The worst vehicle you ever owned was...

If you read MR2 in French, it will sound "merdeux", which means "shi$%y". Probably that was a hint on what not to buy... :D

Ah yes, and remember the story of the Nova being a big flop in Mexico, because "no va" means "it doesn't go".

Urban legend however, because it did fairly well, even exceeded sales expectations. I know here, they were, and still are a nice hot rod. :)
 
Ah yes, and remember the story of the Nova being a big flop in Mexico, because "no va" means "it doesn't go".

:)

HAHA. I just realized that. It literally does mean "it doesn't go" :laughing: :laughing: :laughing:

cant wait to use that one on my friend that drives a nova :p
 
Back in 1988, I purchased my first new car. I bought a brand new 1988 1/2 Ford Escort LX. In the 5 miserable years I had it, I had 2 batteries literally explode, a nagging little problem of the engine completely shutting off on the highway occasionally (finally fixed myself with a zip tie, an electrical connector had broken one of its tabs. I was 18 and still couldn't tell you what it controlled), consistant transmission problems (I went through 3 trans under warranty), various squeaks and rattles from new. It was awful as most of the late 1980's US cars were. Cheaply made and designed to punish the entry level buyer.

On the plus side, it forced me to do a lot of maintenance and I learned much of that through Chiltons (no internet forums to help us like now) and some knowledgable friends.
 
The wife's '70 Ford Maverick she purchased new.

In a nutshell, that thing was a POS from the gitgo. One example, the steering flex coupling had not 4 bolts, but only two and were not even tighten down. Not only the bolts being missing, the ones that were in there were grade nothing and 1/4-20 vice 5/16-18! That was just the first week of ownership. It continued for the next 7 years, little of this and little of that.

But one thing, with that 250cid 6 banger she could/would break the tires loose at 60MPH.

Bill
 
In 2005 I bought the truck that I thought would be the last truck I would ever have to buy. A Ford F-250 extra cab 4x4 6.0 diesel. Thought that this diesel should out live me considering how few miles I drove ( 10,000 a yr ). Well before the first yr was out the EGR valve had to be replaced. No biggie I thought. Ended up going through four more before the 50,000 mile warranty was up. Now while replacing these Ford said don't worry that they would take care of this problem after warranty was up because it was a ongoing problem. At 50,100 miles the EGR goes out and I'm stuck with over a 400 dollar bill. Ford and I start to argue. Before 52,000 moles it goes out again plus the ECU so I go ballistic with Ford some more and a guy calls me while it's in the shop and says instead of 1,600.00 bucks how about 500 ? i tell them its ridiculous but I want it fixed. I got to pick it up and find out they meant 500 off of the 1,600.00 bill not 500 total. I threw such a fit they threatened to call the sheriff. The service manager came out and said Ford was willing to adjust the bill but it would be between me and Ford ,not the dealer.This truck also started rusting below the doors and at the bottom of the tailgate. Their repair lasted about 6 months before coming back through.They offered to re-paint it again but I mentioned if they couldn't repair it right the first time that they were just wasting my time and theirs. He also told me the truck was not driven hard enough or fast enough. I replied BS. I then left on a trip to New Hampshire from Indy and returning through New York and New Jersey at a average of 75-80 mph. It broke down in RI. The dealer there said it needed a turbo and a inner cooler. He also said he had a lot full of 6.0's with similar problems and couldn't get to it for over 30 days. I limped it back home and headed to the dealer again. The estimate was a couple of thousand dollars and I said get Ford on the line for no way was that going to happen. Long story made short, Ford made me a offer for my truck in trade for a 2009 crew cab F-250 6.4 diesel. I might regret it later down the road but this 6.4 is quieter and smoother then the 6.0 so far with 31,000 on it.. My son has a 2006 6.0 and after his second EGR failure we installed a EGR delete and now he needs head gaskets at 80,000 miles. If this 2009 starts having problems their will be a Dodge or Chevy sitting in my driveway next.
 
