I still tune in from time to time, beats a lot of these new car related shows that are completely scripted with fake problems, and bad drama- yeah fantomworks- I'm calling you out!!
@@rocket4332 Most cars from that era look dated. Even the later c4's styling looks old today. However, the c3's timeless styling still looks new today.
@@spankthemonkey3437 82 grand national, what planet was it made on? The Lil Red Truck from Dodge was quickest thing on the st for a number of yrs starting in the 70s. 70s were horrible for performance, proof from this vid. Mid-late C3s still dont cost much today
As a kid these were fairly common. I thought they were trashy. Until today I never realized what a well proportioned beautiful design it was. What an awesome cruiser!
I know it's been four years since you wrote this comment, but I would have to agree. I never liked them when I was a kid either. But we have one that runs auto cross here locally, and seeing at these days it really does have some very nice flowing lines.
I worked for a Chevrolet dealer back in those days. I loved driving any Corvette which was sold or in for service. ( had the opportunity to drive a 69 427, only 400 hp version to the 82. I remember this model very well because we had one at our GM training center that year. A few years later I owned an 84 with the same engine, I could get 24 mpg on the highway and it stuck in corners. Not the fastest but these cars have an attitude about them. Thanks for posting this.
It was the curvy body that hooked me. I purchased an '81 way back in '85 and I still have it today. It's still a lot of fun to drive and weekend cruising in this baby never gets old!! 🇺🇸👍
Yea your right man, however i wonder if the first years of this generation had more power then the later models, or were the power robbing emissions components installed from the first year of this gen?
@@SubieandFriends The first years of the C3 definitely had more power. The federally mandated emissions components and lower engine compression ratios to meet the new emission standards standards came to the Corvette in 1975. The Corvette's horsepower fell from around 300 to about 180 from the 1968-1975+ model years.
Grew up with my Grandpa having an 82 Vette, it was his first of 3 and i absolutely loved it!!! It may have been the slowest but fuck that car absolutely oozed sex appeal and class, loved driving it to car shows
I have an '82 Corvette and it's just stunningly beautiful. I've had many nice expensive and rare cars, none of them get the looks like this car, including newer Corvettes and BMWs I've had. With that said by modern standards, ugh, it's a chore to drive. The turning radius is huge, it's fairly slow by modern standards (although you're close to the ground and it feels much faster than it actually is), it doesn't handle very well and with that early computer controlled crossfire V8 it will go out of tune for no reason at all. However again is the looks... it's soo awesome looking, also I love that long hood when you're drivers seat, it just looks cool - like the Batmobile, finally while turning isn't all that great on the highway the thing cruises incredibly well and is very comfortable. On the downside it's a very small car inside by modern standards, so doing stuff to the interior like any type of work on the console is a pain in the rear, either Americans have gotten huge and fat or this car was made by a team of midgets - but just normal usage and seating is actually very good. The car sits very low like a sports car should, but in a world where every dullard has a SUV, it's very difficult see anything. Brakes also are not very good by modern standards. All in all this car is awesome, but also shows how far car technology has come. This car was based on a platform that was designed in the early sixties as this is the same basic underpinings as the '63 Stringray redesign - so the car by '82 was nearly 20 years old already and badly needed to be updated -which it was for the '84 model. That early computer controlled ignition is a pain in the rear however. Also the car feels incredibly unsafe after you've driven new cars - if you got into anything major in this car you're dead. Finally is the price - these cars don't really sell for much which is shocking based on other garbage cars like 80's Camaros and Mustangs and all the 70s cars skyrocketing in price. You can pickup one of these, non-collectors edition, in fantastic condition for probably $12k, and the price hasn't changed in over decade. It's shocking that these don't appear to be going up in value at all, I mean sooner or later they will I guess, but not yet.
