Taking a diesel car from the 1970 ´s for a drive!

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  • Опубликовано: 29 авг 2024
  • Diesel Dorris is a Opel Rekord 2.1 Diesel from 1974.
    Lets take it for a drive!
    #opel #dieselengine
    Instagram: / seasidegarageyt
    Patreon: / seasidegarage

Комментарии • 402

  • @hallgeirbjrkavag8634
    @hallgeirbjrkavag8634 Год назад +123

    In summer 1974 my uncle and aunt bought a brand new Opel Rekord 2100D like this one. We drove around the whole South Norway, stopping 3/4 of the way to visit my grandparents. We were 4 adults and 2 children. I remember that car as a solid and comfortable car. I can still hear the sound of the diesel engine, and feel the relaxing ride. Good memories. 2 years ago I repeated the trip, unfortunately without any grandparents to visit, but it was a great trip down the memory lane.

    • @CasaOsso
      @CasaOsso Год назад +1

      That’s a beautiful described life car experience

  • @plechaim
    @plechaim Год назад +90

    I find the leisurely pace and the sound of the old diesel engine chugging away quite relaxing . Perhaps there would be zero road accidents if everyone drove these.

    • @Ganjatraining
      @Ganjatraining Год назад +20

      That's generally something I love about older cars. Just take it slow, because the cars themselves aren't made to be quick. And because you sit lower down and you hear & feel much more than in a modern car, it isn't boring to drive at a lower speed.

    • @eekee6034
      @eekee6034 Год назад +6

      I _love_ these cars, but the era when everyone had one was the era when car accidents were the leading cause of death, ahead of heart attacks and everything else. Roads were different then, but part of the cause must have been people zooming about in cars which were much more poorly equipped to turn and stop. Speed limits have only come down since the 70s.

    • @deborahchesser7375
      @deborahchesser7375 Год назад +3

      More driving to actually do in an older car, I like shifting gears etc. why not just cruise along at 45-50 mph and enjoy the scenery with top or windows down. 🐾✌️🇺🇸

    • @Ganjatraining
      @Ganjatraining Год назад +5

      @@deborahchesser7375 There is also much more scenery to be enjoyed in old cars, since you can see out of them so much better than newer cars

    • @zweispurmopped
      @zweispurmopped Год назад +5

      Probably true that there would be no accidents, for everybody would be in hospital getting the coal lung treated. 😜

  • @frisco-2.0
    @frisco-2.0 Год назад +46

    These Opels from this aera were absolutely bullerproof and reliable.
    So no worries about that! And even the diesels were amazing.

    • @eelco1982
      @eelco1982 Год назад +5

      In the day they were concidered crude and underpowered. The engine was actually to tall to fit under the bonnet...but they are actually quite underrated. The powerfigures weren't that bad compared a mercedes 200

    • @seamusburke9101
      @seamusburke9101 Год назад +6

      ​@@eelco1982anything was better than than a Benz 200d. Wouldn't pull a soldier off your sister.

    • @carloM635csi
      @carloM635csi Год назад

      MERCEDES BENZ W 115 /8 -w123 🙏🙏❤❤

    • @19tuureluur86
      @19tuureluur86 Год назад +2

      Except for the rust.

    • @frisco-2.0
      @frisco-2.0 Год назад +2

      @@19tuureluur86 All cars from this aera had rust issues.

  • @matcentrino7602
    @matcentrino7602 Год назад +3

    I've always thought, "Am I normal for loving old normal car from 70s"? I guess not really. When I have a job. I'm definitely will going to buy just one Mitsubishi Galant 74. The design is just so unique and simple.
    I love old cars because of the driving experience, they just feel so good and satifying. Especially saving prehistoric cars from enxtinction.