In 2005 I bought the truck that I thought would be the last truck I would ever have to buy. A Ford F-250 extra cab 4x4 6.0 diesel. Thought that this diesel should out live me considering how few miles I drove ( 10,000 a yr ). Well before the first yr was out the EGR valve had to be replaced. No biggie I thought. Ended up going through four more before the 50,000 mile warranty was up. Now while replacing these Ford said don't worry that they would take care of this problem after warranty was up because it was a ongoing problem. At 50,100 miles the EGR goes out and I'm stuck with over a 400 dollar bill. Ford and I start to argue. Before 52,000 moles it goes out again plus the ECU so I go ballistic with Ford some more and a guy calls me while it's in the shop and says instead of 1,600.00 bucks how about 500 ? i tell them its ridiculous but I want it fixed. I got to pick it up and find out they meant 500 off of the 1,600.00 bill not 500 total. I threw such a fit they threatened to call the sheriff. The service manager came out and said Ford was willing to adjust the bill but it would be between me and Ford ,not the dealer.This truck also started rusting below the doors and at the bottom of the tailgate. Their repair lasted about 6 months before coming back through.They offered to re-paint it again but I mentioned if they couldn't repair it right the first time that they were just wasting my time and theirs. He also told me the truck was not driven hard enough or fast enough. I replied BS. I then left on a trip to New Hampshire from Indy and returning through New York and New Jersey at a average of 75-80 mph. It broke down in RI. The dealer there said it needed a turbo and a inner cooler. He also said he had a lot full of 6.0's with similar problems and couldn't get to it for over 30 days. I limped it back home and headed to the dealer again. The estimate was a couple of thousand dollars and I said get Ford on the line for no way was that going to happen. Long story made short, Ford made me a offer for my truck in trade for a 2009 crew cab F-250 6.4 diesel. I might regret it later down the road but this 6.4 is quieter and smoother then the 6.0 so far with 31,000 on it.. My son has a 2006 6.0 and after his second EGR failure we installed a EGR delete and now he needs head gaskets at 80,000 miles. If this 2009 starts having problems their will be a Dodge or Chevy sitting in my driveway next.

The 6.0s were very problematic. They take lots of building up and modification to be reliable. I think that was the 1st powerstroke engine ford made "in house". Im pretty sure International made all the powerstrokes up untill the 6.0.

Little video on building the 6.0s up...way too much work...

http://youtu.be/RW7JEHLYyJ4

Your 6.4 should be a lot more reliable.
 
Easy 2003 VW Jetta 1.8T

Bought used in 3 months:

-Front Axle
-Wheel Bearings Front
-Window Motor
-Water Pump

Then there was the electrical issues. The radio would turn off in exactly 1 hour. Then, the car just would not start every 2 days. I had to leave the negative terminal off the battery at night.

Took it to dealer, Mekineke, NTB, Foreign car specialist, charging specialist and NO ONE could tell me why this car was losing power over night.

Also the truck was tiny (not fit golf clubs), NO rear seat room. People seriously need to sit in the back before they buy a car to see if baby seats fit, or an average person has leg room!

Anyways, traded it for 2003 s10 that was awesome mechanically. (Just slow and horrible in bad weather climates).

I have had 3 mazdas since and love them all.
 
Haven't had one yet that I could say was the worst I've ever owned.
 
I've owned nothing but GM's. I have no regrets about any of my vehicles.

Age 18 = 89 Cutlass Ciera International.
Age 21 = 1994 Buick Century
Age 23 = 2009 Buick Lacrosse.

The cutlass blew a freeze plug after it overheated 30 miles from home, I sold the 94 Buick a few months ago. Both the older cars had under 100k on the odometer, ran strong.
 
The 6.0s were very problematic. They take lots of building up and modification to be reliable. I think that was the 1st powerstroke engine ford made "in house". Im pretty sure International made all the powerstrokes up untill the 6.0

Ford Truck Salesman here with just a clarification that the first Ford "in house" Diesel was the 2011 6.7 Liter.

The 6.0 was a nightmare and should never have been built.
 
The wife's '70 Ford Maverick she purchased new.

In a nutshell, that thing was a POS from the gitgo. One example, the steering flex coupling had not 4 bolts, but only two and were not even tighten down. Not only the bolts being missing, the ones that were in there were grade nothing and 1/4-20 vice 5/16-18! That was just the first week of ownership. It continued for the next 7 years, little of this and little of that.

