting vid, thanks for making it!

  • @mopartony7953
    @mopartony7953 Год назад +3

    2.6L Mitsui big block. Great, tough torquey motor. It’s silent shaft technology was licensed by Mitsui to Porsche for the 924. Industrial variant very dependable in fork trucks. Highly underrated engine.

    • @Scalihoo
      @Scalihoo Год назад

      They used oil, expect to add a qt. every 800- 1000 miles, I had one put over 100k on it, but they were good besides that..Edit my engine was the 1994 2.4

  • @twisted2291
    @twisted2291 Год назад +5

    I have had a few of the D-50's and their brother the Mighty Max. They where great little trucks. Not the fast thing, but they where little grunts and got the job done.

  • @tims72demon
    @tims72demon Год назад +1

    I had an 86 Mitsubishi Mighty Max. Put over 300k on it. Ran like a clock. Sold it to a friend for his son. He wrapped it around a tree a week later. Never burnt oil. Only put 1 clutch in it. Great truck.

    • @ThePontiac98
      @ThePontiac98 Год назад +1

      I had an 88 with the 2.6 and a 5 speed. That was a great little truck

  • @bradleyspear167
    @bradleyspear167 Год назад

    I had a 1986 W50 4×4 that was gold and black, gold body and black stripes. It was a manual transmission one. I rolled that one.
    I had the 2.6 in two Chrysler/Mitsubishi vehicles, 1979 Plymouth Arrow GT and the Dodge W50.

  • @morganahoff2242
    @morganahoff2242 Год назад

    5:08 "...including that goofy little Colt..." Why you little...! I had one of those. Great little car. I worried if it ever broke down, I wouldn't know what to do, because i never had to do anything to it! I kept poking the fan belt, to see when it needed tightening, and it never needed tightening! What kind of car never needs the fan belt tightened? For five years!! And later I drove a Mitsubishi Delica, which is a Ram 50 with a diesel engine and a van body instead of a pickup truck. It was never sold in North America, so it took a bit of ingenuity to get parts. One of the tricks was, for anything steering, suspension, etc...anything but the body and engine, I could order Ram 50 parts and they would fit.

  • @elp4740
    @elp4740 Год назад

    Nice job Steve using catalogs and excellent narration to highlight these little trucks.

  • @marioncobaretti2280
    @marioncobaretti2280 Год назад +3

    They had the fire arrow with a turbo charged 2.6

  • @spamanator666
    @spamanator666 Год назад +8

    Looks like it would clean up nicely, minitrucks are making a comeback with all the hate against hugemongous pickups in the USA now, hope someone saves this one.

    • @seed_drill7135
      @seed_drill7135 Год назад +2

      Surprising absence of New England rust on that one.

    • @zackjay71
      @zackjay71 Год назад +3

      Lol no hate where I live. Over half the vehicles on the road are trucks.

    • @spamanator666
      @spamanator666 Год назад

      @@zackjay71 The other 50% hates them.

  • @joeholt7578
    @joeholt7578 Год назад

    I had a brand new one in 90, great little truck and was quite quick for the time.

  • @Jim-ic2of
    @Jim-ic2of Год назад

    I always liked those little Mits. trucks . Don't see many around here anymore . Denver Co.

  • @hackfabrication139
    @hackfabrication139 Год назад +5

    I miss the smaller pickup trucks. The current offerings from GM (Canyon/Colorado), Ford (Ranger), Toyota (Tacoma), etc., are almost as large as my GMC 1500 Sierra (reg cab/short box). And in some ways bigger. The Ford Maverick isn't even as small as those bygone models.

    • @googleusergp
      @googleusergp Год назад +2

      They're also way overpriced for a "not so capable" truck.

  • @velixare6199
    @velixare6199 Год назад

    I still have my 88 ram 50, thing runs like a dream on the original engine. Most people stuck an eclipse engine in these things and it could go like crazy.