I replaced the exhaust and catalytic converter on mine and was surprised at the lack of results, I thought it would be a pretty massive difference - but I think you have to reset the computer as well which I never did. The crossfire itself I didn't have too many problems with - other than the fact it constantly goes out of tune. You can tune it and sure enough within a few months its out of tune again - and of course then it starts to rattle and shake. If you know how to tune a car perhaps it's not as big of a deal, but driving newer cars it's rough to switch back. The car cruises on the highway great, but get into a parking lot and wow, you feel that old chassis since doing things like just trying to turn take up huge amounts of space - then again the car is as long as my Caddy CTS, something I never realized until it was parked in my garage next to each other. Don't get me wrong, the car is great, I've had it for a decade now, but I feel its age when I get into it, it takes a few mins to readjust to being an in older car. But man, it looks just amazing - and on the highway, at speed, it's a fantastic car.
I had an 84 CFI Vette for 7 years and never had a problem. I had the TB's synced when I got it and it never went out of tune. If it goes out of tune every few months then the tech isn't doing it right. Gerard keep the original engine. You can get HP out of that CFI. People are doing it. An LS will ruin the cars value which is going to go up.
Lot of it is the drivetrains they are antiquated, slow Say in Ca anything 76 and newer has to pass strict smog, most these cars stock cant. The L82 when brand new had a hard time getting an ok with ca smog . Just isnt a big demand for them. The guy with 8k looking for a cheap vette will grab a C4 Like the C3 styling and interior better but as a car...a good C4 is leauges better. Hobby is aging out to a point.
84's still used it. Also, twin injector throttle bodies were not possible because computer processors of the time could not handle so many drivers. Those injectors were a pretty massive load. In order for twin injection TB's to have worked, two ECU's (one for each TBI unit) would have been needed. That would have made things quite messy and complex for minimal (if any) gains.
I would love to restomod a 1980-1982 rolling chassis. I think it's in the top 5 best looking cars of all time, and everything is set up for greatness under the skin
It's interesting how they worked to adjust everyone's expectations down. I also remember everyone talking about the 5.0 Mustang, IROC Camaro and Buick Grand National.
I do admit I'm a big fan of the late 70's GM B/C body cars along with the 1976-77 GM's personal luxury cars although I normally prefer vehicles built in the late 60's/early 70's.
News flash. No one cares if your 2000's model ( canary, Taurus, accord, civic focus,......) is faster. Can your 2000''s model run with the Vette of its year? Nope. This car is still cooler.
Reading through the comments, it's pretty entertaining to see what everyone's thoughts are on this bodystyle. I guess it has a lot to do with when you come of age. For me, this bodystyle looks old and tired no matter how you look at it, but the first Vettes I remember seeing on the street were the mid-80s ones. Another thing that I thought was interesting. The 82 Vette cost twice as much as the 78? I assume this must more of a factor of the inflation problems of the late Ford administration and Carter administration than GM jacking up the price.
as a kid, this was my dream car. Corvette Summer was one of my favorite movies (with Smokey/Bandit of course). I'm 41 now and buying one isnt exactly impossible. I just dread the thought of how broke I'll end up fixing it, and fixing it up. LOL
Their cult community does make them one of the most fixable (price not with standing) the parts and knowledge are abundant for any year. Have you seen vanguard motor sales videos?
@@w.s.soapcompany94 Dont buy a cheap fixer vette. Youll be sorry! Save and get a nicely maintained/driven one. Cant fix these up cheap, vette specific parts are a ripoff$ 6 os after buying a 73 L82 and looking at parts cost vs my 67 a body...vette was quickly sold. haha
There was some stupid federal law in the early-eighties mandating this, the argument being that if you could only tell how fast you were going up to 85 you weren't going to speed beyond that (me neither)- rather perverse when you consider these (contemporaneously) high-performance cars. Possibly this was one of the reasons why the 83-cough, make that 84- 'vette had a digital readout that could go right the way up to the 150+ that the car was capable of. Whatever, not like you can't get replacement parts.