  • @MrToxicSkittle
    @MrToxicSkittle Год назад +34

    I literally just had the same discussion about diesels with my best friend the other day. How when we were kids, if you heard a diesel, it was 99% certain that it was a Mercedes taxi, and since then diesels have become really popular, and now they’re unpopular again!
    Really nice to see a survivor car like this. My grandfather was a huge Opel fan right from when he learnt how to drive right up to his death, and has owned several vans and estates, for example Olympia. I don’t know if he ever had one like this, but it’s very likely!

  • @pleun315
    @pleun315 Год назад +7

    Its slow, its loud, it stinks, its unsafe its awesome 🙏❤️

  • @twocvbloke
    @twocvbloke Год назад +9

    The answer to "why would you save that?" is usually "Because nobody else will!", there's plenty of cars that during their time were utterly awful, and thus they "went away", and a lot of them, there's no examples left, only the words of those who had them and had their bad experiences with them, so there's no proof as to why they were bad, or whether it was just user error...

  • @jasonmadelin3633
    @jasonmadelin3633 Год назад +2

    A car from a better time thats all I can say oh and I would have one in a heart beat.

  • @julianlangdon3456
    @julianlangdon3456 Год назад +5

    fabulous! Big fan of an old Diesel estate. Ran a Pug 405 non-turbo for many years

    • @LR90_200TDI
      @LR90_200TDI Год назад

      Same here, used to have 3 405 estate diesels, brilliant cars, rare now

  • @andythebourne
    @andythebourne Год назад +26

    I was quite surprised to see that this car has a column shifter. Column shifters were common in European cars, but they fell out of favor by the late 60s, so they can be only seen in very old cars and the Wartburg, which retained it even in the 80s. I really love column shift and diesel estates, so this would be a perfect car for me!

    • @DrivingSander1970
      @DrivingSander1970 Год назад +9

      Peugeot actually used column shifters from the 60s until the 80s.

    • @Jakob_Leth
      @Jakob_Leth Год назад +6

      Opel Rekord D was the last model with the column shifter, but only in the 1700 petrol and the 2100 diesel. All other models had the traditional gear leaver…

    • @SeasideGarage
      @SeasideGarage  Год назад +1

      It would! But I doubt you could make it go 1.000.000 km like the Bluebird!

    • @andythebourne
      @andythebourne Год назад

      @@DrivingSander1970 Thanks for the info! Maybe I will check old Peugeots for a next project :)

    • @andythebourne
      @andythebourne Год назад +1

      @@Jakob_Leth That's why it surprised me, I have only seen Rekord Ds with the "normal" gear lever. Good to know these two models still had column shifter!

  • @garfieldtait5584
    @garfieldtait5584 Год назад +26

    I love the simplicity of older cars. There was nothing there that didn't need to be there.

    • @cbdp
      @cbdp Год назад

      The old ones have their charm, but more recent vehicles are clearly better in almost every way. Having said that, if you lack the knowledge and understanding for diagnosing and maintaining the modern electronics, they can be difficult once they brake down.

    • @tissuepaper9962
      @tissuepaper9962 11 месяцев назад

      @@cbdp bugman!

  • @marcinbujok7388
    @marcinbujok7388 Год назад +11

    Wow! The idle adjustment is the coolest thing! Come on! 😀 What a survivor of a car! Love vintage opel wagons!

  • @christherm
    @christherm Год назад +2

    I love Doris! I have a 1992 Vauxhall Senator. I know what this man means. It has told me lots stories since I bought it. I have found old pay and display parking tickets, I have the original bill of sale I even found an old dry cleaning ticket. Brilliant!

  • @GillesSnowcatOfficial
    @GillesSnowcatOfficial 8 месяцев назад +1

    Column shift were popular on 50s, 60s and 70s Peugeot: 203, 204, 304, 403, 404 and 504. Renault 16 also popularised it. So great to see and hear again this excellent Opel Diesel engine.

