View Full Version : '73 Vega GT, amazingly nice time capsule
scuncio
12-27-2020, 04:34 PM
I'd ruin this one with a SBC...what else would you do with it in stock trim? Very cool to see such a nicely preserved example.
Link to 1973 Vega GT auction (http://ebay.to/2WO6yFL)
https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/LGMAAOSwv7xf5~sw/s-l1600.jpg
https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/G8gAAOSwq69f5~tJ/s-l1600.jpg
https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/T7AAAOSwmOhf5~tu/s-l1600.jpg
https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/rqoAAOSwQSdf5~ud/s-l1600.jpg
1V77B3U376450
Bill Pritchard
12-27-2020, 06:03 PM
Belongs in a Ripley's Believe-It-Or-Not museum.....a Vega purchased in the Midwest that has no rust 47 years later :eek:
Good looking clean car.
Sitting in an LS-6 Chevelle at a corner Drive-In one evening,parked next to a '71 Hemi Cuda & a GTO Judge in the summer of '79.
A Vega GT pulls up to the stop light,intoxicated passenger opens the door and proclaims to us,"The GT Package is No Slouch!" as he threw up on the street curb.Light soon turns green,the girl behind the wheel slowly drives away.
To this day,that has always underscored the Vega to me. :D
seventieshow
12-27-2020, 10:26 PM
"...LS-6 Chevelle at a corner Drive-In one evening, parked next to a '71 Hemi Cuda & a GTO Judge in the summer of '79..."
Sincerely, that must have been great.
Nice Vega, agree on the SBC swap. Done in a manner that leaves the stock hood.
PeteLeathersac
12-27-2020, 10:40 PM
'
Love it too also agree it needs a SBC, how could you not?
Sure did lots of T-Belts on these also wrecked a few decent ones for the Saginaws/Seats/Steering Wheels/Tires.
:beers:
~ Pete
.
mssl72
12-28-2020, 05:04 AM
Yep, I'm with Tony on slipping a small bock in it. I've always wanted a V8 Vega GT. There was a guy that worked for my Dad back in the early 70s that had a orange/white stripe Vega GT. Not a V8, but I always liked the mini Camaro look and wanted one.
Dave Rifkin
12-28-2020, 12:09 PM
Slip an LS and a 5 speed into it. Narrowed 12 bolt and all stock appearing on the outside.
jl8z28
12-28-2020, 12:49 PM
Had a new 71 first car thought about putting a v8 in it then traded it in on a 69 34 dart
Too Many Projects
12-28-2020, 01:10 PM
Belongs in a Ripley's Believe-It-Or-Not museum.....a Vega purchased in the Midwest that has no rust 47 years later :eek:
Must have moved to CA before the first snowfall. Invoice does indicate rust proofing, but still, it would have rusted from the inside out, if it was up here very long.
Olds Toro swap...:dunno:
I had a '71 I bought for $50 in '76, after the guys girlfriend threw his bowling ball over their apartment balcony....right thru the windshield...:laugh:
Do the SBC, and detail the orig engine on a stand in the garage for cars and coffee eye candy
DW31S
12-28-2020, 04:31 PM
Belongs in a Ripley's Believe-It-Or-Not museum.....a Vega purchased in the Midwest that has no rust 47 years later :eek:
Now THAT was funny!!!
njsteve
12-28-2020, 06:21 PM
That Vega brings back memories. Back in 1981 I was living in Aurora Colorado and attending Denver Automotive and Diesel College. A bunch of us hooligans rented a house and proceeded to become an annoyance to the entire neighborhood. One of the neighbors was always calling the cops on us for having too many parties/girls/noise/cars parked, etc. They eventually moved out and out of spite, abandoned a 1972 Vega GT automatic, in that same color red, right in our front yard, blocking our driveway.
Well, when the neighbors leave you lemons...make lemonade. After a couple weeks I called the police to get it towed and they said since it was abandoned on your property, wait another month and then apply for an abandoned vehicle title. Then you can do whatever you want with it: junk it, part it out, get it licensed and drive it, etc.
So I waited, got the title and tags, pulled a door lock cylinder out, and had a key made. The thing started right up and I drove it for six months. It had zero horspeower, being that we were at 5,000+ foot elevation and it had an automatic. But it was a dependable car. I then traded it to a local used car lot/junkyard, straight across for a 1971 Cuda 383 convertible! Here's that cuda as I found it:
Best Vega Ever!
scuncio
12-28-2020, 06:29 PM
Cool story Steve. Boy, that Cuda was a mess for being only ten years old or so.
njsteve
12-28-2020, 06:37 PM
Yeah, cars sure dissolved quickly back then. The junk yard got it because it had been abandoned on Lowry Air Force Base by an airman who had been transfered and left it behind. The old paperwork in the car indicated that it came from Rochester, New York - hence all that pre-existing rustiness. But it had all its original drivetrain and was Curious Yellow. It also started right up! I applied for an abandoned title along with the junkyard-supplied paperwork. And the rest is history. Go here for the "after" photo:
https://www.yenko.net/forum/showthread.php?t=149631&page=16
earntaz
12-28-2020, 08:30 PM
Here is a pic of the little Vega I had back in 71' ...