I've loved the C5 since I first saw it. Finally was able to buy one last year. Wish I would have done so a couple years back before inflation went nuts!
The Crossfire system worked fine in theory but easily lost synchronisation of ignition in actual road use- particularly if the owner tried to adjust or modify it. Really the best that can be said about the Crossfire was that it slugged on for a couple of years before the far superior TPI system was introduced in '85. And while I still love the looks of the C3 Corvette, by the late seventies \ early eighties it was really well last it's sell-by date.
Jason Carpp Nothing wrong with that. Those were good looking cars! I liked the 'looks' of those better than the next generation. Performance is another story. :-)
Jason Carpp Taken to a whole 'nuther level, the Miata. Seriously, the numbers suck, but the car is a BLAST to drive. (please don't tell me it's a girls car, because I had a '91) :-) Factoid: 70% of Miata owners are men. Sorry, not trying got hijack the thread.
I remember going to the Chevy dealer in 1982 and seeing a collectors edition sitting on the showroom floor. Man that was a gorgeous car, with those curves and that beautiful silver paint, the lovely silver leather interior, and the cool tinted t-tops. With a sticker price close to $25k though, you had to make serious money to be able to buy one. The look of the car is so timeless I would have no problem driving one around even today.
@@PrimePrius They were very different cars and I liked them both. The C3 was a flashy looking car from the disco era, whereas the C4 looked like it meant business. Of course back then, I preferred the C4 because of the superior performance and the understated looks. All these years later though, I'd rather have a C3 because the look is so timeless. What I'd really love to have is a 1986 or 1987 Buick Regal Grand National. That thing was a beautiful black beast.
@@PrimePrius I really started noticing cars more in the mid 80s, but at that point in time I definitely preferred the C4 Vette to the design of these. The ZR one was just about my favorite of all time. But if you were to ask me to choose between them today, I would definitely choose the C3. It has more character, more natural beauty to it.
Wow, the Corvette almost doubled in price between 1978 and 1982. I know the late 1970s and early 1980s were a time of high inflation and part of that is the options but damn! I can't imagine what car buyers would do if a model doubled in price in four years today.
Have two older vettes. Yes most modern cars will beat them in performance (pretty much any new car will beat a 70's vette), but these are classic time machines that'll be around when most modern daily drivers have long been crushed. Sit in one and you'll really appreciate how far the new vettes have come.
I love how a 16 second, 84mph 1/4 mile is considered "no want for adequate power" back in '82 for a top of the line sports car. As a kid born in the 1970's, the late 70's well into the early 90's were a dark time indeed for mainstream automobiles.
I restore classic cars for a living. Been doing it for decades now. Our shop has done and won awards with just about every "important" and rare, high dollar corvette there is. I always thought the very early C3's were the way to go. Recently, I came across a 1980 that was stuck in a storage container for almost 19 years. I bought it for way too cheap and proceeded to get it road worthy with the notion of just selling it when I finished and make a profit. Nope! I really like this version! Is it fast? No, but its not slow either. What it does better is drive and ride and is way more comfortable than any 50's, 60's or early 70's vette I've ever driven and I've driven a TON of them! GM figured it out at this point so the car is just a joy to drive. Granted, I did have to put a 700R4 overdrive trans in it to make it cruise-able on the big, Texas 85mph roads. I also installed a 140mph speedo from a 1979 model. The only performance mods are a big, modern aluminum radiator, KYB shocks, 134a compressor and condenser and headers with a full dual exhaust. Hooker makes a nice bolt on kit for these. I get thumbs up from the modern Vette owners on the road all the time. Its got a nice, vintage vibe with just enough "modern" in it to make it a great cruising car I can drive for hours and not get beat up by it like an earlier version.
I just (3 weeks ago) bought an '82 Collector Edition with only 24,700 miles. It was in a collector's show room for the past 22 years. It's in MINT condition and I'm afraid to drive it anywhere because of other drivers not paying attention......there's not a chip or a scratch in it anywhere. ;-)
It does, it was just never released. This video is supposed to be taken place in late 81 or early 82 and people didn't know they would withhold the 83 Vette until 84.