  • @nigelmchugh5541
    @nigelmchugh5541 Год назад +8

    Here in Ireland the last model Opel Rekord diesel was the archtypicial farmers car!
    The bonnet bulge needed to clear the diesel engine looked good too!
    After that model, the Isuzu Aska was popular, and about that time (1984 or so) the Nissal Patrol with the straight six diesel took over farmers work from car models.

    • @seamusburke9101
      @seamusburke9101 Год назад +4

      The diesel Rekord's in Ireland in the 80s had the same engine as the 2100D in the video. The only difference was the engine was modified by fitting liners in the bores to downrate to 2000cc so they would be cheaper to tax. Road tax on 2.0 litre was about £240 in 1982 and on 2.1 litre it was over £300. Opel did this mod to the engine to sell the Rekord. Of coarse the mod was a disaster cause you'd be lucky to get 25k miles before the liners wore out. You then had to go to your Opel dealer and get a new engine fitted under warranty every time your engine gave up. I knew people who used to have 2 engines a year as long as they had the car.

  • @GillesSnowcatOfficial
    @GillesSnowcatOfficial 8 месяцев назад +1

    Column shift were popular on 60s and 70s Peugeot: 204, 304, 404 and 504. Renault 16 also popularised it. So great to see and hear again this excellent Opel Diesel engine.

  • @alfderbabybenz7092
    @alfderbabybenz7092 Год назад +1

    it warms my only 22 year old heard, hearing the noises and seeing the ways of this car!

  • @L3AP2020
    @L3AP2020 Год назад +2

    Beautiful car. Mechanical fuel injection diesels are something else. I could just sleep soundly just by hearing one go

  • @DrivingSander1970
    @DrivingSander1970 Год назад +10

    Great to see a typical work horse in original condition. I can imagine how you must feel driving it.

  • @darrenwilson8042
    @darrenwilson8042 Год назад +9

    I remember my Dad had Vauxhall Victors ( the GM UK equivalent of the Rekord ) during the 70's and early 80's. Rot boxes but by heck they were reliable and he loved them - drove all over the UK in them

    • @wbtx2075
      @wbtx2075 Год назад

      Opel/Vauxhall always had very good and (for the most part) bulletproof engines during the 70s/80s/90s. In fact, they were the biggest manufacturer of cars in Germany for some short time in the 60s/70s (even before Volkswsgen). But they often had problems with crappy steel and rotting bodies. I drove an Opel Kadett E Caravan (the German Version of the Vauxhall Astra E Estate) for many years as my daily. It was a fantastic car and was really big for a compact estate. However, its body was not the best. The E's were known to have a "K.O-spot" on their front axle, where the axle connects to the body. Most of the scrapped ones probably went because of the rust issues on this spot, which was extremely hard to fix.

  • @seancooke7332
    @seancooke7332 Год назад +3

    My Dad bought a yellow one in 1977 and it was a great car. Very good on fuel. It was a floorshift though, I don't know if we got a column shift in Ireland.
    The whole car shook when he revved the engine and the back end was covered in soot after a couple of weeks driving.
    I remember that the Dealer showed us the 6 cylinder Commodore when we first picked it up. It was very cool 😎.

  • @JinderSongs
    @JinderSongs Год назад +1

    Slow, noisy, stinky, perfect…love old diesels like this. A bit later, but I have a Volvo 940 with the VW D24TIC straight six diesel lump in it which is based on mid ‘70s technology. 310,000 miles and still pulls well. Has a bit of punch thanks to the turbo but makes more noise than power! I love it though. Bought it for £200 years ago with an MOT but in a real state of disrepair. I’ve used it as a daily since then and treated it as a rolling resto. Have spent a fair bit on it but it’s in great shape now and has never let me down. These old dervs must be saved!

  • @shyviking
    @shyviking Год назад +1

    Yes; just as I remember diesel cars from my childhood....
    ....And nice Danish countryside drive :-)

  • @stevangucu522
    @stevangucu522 Год назад +5

    My favorite thing about German diesel cars of the 70s and 80s are big clocks instead of tachometer.

