Good morning! I seem to have stumbled on a theme for this week, so we’ll just go with it and see where it leads. Today we’re looking at two four-door sedans with manual gearboxes, but with wildly different levels of difficulty. Before we get to those, however, let’s see what you made of yesterday’s air-cooled beasts:
Yes! A full one-fifth of you are crazy enough to take on that dune buggy. When one of you one hundred and twenty-nine brave souls brings that beast home, we expect a full report.
Today, we’re shifting gears and looking at two vehicles with fixed roofs, four doors, and a certain degree of respectability that was lacking from Monday’s or Tuesday’s offerings. Does this mean that they’ll be boring? Not on your life. Here they are.
1986 Chevrolet Nova – $2,250
Engine/drivetrain: 1.6-liter inline-4, 5-speed manual, FWD.
Location: Portland, OR.
Odometer reading: 162,000 miles.
Runs/drives? Like a top, from the sound of it.
Before there was Geo, Chevrolet slapped its own badges on GM’s captive imports. The Chevy Spectrum was a rebadged Isuzu Gemini (or I-Mark in the States), the Sprint was a Suzuki Cultus, and the Nova was essentially a Toyota Corolla with some minor sheet metal changes. GM caught some flak for applying the Nova nameplate to a front-wheel-drive import, much like Chrysler faced with the Japanese-built late-1970s Challenger and front-wheel-drive Charger and Duster. What’s in a name? Quite a lot, according to some, it seems.
The Nova was built alongside the Corolla at the New United Motor Manufacturing Inc. plant (NUMMI for short) in Fremont, California. As such, the Nova wasn’t really an import after all. Or was it? And what about the Toyota-badged cars rolling out of the same factory? They were built by the same workers; did that make them domestics? The whole “Buy American” thing gets more muddled the closer you look at it.
The best thing about this car, to me, is the complete lack of bullshit or pretense. It’s just a car, built to be useful, reliable, and reasonably comfortable transportation. And I can vouch for the truth of that: I commuted a hundred miles a day in one of these for the better part of a year, and it held up just fine. It won’t impress anybody except the person who owns it, but who cares?
The condition of this particular Nova is certainly impressive; it has covered only 162,000 miles under one owner, and it has been well-kept. In fact, looking at the photos, I don’t see anything wrong with this car except a little ding on the left rear corner. Really, this is a hell of a deal on this little car, and I can’t figure out why it’s still up for sale after eleven days, honestly. Maybe nobody wants to drive a manual. Or the average car-shopper has no idea about this car’s Toyota DNA. Whatever the reason, it’s a bargain, and if I were looking for a car, I’d be tempted to scoop it up myself.
(Images and listing from Craigslist.)
1961 Jaguar Mark II – $2,200
Engine/drivetrain: 3.4 or 3.8-liter inline-6, 4-speed manual with overdrive, RWD.
Location: Monterey, CA.
Odometer reading: Unknown.
Runs/drives? That would be a no.
When you think of a 1961 Jaguar, what probably comes to mind is the legendary E-Type sports car. But about twice as many Mark II saloons rolled out of Coventry than did E-Types. The Mark II used the same XK series dual-overhead-cam engine as the E-Type. The Mark II’s engine was slightly de-tuned, and it had a live rear axle on leaf springs in place of the E-Type’s independent rear end, but this was still a high-performance car, especially the 3.8 liter version.
There’s no indication of which engine size this Jag holds under its long bonnet, but whichever it is, its cylinder head is in the trunk. It was in storage for a long time, presumably with the head off, so here’s hoping some sort of prep work was done to keep the cylinders from rusting, or this may be a famous Le Mans-winning dual-overhead cam boat anchor. The rest of it looks rough but restorable, and compared to an E-Type in similar condition, this is a bargain.
I love these little folding trays for the rear seat passengers. This car may have been fun to drive in its day, but one wasn’t meant to drive it oneself; one was meant to be driven in it.
The seller seems to have thought it more important to take artsy close-up shots than any decent overall condition shots, so I guess I’ll leave you with this look at of one of the Lucas headlamps and fog lamps:
Look at that patina. This old Jag wouldn’t be welcomed at The Quail, but we here at Shitbox Showdown aren’t so highfalutin (we are, at best, medium-falutin) and we appreciate a bit of texture.