But one thing, with that 250cid 6 banger she could/would break the tires loose at 60MPH.

Bill

Bill, I just love how we are all starting to tell our age in this thread. :D

I have a particular affinity towards that model/body style as my first car in 73 was a used 70~71 white Mercury Comet GT, 302 2-bolt, automatic. I learned to work on cars with that thing. It's the car that brought my wife and I together. We worked on it all the time, didn't need anything done to it, but I was constantly putting hot rod parts on it.

Finally wrapped it around a telephone pole doing about 35, SIDEWAYS off a dam about 8' in the air, DIRECTLY in the drivers door handle! :eek: Cut the pole in half, spun the car around and threw us (me and a racing buddy) down the dam into a swamp. My seat ended up on top of the passenger seat.

Then my 3rd car was yet another, black Comet GT. The interior was button tucked diamond pleated black naugahyde (had to kill a lot of little 'nauga's' to get all that hyde. :laughing: That one however had a 4-bolt 302, 12.7:1 Speed Pro pistons, 612° lift cam, Offenhauser racing intake with a NASCAR 1050cfm carb, and about everything else you could think of. Most of it was done when I bought it but I did change out the headers, dual point distributer, big ol' super coil, fat wires, and put a 4" short pipe exhaust on it, doing away with stupid glass packs, and some competition J style traction bars. The rear axle was pulled from a Torino 429 'shaker' car and was about 1½" too long on each end with a 4:10 gear.

That puppy would pull the front wheels about 8" up and freaking FLY!!!:hotrod2:
We had gas lines and I was driving around in a car that got about 7mpg (if I was lucky). Still like those Comets to this day, neat hood and that fastback kinda' styling with the black out rounded tail lights that stuck out a bit where the Maverick was a long flat style. I'd maybe buy one today if I found one I like.... (just don't tell my wife). :bolt:
 
Ford Truck Salesman here with just a clarification that the first Ford "in house" Diesel was the 2011 6.7 Liter.

The 6.0 was a nightmare and should never have been built.

I stand corrected. But yes, the 6.0 was a nightmare, and I'll never own one.
 
I stand corrected. But yes, the 6.0 was a nightmare, and I'll never own one.
They're not so bad if you get one that is maintained well and then address the all of the 6.0's common problems before they become problems.
 
In 2005 I bought the truck that I thought would be the last truck I would ever have to buy. A Ford F-250 extra cab 4x4 6.0 diesel. Thought that this diesel should out live me considering how few miles I drove ( 10,000 a yr ). Well before the first yr was out the EGR valve had to be replaced. No biggie I thought. Ended up going through four more before the 50,000 mile warranty was up. Now while replacing these Ford said don't worry that they would take care of this problem after warranty was up because it was a ongoing problem. At 50,100 miles the EGR goes out and I'm stuck with over a 400 dollar bill.

Ford and I start to argue. Before 52,000 moles it goes out again plus the ECU so I go ballistic with Ford some more and a guy calls me while it's in the shop and says instead of 1,600.00 bucks how about 500 ? i tell them its ridiculous but I want it fixed. I got to pick it up and find out they meant 500 off of the 1,600.00 bill not 500 total.

******** I threw such a fit they threatened to call the sheriff. ********

The service manager came out and said Ford was willing to adjust the bill but it would be between me and Ford ,not the dealer.

This truck also started rusting below the doors and at the bottom of the tailgate. Their repair lasted about 6 months before coming back through.They offered to re-paint it again but I mentioned if they couldn't repair it right the first time that they were just wasting my time and theirs. He also told me the truck was not driven hard enough or fast enough. I replied BS. I then left on a trip to New Hampshire from Indy and returning through New York and New Jersey at a average of 75-80 mph. It broke down in RI. The dealer there said it needed a turbo and a inner cooler. He also said he had a lot full of 6.0's with similar problems and couldn't get to it for over 30 days. I limped it back home and headed to the dealer again. The estimate was a couple of thousand dollars and I said get Ford on the line for no way was that going to happen. Long story made short, Ford made me a offer for my truck in trade for a 2009 crew cab F-250 6.4 diesel. I might regret it later down the road but this 6.4 is quieter and smoother then the 6.0 so far with 31,000 on it.. My son has a 2006 6.0 and after his second EGR failure we installed a EGR delete and now he needs head gaskets at 80,000 miles. If this 2009 starts having problems their will be a Dodge or Chevy sitting in my driveway next.