    • @Zeem4
      @Zeem4 Год назад +1

      My 2006 Peugeot Expert has a big clock where you'd expect to find a tachometer, and I love it. It's way more useful, especially when driving between customer sites for work.

    • @stevangucu522
      @stevangucu522 Год назад +1

      @Zeem4 2006?! Wow! I thought that clock trend ended in late 80s-early 90s.

  • @classicwheelswales4491
    @classicwheelswales4491 Год назад +4

    Loving the opel rekord😂 recommission.. never restore..keep them on the road and use them. Love your work keep it coming 💯🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🇬🇷

  • @user-glg20
    @user-glg20 Год назад +2

    the time when kombi (called also: touring, wagon, avant, break, traveller, caravan, etc) was really helpful when you ran small business.

  • @juanjogsi
    @juanjogsi Год назад +1

    Doris made me smile too. Nice ride😊

  • @ichbins8588
    @ichbins8588 Год назад +1

    thank you for uploading, didn't know Opel used a column gear-shift in the 70s and never heard about an idle adjustment before!
    Except for some cleaning, the car has everything what's necessary to do it's job, love the simpliciity and mechanical robustness of these brave workhorses 😇

    • @GillesSnowcatOfficial
      @GillesSnowcatOfficial 8 месяцев назад +2

      I think only the Diesel version had the column shift. There was also an automatic gearbox available but no more column selector.

  • @Marshal_Dunnik
    @Marshal_Dunnik Год назад +1

    Perfect name. Doris the Diesel.

  • @a___________r414
    @a___________r414 Год назад +8

    In this time Opel had a lot of good cars! Great video!

  • @nicoroehr
    @nicoroehr Год назад

    I was born in 1967 and have been interested in cars from my early childhood. Back in the 1970s European cars were made to last about 62,000 miles (100,000 km). Almost nobody considered to keep them beyond it, people just bought a new one. Today most of the survivors are way beyond their '95k date of expiry', so having multiple issues with them is not uncommon. I always liked the old, loud diesel engines, btw

  • @TheStobb50
    @TheStobb50 Год назад +11

    I had a Vauxhall Victor estate from roughly the same time, it’s amazing. How similar they look it looks pretty much like the shared a lot of the parts. Also, I had a Vauxhall Victor, 101 from 1965 and it had exactly the same column gear

    • @SeasideGarage
      @SeasideGarage  Год назад +6

      I do believe its pretty much the same car :)

    • @carloM635csi
      @carloM635csi Год назад

      Quelle auto nascono OPEL !!Non sono Inglesi🖐🖐

    • @kieferngruen
      @kieferngruen Год назад

      All Vauxhall models since the 1970 have been and still are rebranded Opels. They are only sold under the name Vauxhall in the UK.

    • @Zeem4
      @Zeem4 Год назад +1

      @@kieferngruen This model shares the same floorpan as the Vauxhall Victor FE (launched in 1972), but they have totally different bodywork on top. The Victor FE was the last Vauxhall made in this way - it was replaced in 1978 by the Vauxhall Carlton, which is almost identical to the Opel Rekord E.

  • @oddjobtriumph1635
    @oddjobtriumph1635 Год назад +1

    Wow...absolutely love it

  • @frasendusseldorf5171
    @frasendusseldorf5171 4 месяца назад

    Opel Rekord - what a great car of the 70th....My first car was an Opel Rekord 1900 an I loved to drive it.

  • @Harley-ir4er
    @Harley-ir4er Год назад

    I live in UK. I don't remember any Diesel cars in the 70's, it must be EU only. I did have a petrol Opel Kadett C in ealy 80's, It was 79 car, My first car, so reliable, never had a day's trouble with it.. I have now found one again (79 Kadett C) last month, in the Netherlands and looking forward to driving it in the sunny days - Thank for sharing your video.