[Editor’s Note: This Jag has fantastic potential to become a rally car. It would be very welcome at a Gambler 500 or a HooptieX. Get that pile of crap running, wrap some all-terrains on those wheels, bolt some rally lights to it, then take it on an adventure! – MS]
(Images and listing from Craigslist.)
So that’s what we’ve got for you today: A captive import in remarkably good shape, or a decent deal on a restoration-ready British motorcar. Which one will it be?
As someone who has had both of these cars in their driveway, I’m going to go with Chevy Nova here. My landlord actually owned the Jag, he dropped it off at my house and told me he wanted it running, but it was going to need a lot of work just to get it there, and then even more to be presentable. However, after it sat at my house a couple of weeks someone showed up and my door and made an offer I felt my landlord shouldn’t refuse – so I told him about it and a week later the Jag was gone with me having to do nothing to it.
Everyone is always talking about engine swaps.
What about interior swaps?
Give me the Nova with the Jaguar interior please.
I voted Nova, I’ve seen how much rust a Jaguar develops and the early NUMMI cars are forgotten Radwood era rides. Also the Sprinter 6 window sedan is the most attractive FWD E80 car. Plus if I was of a mind to I could probably find Sprinter trim and fake people out
As the owner of a 1966 Jaguar salon the correct answer is both of them. The Jag restored or not will always be needing something and you will want a wheeled appliance to drive while you contemplate how to ge the Jag on the road again. Also the Jag is a thirsty beast. Luckily mine has the overdrive so my milage is in the double digits.
I don’t have the time or money to serve that lovely Jaguar. The Nova would serve me. When I met my future wife in 1991 she had a 5 speed Geo Prism that she adored. She misses that honest machine to this day.
I took my driving test in this car’s twin. A greenish stick shift Chevy Nova that was probably the same year as this. I wasn’t surrounded by wealth back then and this was the only clean, reliable, and reasonably sized car I could borrow to take my test. The DMV officer was a BIG dude and took up the whole front passenger side plus part of my side. I remember struggling to operate the shifter around his bulk and having to look around him when looking right to make turns through downtown traffic in the ‘burbs outside Boston.
Sorry I guess I’m just s Jag-off. Gotta be the Jag. Especially having owned one of these rebadged Chevys. Mediocre and electric problems.
Voted for the Nova. We bought the exact same model/color in 1988 when we moved to Atlanta. My wife, short in stature really loved this car. Never left us on the side of the road. All we did was have it serviced when required. A couple of years into ownership we found the rear struts were faulty and the back tires were badly cupped. After that, no issues. At 232,000 miles it had a lot of things suddenly go bad (brakes, struts among other things) and repair costs were more than it was worth, so we donated it to the American Cancer Society and bought her a new 2005 Toyota Corolla CE sedan. We put 216,000 on the Corolla and sold it after buying a Chevy Volt off lease. My wife likes to keep cars a long time.
Well the Nova was built in what is now the Tesla factory so that’s worth some sort of conversation points. Other than that it’s a stealth Toyota with a stick.
The Jag is every bit as expensive to fix up as an E type.
Nova wins as transportation, Jag wins as art. Maybe buy both so you have something to fetch Jaguar parts in?
Guess I’ll take the Nova even though I already have a different NUMMI Chevy DD.
It’s a sacrifice I’m willing to make because I know I don’t have the means or abilities required to give the Jag the life it deserves.
It would be selfish of me to vote for it. I’ll leave it for someone else. But they better not change anything about that lovely sunflower and maple interior besides cleaning it up and replacing what’s missing. Man that looks like a nice place to sit.
I want to be the man who could resto-mod that Jag with something stupidly incorrect, like an I8! Just to be strange and justify loving the patina without needing to stuff a modern V8 in it. But that’s not me. I’d be a lot more likely to find bliss by rebadging the NUMMI as a Corolla (because Nova’s are RWD damnit!) and puttering around in it.
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We’ve been invaded by femmebots! Where’s Austin Powers when you need him?