Sounds like some of the roads I went down with them for sure. I got to the point where I understood the dealer not wanting to *step up to the plate* because as all my trucks were bought and built from the equipment installer the dealer(s) just didn't have any skin in the game. OTOH, They are THERE to service their label, period. When you buy a truck where the chassis was drop shipped elsewhere you don't have a choice to go through your home town dealer, they get it from wherever (literally anywhere) they buy them from.

All that made for some pretty tense moments in the service lanes for sure!

I dunno' Paul, on the Dodge vs Chevy. Were it me I'd go Chevy as it's just a better truck hands down. OTOH, That Cummins power is rock solid and I don't care what they do to V8 diesels EVER, I'll take a straight 6 anytime and everytime.

I just HATE that GM put the medium duty CAT out of business. When I think about all the CAT power I ended up with after switching from Fords it's almost like remembering good sex. :D The first one I bought was the 3116 215hp / 605tq in a TopKick 6500, 26,000 Lb taperleaf rears (instead of rougher riding stack leafs, which also wear out and need re-springing before 100,000 miles) w/ 19,800 axle, 8400 Lb front axle. Derated the truck to 25,750 to keep from running a CDL. ;)

One thing that made that engine so much more expensive was all the internal fuel rails, but it also made it more reliable as well. Back then (1996) there were 'basic' CAT packages, the 170/185, 200/215, and a 230/245. Same block but different cams, pistons, sleeves, cranks, injection pumps & injectors basically is what made the difference. Same turbo even. And the sound.... OMG I love that CAT sound. Every one they make has the same firing order, to this day, (which makes it easy to tell how well she's a runnin' when you get used to it). ;)

Were Chevy/GMC to put one in a truck today they would *own* that segment for guys that need those trucks to pull, day in, day out. Might not make a difference to those guys that just use them as a HD Pickup, but to those that 'work' them daily that is one tough engine.

The 6.0s were very problematic. They take lots of building up and modification to be reliable. I think that was the 1st powerstroke engine ford made "in house". Im pretty sure International made all the powerstrokes up untill the 6.0.

I know the first Powerstroke was in that darned 94, and it was JUNK compared to the Navistar engines that preceeded it, at least till they got the kinks worked out. What happened in my industry was we were running 350's, then Super Duty's and when the beds started reaching up to 19' it was just more than the chassis was built for. Put a VW bug on it and it was at rated limit on the rear axle. Put a car on the wheel lift and the only and I mean ONLY time you have front brakes worth a crap is on dry pavement. To this day I just shake my head when I see guys running a rollback with a pickup style body (HD, SD, whatever). I put a ton of flashing lights, strobes, horns, and whatever else I could on mine because I knew the first time the road had ANY moisture I would AND DID slide through intersections with the front wheels stopped dead still and my "pucker factor" going full blast. :eek:


It''s just a LOT safer, not to mention easier, to buy a 'real' medium duty truck. Wear and tear goes down by a huge factor, mpg actually can go up overall, and cost to run is a TON cheaper. Not to mention they'll STOP! :props:

All my 215's would run right at 10¾ MPG @ 77.6 mph, with that thing started at 6:00am and running non-stop for 16~18 hours a day. Empty, loaded, even pulling a triple-axle 41' trailer the mileage was something you could set your watch to. :) Unless.... there was a road trip to FL (all down hill) and it'd jump to 13 MPG. I'd leave early doing Mercedes dealer trades to Tampa, and be back for supper. Only had to stop for a quick refuel when back at the FlyingJ in Forsyth (which is almost back home).
 
Also the truck was tiny (not fit golf clubs), NO rear seat room. People seriously need to sit in the back before they buy a car to see if baby seats fit, or an average person has leg room!

I have had 3 mazdas since and love them all.