  • @dimitarmladenski1367
    @dimitarmladenski1367 Год назад

    Ahh, old diesel sound. I had an 1989 Golf 1.6 D. Miss it everyday.

  • @tomasnordin9778
    @tomasnordin9778 Год назад +1

    Thumbs up from Sweden.

  • @minidriversouthsweden5137
    @minidriversouthsweden5137 Год назад +3

    I’ve not grown up in the 70’s so I didn’t know that Opel had a Rekord estate car. And it could be a great project or keep it as it is. 4 speed on the steering column I think it’s going to be a lot of work fixing it if it breaks down. But nice to keep the car running for so long.

  • @MrBenjaminTea
    @MrBenjaminTea Год назад +3

    If you like this sir, you should try a Peugeot 504 or 505 diesel.....you will be smitten!

    • @nickcoppard5335
      @nickcoppard5335 Год назад

      Yes 504 pickup , more bullet proof than a Russian tank

  • @jackdaw339
    @jackdaw339 Год назад +1

    What a car, what a survivor esp. for a caravan (estate) type I like the design and this diesel sound sounds great.

  • @Equiluxe1
    @Equiluxe1 Год назад +2

    In 1974 I had my second vehicle after getting my licence, it was a Bedford CA van with a Perkins diesel engine and three on the tree gear shift ie it had three forward gears with changing done with a lever on the left hand side of steering column. Bedford was part of Vauxhall which like Opel was part of the GM group.

  • @harryharker9564
    @harryharker9564 Год назад +1

    I can feel you projecting the happiness gained from driving this wonderful old car

  • @ridbanner1407
    @ridbanner1407 Год назад

    My grandfather had one and I drove it regularly in 84 to 86. Diesel was about 60 % of petrol and red diesel ( untaxed) half that. As there were very few diesel cars the police and excise never bothered to check the tank back then. This changed within about 5 years.

  • @Nkana1953
    @Nkana1953 Год назад +1

    My parents had a 1900cc Rekord C series Car-a-van (estate). Five door with bench seats front & rear. That had 4 speed column shift. We were in Zambia in 60s & 70s. 🇿🇲

  • @ralfbond258
    @ralfbond258 Год назад +1

    Opel Rekord Ds were hot wheels back in the days

  • @cebudave
    @cebudave Год назад +2

    A wonderful car. Thanks for sharing.

  • @Ianlovemuck
    @Ianlovemuck Год назад

    My dad owned one and he took the 1.9 petrol engine out and fitted it with a 1.5 bmc diesel engine and gearbox out of a j4 van. Every time we drove up a hill the inside filled up of smoke. It needed a can of easy start to get it goin in the morning. 😂

  • @dandandan389
    @dandandan389 Год назад +3

    I really like this car I hope we see more of it

  • @rahmatshazi883
    @rahmatshazi883 Год назад

    Other than the clock replacing the tacho, its a perfect reminder of mum's '73 Manta dashboard. Beautiful.

  • @eekee6034
    @eekee6034 Год назад +1

    In the 70s/80s, my brother in law hated column shifters because they were so vague. Seeing you had trouble finding first gear, I finally see what he means!
    I love 60s and 70s car interiors too. :) They feel airy and I like the minimal transmission tunnel. Hmm... now I realise I might be reacting to pollutants in the later plastics.

  • @Space_Reptile
    @Space_Reptile Год назад +3

    the indicator you named as "break wear sensor" is for the parking brake

    • @juliussd5901
      @juliussd5901 Год назад

      Some cars used that indicator for both "parking brake activated" and "low brake fluid level"

  • @puebespuebes8589
    @puebespuebes8589 Год назад +2

    Am i the only one who love boxy retro car ?