You are mostly correct. The '84 was supposed to be released in '83. GM was having issues with the new design and held it off a model year before releasing it. Given how trouble plagued the early C4's were, I shudder to think what the problems that they fixed before releasing the car for production were.
Find a 76-82 in good shape with a shelled out engine and drop in a 350 GM crate motor with a 5 or 6 speed. Do some updates on the suspension; restomod. Plug and play fun!
How so? A Honda Accord V6 screams down the 1/4 mile in the low 14's and gets 34mpg highway. Only through massive advances in automotive technology allowed this to happen.
Gas mileage has changed drastically...I don't see why so many people don't see this. For instance, our '14 Santa Fe makes 65 more HP than this Corvette, and it gets 50% better gas mileage despite being 800 lbs heavier. How is that not an advancement?
Some pencil neck kid in a GD 80-something Mustang 5.0 blew my friggen doors off at a light immediately after I had just washed my 82' (this was in 1986) - still had a few water beads on it. I was in the car with my lady and I was wholly embarrassed and enraged...F_CK!! I sunk some considerable money into that baby - custom glistening 2-tone lacquer paint (liquid sliver metallic/ice blue metallic), glassed on spoiler and custom hood. She got looks and complements constantly - gorgeous car. That 82' was pure eye candy however - performance was crappolah. If I ever dig up the cash I will hunt down a cherry 80-82 and do a ground up, crate engine build and do that beautiful body style justice. I did get revenge on the much reviled 5.0 in 1988. I just scored a brand new 88' with the 4+3 trans. I totally blew away a different 5.0 candy-ass at a light one eve and damn near killed my wife and I when I turned off to our exit at over 100 mph. Thank God for the amazing handling of the 88 plus its leg zapping ABS!
Sounds like this is when the price of cars started going up quite a bit. Sure the 82 is quicker but not 9000 to 18000 difference worth. I actually like the look of the 78 best. Always have.
my freind had an 82 Vette back in 89 ..... late night cruising,having fun ....... took a 45 curve at just over 90 ..... it felt like it was glued to the road as much G force we were feeling inside.
1982 the last year for the old stingray look! Slow as hell though but looks nice! A 1984 corvette will leave it in the dust and costs less regardless of only having 15 more hp lol! You can get a 1984 for only 3 grand!
Nick Sandman ummm hell no. Never gonna have a corvette with a ford engine in it. Wtf is wrong with you. Just for saying that you should have your privilege to drive taken away. Ugh.
I see what they did there playing "Shut Down" by the Beach Boys on the radio, as this too is a "fuel injected Stingray". The C3 was a beauty when it was new in the 60s, but of all the smog era cars I think the changing times of the mid to late 70s hit the Vette the hardest. It had the furthest to fall, after all.
My great grandfather bought an 82 collector edition corvette brand new. He bought it from the dealership with 9,000 miles but he was the first owner. I assume it was used as a test/demo car. I’d love to find a way to tell if the corvette in this video is the exact one that he bought. He just passed it down to me today with 20,000 miles on the odometer
My dad had 1979 Corvette that him and his brother restored in the early 90s. He had it until 2015 when he sold it and got a 1997 Corvette. His 1979 Corvette was so cool but I remember nothing inside worked anymore. The heat and AC controls were broken, no clock, no horn, no interior lights, no wipers, pretty much anything electrical or had an electrical motor was lifeless in it as it would just completely drain the battery. The only thing I remember my dad fixing before getting rid of it was the radio. Everything was able to work in his 97 Corvette which he drove much more in the year then he ever did with his 79 since it was more winter friendly. He sold it in 2019 and got a 2009 Shelby GT500 convertible
For the C3 Corvette's I've liked the earlier models built from 1968 to 1972 the best, I didn't care much for the 1973-82 Corvette's all that much at all.