Voted for the fold down tray tables. Try having a picnic in the back of that Nova
I remember the vile hatred for these Japanese-junk ” Novas” spewing from folks such as my dad and the owner of the local autobody shop in the small midwestern town I grew up in. “What the hell! Mechanics now have to have TWO sets of tools – one just for this new metric shit! Damn government.” Actual quote from an authority figure of my younger days.
Novas were supposed to be rear-wheel drive, have big meats holding up the ass end, jacked to the sky as God intended. Throaty big block “Rat-attack” motors pulling single-digit mileage as they prowled the 25mph streets, the driver’s arm resting comfortably on the edge of the open-windowed door, a Bud-heavy tallboy parked nearby in a make-shift can holder.
Years later I had a chance to test drive one of these NUMMI-Novas in perfect condition with my new girlfriend who was shopping for a car at the time. I remember thinking “huh, not bad” and then completely forgetting about the car after we left the dealership.
I voted for the Jag.
I was hoping the Nova model was a typo and it was really a 1968. That’s be real cool – and I HAD a 68 Nova at one time. But even so, as much as the Jag would be cool if only… that Nova is really clean and will run another 100,000 miles at least. Nova for me, dawg.
Nova!! I drove an 84 Chevy Nova that I bought for $250 from a friend in Northern Virginia (aka NOVA) as it would not pass inspection. This was the late 90s I was in the Army and stationed in North Carolina so no worries about inspections. Drove that car up and down the eastern seaboard for a few years before I got out of the Army. Great car, very reliable. No power windows/locks to break and no AC to worry about. Just roll down the windows, crank up the radio and start shifting gears.
I am tempted to buy that one just to putter around, though living in Texas now it is hard to survive without AC. Summer is about 8 months of the year.
Electrics by Lucus means be home by dark
I’d totally do a restomod on the Jag. Electric conversion. Tesla Model 3 pack and drive system would be a good match. Gut the original electricals and go with a cheap GM wiring harness. All of this could make it into a reliable daily driver, with all the style of the original. Plus it has decent aerodynamics, even by today’s standards, and it is light. This could be a 250 Wh/mile car.
Grew up in a Nova. A few notes:
Ixnay on the A/C. Not great for a family in Houston. Don’t know if retrofit even exists for this.
The coolant system only takes antifreeze, any water will result in overheating. Not sure what brainiac came up with that, or decided not to put it anywhere but a tiny blurb in the owners manual, which by the time we got it the car didn’t have. Even the Chilton had this tidbit buried.
Vacuum controlled cruise control is somewhere between stupid and criminally negligent. We had a hose break and punch it. Were doing 20 over before we figured out what was wrong and cancelled.
Still seriously considering a road trip to buy it and bring it down to Houston.
A ca. ’86 Nova was (kind of) my first car! For awhile we were a 2-car family with 3 drivers, but my dad’s colleague had a spare Nova (his wife left him and returned to England—bad for him, good for me) that I used until my mom got a teal Plymouth Laser (I’ve now narrowed the date son this story pretty tightly) and gave me her Grand Am.
Anyway, the Nova, an automatic, had awful response off the line, but pulled surprisingly hard in 2nd gear. My friends and I joked about future teens dragging ’80s Novas in races that started verrrry slowly then picked up.
Anyway, I’d rather have a nonfunctioning Jag than a pristine ’86 Nova. I mean, I already own a car.
The Nova for me since I’m not looking for a project.
But if I was looking for a project, then the Jaaaaaaag would be the ticket.
Chevy Nova, aka Toyota Corolla, aka Geo Prism for me. I had an ’86 Nova and two other friends had the Corolla..all at the same time back in the day. Mechanically they are tanks. I think we all totalled them within a year of each other. We were young and dumb.
Passion wins out over rationality today although both are worthy. As a Jag owner it’s the MkII all day every day since a well-done end result will result in much more pleasure than the Nova could ever give. But props to the Nova for being a really solid piece of engineering and a decent car in its own right.
JagUar !
Class, Taste, Breeding.
Runs, Drives Just like a new one.
Really wanted to vote for the Jag. I did. But I can see much money and time disappearing in a wild goose chase on that one.
Voted for the Nova. I would take it to car shows and tell all the boomers “Look, I’ve got a Nova just like you!”