  • @davidbrown7538
    @davidbrown7538 Год назад +1

    You are talking about how people react well to very ordinary cars from years ago.
    In the UK we have a car show called festival of the unexceptional which is only for very ordinary cars that were seen everywhere but have mostly disappeared now.
    The cut off date is year 2000.
    It was amazing seeing all the cars that I hadn’t seen since the 70’s when I was a child and the cars of the 80’s when I was in my teens

  • @dario1837
    @dario1837 Год назад

    back in the 70s we, children, used to play on the sidewalk, and once in a while there was this guy, taking out this very car from the garage; In these occasions I used to stay still, mesmerized, looking at that car (the only one) that sounded like a truck...

  • @C0bblers
    @C0bblers 11 месяцев назад

    Definition of an honest car.

  • @keithbird8910
    @keithbird8910 Год назад

    I had one of these.Mine had 4 on the floor though, not on the column. It also had a pre-heat button that you had to hold in until your finger went white before it would start! Also the rear diff needed replacement - managed to salvage an entire rear axle from a scrap yard. Altogether, a bit of a beast with zero traction in the snow.

  • @wpjansen2021
    @wpjansen2021 Год назад +1

    Love this old diesel sound!

  • @-DC-
    @-DC- Год назад

    Got my first speeding ticket in a 2.3d Sierra 🤣 67 Raging BHP new after 170k it didn't feel anywhere near that, Was utterly unstoppable never had a problem with it .

  • @ruk2023--
    @ruk2023-- Год назад

    Cars back then were better in some ways because they were simpler. I'm only in my 40's but my parents and grandparents had cars from the 70's and early 80's and they were just basic things doing one job. Moving people around. I love modern cars too but sometimes I get in mine and remember that I don't need a LCD TV connected to my phone and a billion safety devices to have fun.

  • @Latsaab
    @Latsaab Год назад +1

    Such a nice car!
    I would also like a older diesel, probably mercedes

  • @torresalex
    @torresalex Год назад

    I couldn't agree more with your philosophy regarding the story of the car, and how cars that most people find unattractive sometimes are the most interesting ones

  • @alexbaracetti6450
    @alexbaracetti6450 Год назад +5

    I think that you must keep that car very carefully, because the Record D series 2100 Diesel disappeared. They survived only with the petrol engine .

  • @dannyganseman7983
    @dannyganseman7983 Год назад +1

    Great video! Brings a lot of memories back!

  • @proudtobeceltic885
    @proudtobeceltic885 Год назад +2

    A car for the rest of your life....tack sä mucket❤

  • @m.hidding2002
    @m.hidding2002 Год назад

    Hello! Great Car. Nice Patina! The shown Shifter is the standard offer for this car. But the most Customers didn´t want it... So its very rare. By myself drive a 1973 Limo 1700 Petrol in green metallic. A 4 door sedan with the 1700S Engine (83PS) and L Interieur. That means heated Rearwindow and headrests... Haha 😂 😂 Always have a good trip!

  • @hellcat77
    @hellcat77 Год назад

    Realy Nice Car, it’s even rare in germany with a diesel engine, especially as a caravan.

  • @southerndiy1
    @southerndiy1 Год назад +1

    This is so cool! Real, leisurely motoring that’s all mechanical and agricultural as you mentioned.

  • @PJ-om2wq
    @PJ-om2wq Год назад

    I used to have a 1978 Peugeot 504 2.3D. I miss it.

  • @PaoloRossi723
    @PaoloRossi723 Год назад +1

    Fantastic sound!

  • @nigelhulse1538
    @nigelhulse1538 Год назад

    i had a 1972 zephyr 6 with column change loved it & the front bench seat that sat 3

  • @V1peRv10
    @V1peRv10 Год назад

    My stepfather had an exact same diesel Opel and the same red color. It was my first car that I got to practice drive with before I got my driver's license. From what I remember, this car was extremely sluggish.