When I was a little kid, I remember seeing this car and not wanting it then either. Looks like a bathtub on wheels and the way it bobs up and down, it makes me seasick. 1981 Camaro Z-28 with blackjack headers, TH350 and B&M shift kit, thrush mufflers, 3:42 rear gears, Edelbrock dual plane intake and ditch the Rochester Quadra-bog for a Holley, a red MSD coil, some yellow Accel wires and a chrome B&M triangle shaped air filter with foam filter that burns up when your car backfires. Black and gold with a Road runner air freshener hanging from the mirror. I'll take on that 1982 Vette, no problem
Funny off topic story.... I was working at a Toyota dealership as a lot/delivery guy and our GM was a real car guy that had a deal with the owners that he could store his 18k mile ZR-1 and his low vin# '97 C5 6 speed. One day we got into a discussion about the worst Corvette (I was driving my first Turbo Regal at the time with over 300k miles) and after going over the reason to exclude the C1's I said, "The C3 California 305 automatic cars". "What? Those don't exist, and if they do you can drive the ZR-1". I did not take the ZR-1 for a ride out of principal, but got to rip some awesome cars as a somewhat trusted employee afterwards. The guy that showed up to buy both 'Vette's a couple weeks later was driving a turqouise Callaway TT with the Sledgehammer body. The only time I ever cried while dealing with other bodily functions and I can tell you way more facts about an LC2 Buick than I ever could a lowly Corvette.
I,traded my 1978,L82 , 4sp, gymkhana suspended vette, in 1984,for an '82 collection edition. I,got many compliments on its looks. It had many more options than my'78. But,it was an automatic 4sp with overdrive. The cross fire,was a major problem. Later, among us drivers We renamed it,CEASE FIRE. THE tranny,was forever hunting for the proper gear, which it MOST ALWAYS NEVER FOUND. The ride & handling ,& braking was much improved. But,it didn't feel SPORTS CAR LIKE, as my older 1. It had become a GRAND TOURER. I used my older vette as a trade in. 32k -miles & Chevrolet gave me ! $pit,the newer vette was lower,so drive ways, speed bumps,pilot holes,always gave me a reason to repair out of warranty. Lucky,1 x-mas, it would end up!$TOLEN...SO. ..NO MA$!!! I would have loved to install a LS-7 ,427CID NATURALLY ASPIRATED OHV VERSION & a 6sp manual. We can still DREAM, RIGHT $$$$$$$$
mundotaku. Not really, it demonstrated the upswing in performance of the 80s and aside from the early car's power advantage the 82 was no doubt the best C3.
I used to have a 79 Toyota Supra. Sticker price $10,500. Only 110 hp. So, strangely, these are actually good numbers for the era. I also had a 79 Monza V6 with "only" 110hp which would absolutely smoke my Supra, and Monzas were also available with a V8. Price? $6500
Single exhaust, the early restrictive pellet style catalytic converter, really choked those smog era engines down. Add a dual exhaust, dump the cats, and that by itself will add 75 horses. Carbs or early throttle bodies lean tuned so the fuel intake was restricted, and the intake manifolds were built for economy and a hot lean burn. Those engines couldn't breathe. Add a free breathing manifold and a free flowing carburetor with the dual exhaust and you'll take that smogger from 185 horses to 300-350 horsepower.
Vladimir Yemelyanov You are joking, right? Leaf springs worked pretty well on all of the muscle cars back in the day, from 428 CJ Mustangs to 455 Trans Ams, 454 Chevelles and 440 Barracudas. Some of them, especially the later 2nd generation F-body Camaros and Firebirds were excellent handling cars as well. The 1971 Corvette with a 454 V-8 (LS6- 425HP, 475lb ft torque) did just fine with a single multi leaf transverse steel spring, and the later smoggers with even better suspensions are excellent candidates for increased horsepower. The late C-3 Corvettes have a single leaf fiberglass transverse mounted spring and a multi link independent rear suspension on a solid mount Dana 44 limited slip differential. Besides, the type of spring in a vehicle has a very small bearing on the amount of horsepower that any particular vehicle can deal with.