67since67
12-28-2020, 11:46 PM
In the early to mid 1970s I made a bunch of money replacing warranty short blocks in these. Didn't take long for GM to realize the aluminum cylinder walls weren't such a great idea for the general public.
Steel sleeves made them a fairly reliable engine. The A/C equipped cars weren't as likely to score cylinder walls due to having a larger radiator. Replaced a lot of valve seals and diff pinion bearings in these as well.
juliosz
12-28-2020, 11:52 PM
I know these aren’t super cars but I couldn’t pass on price of admission a few years ago when I picked this up. 38000 miles on the clock and runs great once I sorted the fuel injection. It’s also a really nice driving/handling car. The chassis team at Chevrolet Engineering did their homework. Even though the 122CI L4 is no rocket ship, I never considered doing a V8 swap.
The last couple years prior to 2020, I was driving this once or twice a week to work between April and November, about a 50 mile round trip.
earntaz
12-28-2020, 11:55 PM
In the early to mid 1970s I made a bunch of money replacing warranty short blocks in these. Didn't take long for GM to realize the aluminum cylinder walls weren't such a great idea for the general public.
Steel sleeves made them a fairly reliable engine. The A/C equipped cars weren't as likely to score cylinder walls due to having a larger radiator. Replaced a lot of valve seals and diff pinion bearings in these as well.
On my blue Vega below, between my dad and I we put over 93K on it. The only things that ever went bad were a throwout bearing and a starter drive. Oil was changed like clockwork and car maintained to the max. I found my used Cortez Silver Yenko Deuce at Broadway Chev in Green Bay and was going to trade the Vega in on it, but my dad wanted the Vega. Later, my brother stuffed a SBC in it and the last I heard it was still on the streets in Green Bay.
Too Many Projects
12-28-2020, 11:57 PM
I know these aren’t super cars but I couldn’t pass on price of admission a few years ago when I picked this up. 38000 miles on the clock and runs great once I sorted the fuel injection. It’s also a really nice driving/handling car. The chassis team at Chevrolet Engineering did their homework. Even though the 122CI L4 is no rocket ship, I never considered doing a V8 swap.
The last coupe years prior to 2020, I was driving this once or twice a week to work between April and November, about a 50 mile round trip.
Dang, that's cool. The Cozworth's are rare..:cool: Even more rare if you found that in MI with so little rust.
Bill Pritchard
12-29-2020, 12:05 AM
The A/C equipped cars weren't as likely to score cylinder walls due to having a larger radiator.
A good friend of mine (now departed) bought a new 71 Vega GT with a/c and never had a lick of engine trouble during many years and miles of ownership.
I know these aren’t super cars but I couldn’t pass on price of admission a few years ago when I picked this up. 38000 miles on the clock and runs great once I sorted the fuel injection. It’s also a really nice driving/handling car. The chassis team at Chevrolet Engineering did their homework. Even though the 122CI L4 is no rocket ship, I never considered doing a V8 swap.
The last coupe years prior to 2020, I was driving this once or twice a week to work between April and November, about a 50 mile round trip.
Cool car. My Dad bought a 75 Cosworth from Nankevill Chevrolet in Indy new. It was chassis 638 I think. My brother bought it from him in the 80’s as his first car and still has it. :)
JRSully
12-29-2020, 10:54 AM
Talk about a sign of the times, look at the interest rate on the purchase order, Holy cow
GMAC took good care of me in 1979, my rate was 11 3/4 lol.
May 1989,I bought a brand new 5.7 liter IROC camaro,while a 2.9% GMAC interest rate was being advertised in the Dealerships window.
My local Bank was paying me 6% interest on my Savings account then too,so I financed the IROC through GMAC,to make 3.1% on the 18K I had for it in the Bank.
Bill Pritchard
12-29-2020, 05:36 PM
My local Bank was paying me 6% interest on my Savings account then...
My, how times change :frown:
scuncio
01-03-2021, 03:23 AM
Wow! Sold for $18,100. Anyone here get it?
Too Many Projects
01-03-2021, 04:45 AM
It was a cool time capsule but I can't imagine paying that amount for a Vega...:confused2:
jl8z28
01-03-2021, 05:05 AM
I think i paid $2100 for the 1971 i bought brand new
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