  • @DoctorAlex1
    @DoctorAlex1 10 месяцев назад

    My dad had a Vauxhall Victor FE, mustard yellow with one green wing! :D

  • @realnutteruk1
    @realnutteruk1 Год назад +3

    The oldest diesel I've driven was back in the late 80s.. I had a company car, a Vauxhall Cavalier (Opel Ascona) diesel estate, which had a 1.7 Isuzu NA diesel if I remember correctly.... that was horridly agricultural... I can't imagine how bad that Rekord is!

    • @Luton-Mick
      @Luton-Mick Год назад

      I worked on the production of the Cavalier MK3 at the former Luton plant, all N/A Diesel cavs were the mighty GM unit putting out a barn storming 57 bhp! and mostly found on the poverty spec models, the only Isuzu powered Cav was the 1.7TD putting out 87bhp, there was also a "low blow" tiny turbo GM unit that went in the Astra mk3 along with the higher powered Isuzu TD. Are you sure it wasn't an Astra estate you had as the MK2 Cavalier was the last of the model with an estate option powered by horrendous GM 1.6d? They definitely never made a mk3 estate.

  • @DSGNflorian
    @DSGNflorian Год назад

    "It's really soft In the suspension..." LOL that goes to show just HOW hard suspension have become today in the pursuit of track-like handling for every family hauler. The Opel Rekord D was notorious in its day for its HARD ride, often criticized as much too bumpy and stiff for the average buyer. You can thank Bob Lutz for that. He oversaw the product character during the development of the Rekord D (and promptly departed for BMW after the launch of this car in December of 1971). For 1973, the suspension was softened somewhat, but the Rekord D series remained a rather firmly and uncomfortably sprung car until it was replaced by the Rekord E in the fall of 1977.

    • @SeasideGarage
      @SeasideGarage  Год назад

      Maybe this has gotten a bit soft over the years... haha! ;)

    • @Jakob_Leth
      @Jakob_Leth Год назад

      Everything has been changed including the springs. There is a big difference between Rekord D and Rekord E. As you know I own both 🙂

  • @cactusthomas914
    @cactusthomas914 Год назад

    When I lived in the UK as a child, my father bought an Opel Rekord 1900s Coupe. It was the very car that had been on show at the Earl's court motor show in london in 1973. Would be nice to have it now! it was a lovely car although the black vinyl seats were too hot in summer and the engine block cracked putting an end to the car in around 1987.

  • @redprince3158
    @redprince3158 Год назад +2

    The lndicator gauge is for handbrake light 😊

  • @16jan1986
    @16jan1986 Год назад

    I can smell the diesel all the up here in Greenland Lovely

  • @tymac3306
    @tymac3306 Год назад

    00:59 had me on the floor 😂😂😂

  • @pegleg1514
    @pegleg1514 Год назад

    "I hope i don`t kill them with the smoke" 🚲😂😂

  • @artoodiitoo
    @artoodiitoo Год назад

    My uncle had a 70s diesel Toyota when I was little,
    now everytime I hear a diesel engine I think it sounds like the word "Carina" :D

  • @thatcheapguy525
    @thatcheapguy525 Год назад +1

    diesel cars from the 1970s are certainly an acquired taste (and smell lol). 0-60mph = maybe, top speed = 2CV BUT longevity and fuel economy were huge

    • @SeasideGarage
      @SeasideGarage  Год назад +2

      That smell in a frosty morning is something else!

  • @frankr.1594
    @frankr.1594 Год назад

    What a beauty!! And a Diesel!👍Our family used to have the Opel Ascona Voyage mark 1 as i was a kid. To me it looks nearly the same instat of the frond, ours got the round headlights.