  • @cameronlovesevolve
    @cameronlovesevolve Год назад

    a family friend had the 1 ton version in the 90's identical to the one at 07:33 .. It was so cool looking! Big, tall, Red and 4 wheel drive.

  • @marioncobaretti2280
    @marioncobaretti2280 Год назад +2

    2.6 ,s were junk. I worked for granite dodge in Quincy in 1980. Thats all that came in was colts with overheated engines and head gasket failures. It was a garbage engine in the early caravans too. That year we sold 300 d350 cab n chassis trucks with 360 4 bbl thermo quad and a 4 speed. They came with dually deep tread snow tires from the factory. We would drive them around back and roast the snow tires. They were very favored by the phone company for power and reliability

    • @burthenry7740
      @burthenry7740 Год назад +1

      I remember walking through a Plymouth dealer service area in 1982 and the place was full of Mistubishi 2.6s. Same issues!

    • @mexicanspec
      @mexicanspec Год назад

      I hope you grew up since then.

  • @devonkennedysmith6434
    @devonkennedysmith6434 Год назад

    Went there last week looking for parts for my 1980 power wagon, it was literally the promised land. I couldn’t focus on anything I was so overwhelmed by the cars there.

  • @OurLifestylePodcast
    @OurLifestylePodcast Год назад

    Love this mini truck! #MiniTruckin for life! Much respect Steve!!!

  • @seanfrank4158
    @seanfrank4158 Год назад

    That little truck is in pretty good shape for Massachusetts. Someone could get their mitts on a cool little runabout.

  • @garycrawford2256
    @garycrawford2256 Год назад

    Watching Steve's videos, I see so many potential videos in the background.

  • @Vet-7174
    @Vet-7174 Год назад +2

    Good Morning Everyone ! 🇺🇸

  • @seed_drill7135
    @seed_drill7135 Год назад +3

    The Mitsubishi version could be had with a diesel. I know that engine appeared in a few D-100s pre Cummins.

    • @googleusergp
      @googleusergp Год назад +2

      I believe the Chrysler version as well from 1983 to 1986.

  • @yabbadabba2887
    @yabbadabba2887 Год назад

    Had a 1992 Mighty Max 4x4 with a 5 speed short bed. Looked awesome. Wish it was more comfortable. Electric Blue

  • @marcstlaurent3719
    @marcstlaurent3719 Год назад

    Well Steve another great vid , I bought a 86 D50 4x4 in Canada for a truck to tow behind my oilfield vacuum truck when the hitch broke and my fully loaded loaded F250 Super-cab 4x was destroyed on a huge backroad downhill in 92 , I bought it because I was only going to tow a beater from now on . The joke was on me as I really enjoyed my automatic equipped 2.6 litre little gutless Mitsubishi . It had the most comfortable bucket seats of any vehicle I have ever owned till this very day and the steering wheel was in the perfect spot even though nothing was adjustable , hell the seats didn’t even flip forward , I commented this to a friend of mine who has owned an Accura and a GTI and he told me his 80 something Dodge Colt he had previously had the most comfortable seats he had ever owned . Also the little Mitsubishi could carry 1000 lbs no problem when half that bottomed out my previous 70’s Datsun pickup which had seats which the foam was completely sacked out to where the metal crossbar in the back pressed into you .

  • @lilmike2710
    @lilmike2710 Год назад

    A family member had one of those first gen base models way back in the early 80's, and i swear he still has it!! Or at least his son does. It's now a custom low rider that looks amazing!
    Back in the day it was a work truck. He and I even ran a lawn service with it. I remember watching him rebuild the 4 cylinder in his yard without even removing it from the truck. He built an open wooden bed that stayed on it for a few years. He bought much of the custom trim package that's on it today, way back in the 1980s and it all laid in the back yard on the ground for years..
    It's unbelievable that he still owns that truck and that it looks as good as it does today.