Could be worse, could be a 1981 Corvette which slipped under the 200 hp barrier. However here's a hint... replace the catalytic converter with a high flow one, and while you're there replace the mufflers with modern ones as well - that makes a big instant difference. That's still a V8 sitting there, if it's allowed to breath it can do great things.
I replace the CC with a high flow model and went with dual exhaust as well - not sure I got anything close to 75hp, but probably a good 30-40hp, it was absolutely noticeable, the car ran better, got better mileage and most importantly sounded dramatically better. If I cut the CC out completely I might have got closer to your number, but played it safe on inspections, which they then dropped like a year later.
I have no clue where he got 18 seconds for the 1/4 mile for a base 78 Vette. They usually were in the 16.5 range. 1977 Chevrolet Corvette L48 0-60 mph 8.7 | Quarter mile 16.4 1979 Chevrolet Corvette L82 0-60 mph 7.2 | Quarter mile 15.5
Such a beautiful, sexy car with those shapely curved fenders 😍... then they flattened everything with the next generation and ended up with the most boring Vette ever made! 😖
I disagree, i think the c4 oozes style, and although it is smoothed out still to me is more asthetic than is predecessors. Plus, the c4 just screams 80s i love that about it.
@@mbox314 Being simple and working doesnt equate to high tech. A spear is a simple and effective design, but it is not high tech. Leaf springs are a simple and effective design, they are not high tech.
Some context is needed here. He asks if it's worth double his car...as if the dollar comparison is relevant. In reality, the US dollar had a highly unusual period of hyperinflation. Everything went up -- including wages. It would be like comparing a 1995 corvette price to a 2010 corvette price.
A 16.0 quarter mile is dead slow by todays standards, but anyone who was around in '82 would know that 16.0 in '82 was FAST. Government strangulation (regulations) was still crushing the American auto makers in the 80s.
Fair enough, but there were still PLENTY of older muscle cars around in 1982 that snickered at an '82 Corvette's 16s and showed the Vette driver their tail lights.
@@oldtwinsna8347 Well, considering that when I was racing in 1982, and that NO ONE thought that 16s were quick, and the streets were full of 13 second daily drivers, your opinion is duly noted and disregarded. Cheers.
The performance is comparable to a base Cruze, and the mileage is probably comparable to the upcoming ~800 hp ZR1, but it still has limitless "cool" factor.
they were hugely restricted, in a wheel dealers episode he bought a late 70's vette I think and with one minor engine mod picked up 50hp I think? also how amazingly long is the nose on these cars, crazy!!
18 sec 1/4 mile for that 78 vette is not right unless it is running on 7 cylinders. Even a stock base 78 vette with automatic would run the 1/4 in 16 seconds.
1:30 you can blame that price jump greatly on the fact that inflation was rampant in the late 70s and subsequently interest rates went through the roof in the early 80s.
The small intake manifold ports ran out of air as the rpm's went up. I'd bet a better intake manifold would take care of that problem. Best of all if you have a C3 they still bring original sticker price at least, unless it's in horrible shape. Nice!! None of these new computer cars on wheels will be around 30 years from now as the electronics will be fried!
Quality Tofu Delivery Doesn't matter if theres moving parts or not if this happens scontent-dfw.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-xpa1/v/t1.0-9/s526x395/10384349_10202980026514706_2709994726165031320_n.jpg?oh=c7b8b6d7dfd27cf2a184e7d7c1a17aa3&oe=559407DB
Quality Tofu Delivery Thats my 01 rango after going down the low maintenance road to my dads house. Cooked my ecm although still runs and drives only enough just throws ecm failure and a ton of random come and go codes.