  • @wollaminfaetter
    @wollaminfaetter Год назад

    A blast from the past. My brother owned one of these, and I remember the on/off throttle very well, the thing was DEAD 😂

  • @MitzvosGolem1
    @MitzvosGolem1 11 месяцев назад

    I run 15w 40 Movil oil with Lucas thickeners helps stop oil consumption on old motors .
    I also found Synthetic oil does not make blue smoke cloud either.
    Nice channel 👍

  • @x_x_x_x_x
    @x_x_x_x_x Год назад

    Great attitude to old cars - its easy for people to save an SRI or top of the range, that why i have a 1.8 mark 3 cavalier and a 1.8 vectra b. I would love this rekord

  • @ShootingUtah
    @ShootingUtah Год назад +4

    I'm from the US and I've never seen a car with a manual column shifter like that. Really cool though. I especially like the exposed metal in the back which really gives it that "agricultural" feel.

    • @seamusburke9101
      @seamusburke9101 Год назад +5

      There were plenty American cars had column shift manual transmission. Haven't you ever heard the expression "three on the tree"

    • @RJARRRPCGP
      @RJARRRPCGP Год назад

      @@seamusburke9101 That would be my father's generation. I don't know if I even was in an automobile with a "three on the tree" or not.

  • @u.e.u.e.
    @u.e.u.e. Год назад +1

    2:18 Handbrake or brake fluid, brakewear sensors didn't exist yet.

  • @hayamburuk
    @hayamburuk Год назад +1

    I'm a great fan of old French cars but I really have a thing for big old Opels from the seventies up to the mid eighties

  • @woodennecktie
    @woodennecktie Год назад

    everybody smart bought a peugeot 504 estate diesel in that era , fixed a lot of these opel diesels , rotary perpendicular injector pump , still have nightmares over them

  • @linuslarsson3442
    @linuslarsson3442 Год назад

    And I totally agree about the patina😍

  • @bill84
    @bill84 Год назад +1

    I like this vid, but I'm a bit baffled usually old diesel engines "before we had all this electric nonsense and emissions regulations" were bomb proof and never needed rebuilding or changing. Perhaps this one was problematic because people left it in low gears revving the nuts off it not knowing how to change gears properly??? I must say column change are a bit of a rarity now in Europe. But anyway nice to see an older diesel still going, keep up the good work 👏

    • @seamusburke9101
      @seamusburke9101 Год назад +1

      You're spot on there and another good driving habit is to go easy on them when they were cold. Give em a chance to warm up before putting them to hard work.

  • @1ROB82
    @1ROB82 Год назад

    When I was a teenager I had a old cord truck that shifted like that. We called it “3 on the tree” or “suicide shifter”.

  • @zweispurmopped
    @zweispurmopped Год назад +1

    "I have to overtake some cyclists, hope I don't kill them with the smoke!"
    I was gong to say: Yes, but each only once. 😆
    My parents always drove Opels. My mother had that Rekord model with a petrol engine back in 1980/81, also the estate body. It was a good family truck for the dirty jobs after we bought our house, but so generic, even my mother who really didn't give much of a damn about what her car looked like and handled like got bored. I remember the smirk on her face when the TÜV put their thumb down for it and expensive repairs would have been due.

  • @jontaylor1652
    @jontaylor1652 Год назад +1

    You're certainly introducing us to some pretty unique and interesting cars on this channel.

  • @tammyjc15
    @tammyjc15 Год назад

    4:36 nice diesel clag 😁

  • @RichieRouge206
    @RichieRouge206 Год назад

    Very appealing car indeed. My grandparents had an Opel Kapitan when they lived in the remote bush in Botswana in the late 60s!

  • @mnp3713
    @mnp3713 Год назад

    i daily drive a late 60'ties diesel engine in my VW T4 2.4d - i love it best engine ever. 5 gear in most roundabouts and turns, its almost an automatic

  • @vitonamous
    @vitonamous Год назад

    i find this very relaxing

  • @BITTYBOY121
    @BITTYBOY121 Год назад

    Sounds just like a Peugeot diesel from the 1980s !

  • @barnbersonol
    @barnbersonol Год назад

    I had a 1976 merc 300D which was as good a diesel as you could hope for in that era. Even that only managed 30mpg.