  • @johnbehneman1546
    @johnbehneman1546 Год назад

    Great video Steve. Great education as well.

  • @yellowdog8092
    @yellowdog8092 Год назад

    My father in law had one of these. They lived outside of LA His was black stretched with a full back seat duel wheels and wide fenders. Very cool

  • @rodneybrand8521
    @rodneybrand8521 Год назад +2

    Hey Steve..i remember when the Dakota came out with the first fuel injected 318..the 318 never ran that good the truck was a mighty hauler..the year after that it was discontinued ..replaced with the V 6 ..ford had the 300 CI in 96 that was the first year fuel injection in 97 the replaced it with the 4.0..auto makers do some dumb things ..see you on the next one Cheers friend 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸

  • @joeholt7578
    @joeholt7578 Год назад

    It was the Mighty MAX....I had a brand new one in 90, great little truck and was quite quick for the time.

  • @backachershomestead
    @backachershomestead Год назад +2

    I always want the Dodge Raider. Not many where I lived and rusted out in a few years.

  • @orlandonostagiafever1964
    @orlandonostagiafever1964 Год назад

    The Champ with the power stick next to thr stick shift lol I remember those ,the Cricket ,the Colt ,Celeste and arrow.

  • @SuperchargedPathfinder
    @SuperchargedPathfinder Год назад

    Get well Steve!!

  • @unclemarksdiyauto
    @unclemarksdiyauto Год назад

    There were lots of those trucks here in Manitoba, Canada.

  • @killerontheloose80
    @killerontheloose80 Год назад

    My sister's boyfriend Jeff had one of these in the mid-to-late 1980s rock-solid Japanese engineering no problems

  • @merrillthomson9837
    @merrillthomson9837 Год назад

    Cool, years ago I had a white and gold Ram 50 Truck. Was a great little truck but it started rusting away.

  • @MrRoyatkinson
    @MrRoyatkinson 4 месяца назад

    I had the Plymouth Arrow version. It was a decent little truck. I replaced it with a full-size D150 “heavy half-ton” pickup.

  • @Ramcharger85
    @Ramcharger85 Год назад

    Love these little guys. Thanks for sharing. ❤

  • @Fevebblefester
    @Fevebblefester Год назад

    In 1979 I purchased a Plymouth Arrow Sport pick up with the 2.6 and a five speed manual. I had it for three years until an 82 5.0 Mustang lured me away. Shouda kept it.

  • @TheREALOC1972
    @TheREALOC1972 11 месяцев назад

    I had an 86 Ram 50 back in the mid 90's when I was stationed at Fort Campbell, yes it was a small, ugly and yes it had little to no power but it was the PERFECT vehicle for me at the time, Ft. Campbell is 4 hours from home for me in Mid Missouri, I could jump in the truck right after formation on Friday night and be HOME by 9 p.m. for the weekend and it cost me $15 in gas. I loved that little truck.

  • @danielleclare2938
    @danielleclare2938 Год назад

    Had a red one 4 wheel drive and the manual transmission. The 2.6 was ok... the truck was great. Looked good too. Earlier model than this one shown. Very practical vehicle.

  • @IowaBudgetRCBashers
    @IowaBudgetRCBashers Год назад

    MCA JET!!! I know a lot of guys who had these and put v8’s in them, but the Mitsubishi Hemi was actually a good little motor

  • @briancollins4596
    @briancollins4596 Год назад

    Stay on it Steve. Really enjoying the shows.