Haaaaaa, that reminds me of my G35. When I bought it I made it a point not to get a 350Z because the G is a true 2+2 coupe. Figured I'd get less crap from the wife, and it worked. Well sorta'..... That was until she had to sit in the back! :rolleyes:

Then she drove it to work one day and went to stop and run errands on the way home. She was pretty upset that the trunk wouldn't hold almost any box you try to put in it, and was packed with just a few grocery bags. (I keep a detail bag in it, plus a cloth backpack full of towels, a windshield reflector rollup thingy AND a California car duster.)

So once she got home and was going on about how it didn't have any room in the trunk I pointed out the diagram where it shows you how to load not one, but TWO golf bags. :laughing: (That was a design criteria to have it be able to handle two bags. I can tell ya' though that they'd have to be small ones, that's for SURE.) :p
 
In 2005 I bought the truck that I thought would be the last truck I would ever have to buy. A Ford F-250 extra cab 4x4 6.0 diesel. Thought that this diesel should out live me considering how few miles I drove ( 10,000 a yr ). Well before the first yr was out the EGR valve had to be replaced. No biggie I thought. Ended up going through four more before the 50,000 mile warranty was up. Now while replacing these Ford said don't worry that they would take care of this problem after warranty was up because it was a ongoing problem. At 50,100 miles the EGR goes out and I'm stuck with over a 400 dollar bill. Ford and I start to argue. Before 52,000 moles it goes out again plus the ECU so I go ballistic with Ford some more and a guy calls me while it's in the shop and says instead of 1,600.00 bucks how about 500 ? i tell them its ridiculous but I want it fixed. I got to pick it up and find out they meant 500 off of the 1,600.00 bill not 500 total. I threw such a fit they threatened to call the sheriff. The service manager came out and said Ford was willing to adjust the bill but it would be between me and Ford ,not the dealer.This truck also started rusting below the doors and at the bottom of the tailgate. Their repair lasted about 6 months before coming back through.They offered to re-paint it again but I mentioned if they couldn't repair it right the first time that they were just wasting my time and theirs. He also told me the truck was not driven hard enough or fast enough. I replied BS. I then left on a trip to New Hampshire from Indy and returning through New York and New Jersey at a average of 75-80 mph. It broke down in RI. The dealer there said it needed a turbo and a inner cooler. He also said he had a lot full of 6.0's with similar problems and couldn't get to it for over 30 days. I limped it back home and headed to the dealer again. The estimate was a couple of thousand dollars and I said get Ford on the line for no way was that going to happen. Long story made short, Ford made me a offer for my truck in trade for a 2009 crew cab F-250 6.4 diesel. I might regret it later down the road but this 6.4 is quieter and smoother then the 6.0 so far with 31,000 on it.. My son has a 2006 6.0 and after his second EGR failure we installed a EGR delete and now he needs head gaskets at 80,000 miles. If this 2009 starts having problems their will be a Dodge or Chevy sitting in my driveway next.

Lol dodge or Chevy ay? How bout Japanese
 
Lol dodge or Chevy ay? How bout Japanese

No such thing as a medium duty, diesel, pickup/extended/crew type cab thats Jap built.

There's always Hino or UD though. Nissan UD is actually a very decent 'in city' chassis, 7.0L straight 6, air over hydraulic brake AND clutch. They ride like junk you are over the front axle and if there is an accident you WILL be the first one there, and usually the LAST one to leave. (Like under a white sheet in the coroner's van.) I tried to like them, I really did but climbing up all twisted and the driving position just coudn't make it work. Almost smacked one broadsided into a car on the way back from the FBI office in Huntsville on 431 in Anniston. The brakes were new, out of adjustment and heated up BAD. Coming into Anniston 431 is long and flat and all of a sudden there is (or was) 1 lonely redlight that changes when you're coming down through there wide a$$ open. Had a recovered theft Camry on the bed, nothing else on the lift, hit the engine brake instantly, stood on the service brake like I was trying to stick me feet out the front of the cab and it just f-l-e-w right through that light missing a big ol' Buick by about a foot.

I've seen what happens to the cab when a loaded rollback comes to a quick stop as in hitting an immovable object.
It is very ugly! Lost friends that way....:nomore:

Any-who... I bet if say Toyota built up a platform on their full size trucks with a diesel that it'd be popular for sure.:dunno:
 
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