  • @caseyjones1999
    @caseyjones1999 Год назад

    I had an '87 long bed 4x4 2.6 engine auto tragic transmission. As a 13-year-old it was a lot of fun driving around our farm. Of course I was pretty hard on it eventually I spun a bearing

  • @galencurrington8704
    @galencurrington8704 Год назад

    My brother had a 87 mighty max. That looks like a pretty clean truck

  • @RpmAuto
    @RpmAuto Год назад

    Thank you Steve for showing this truck. I rescued a Dodge Challenger that same year many years ago and brought it back to life on my channel and some people thought it was a fox body Mustang😂

  • @cartmanrlsusall
    @cartmanrlsusall Год назад

    Had an 84 sport d50 it was an automatic tyranny that needed a fast jiggle to get it into reverse. It was a good highway machine and I drove it for years before the rings gave out

  • @dennisgallear409
    @dennisgallear409 Год назад

    Thanks Mr. Stevie Wonder. I have a little Dodge 2002 Dakota. Throws about 6 codes but I barely run it. Short bed single cab matching topper resale red. Mountain biker to the Pabst blue ribbon store anyway. Respect honest.

  • @paulyokoyama7162
    @paulyokoyama7162 Год назад

    The Mazda made truck for Ford was the Courier. The Mitsubishi 2.6 used in the truck did not come with balance shafts.

  • @MikeBrown-ii3pt
    @MikeBrown-ii3pt Год назад

    Does anyone else remember the "Cross the Mitsubishi bridge from Japan to Dodge" TV commercials from the 70s and 80s?

  • @HELLBAG1
    @HELLBAG1 Год назад

    One of my Dad's last projects before he died was the 87 Mitsu trucklette he got out of someone's backyard for free. Took the engine out and rebuilt it. I loved the man but never understood why he spent so much time on junk.

  • @MichaelThomasMarion
    @MichaelThomasMarion Год назад +2

    Steve... First new car I ever bought was an 1984 Dodge Colt - Turbo (Mitsubishi Mirage). It was truly a "Hot -Hatch" and a blast to drive.

    • @michaelloughlin1597
      @michaelloughlin1597 Год назад

      Mike, upon graduation from college I went right down to my local Dodge dealership in Syracuse and bought the exact same car! Mine is black and gold and yes believe it or not I still own it after all these years!!

    • @MichaelThomasMarion
      @MichaelThomasMarion Год назад

      @@michaelloughlin1597 My Dodge Colt Turbo was bronze. Bought at KEENE DODGE in Jarrettsville, Maryland.

  • @grndiesel
    @grndiesel Год назад

    Mitsubishi Mighty Max. Also available with a 2.3L turbo diesel (based loosely on the aforementioned 2.6L Astron engine). And funny enough, the later ford rangers were also available with the same diesel from 1985-1987.

  • @allanyoungstein4227
    @allanyoungstein4227 Год назад

    Not sure what year it changed. In New York State a pickup without a cap would have commercial registration.
    Could not drive it on parkway or get toll discounts.
    Put a cap on and you could get a passenger registration.
    Changed when more people started to pickups for personal transportation.

  • @FORDCAMPERSPECIAL
    @FORDCAMPERSPECIAL Год назад

    My first truck was a 79 Plymouth arrow that I saved from a junkyard. They were really just a rebadged dodge D50.

  • @melvinjones3895
    @melvinjones3895 Год назад

    Bring it back to life. These were good little trucks We should have a little truck now.

  • @Ballterra
    @Ballterra Год назад

    The interior is classic Mitsubishi lol I had a pick up (or as we Aussies say a "Ute' short for utility) it had the 2.0 litre four and 5-speed manual box very reliable very basic no aircon or other luxurys apart from a CD player that I installed along the way.

  • @marioncobaretti2280
    @marioncobaretti2280 Год назад

    Thanx katie , Steve put on a good class

  • @mackaman1964
    @mackaman1964 Год назад

    These Mitsubishi’s were sold under the Chrysler banner here in Australia till 1980 then Mitsubishi took over all Chrysler dealerships and sold thousands of them .
    In Australia they were called the Triton ,my son has one still

  • @kenthowell7829
    @kenthowell7829 Год назад

    On Saturday I was at a auction in the Charlotte area. A light blue Chevy Luv diesel sold for 6 grand. It was probably a fifty footer