Long time stalker (04ish era) who used to be a registered member and a regular reader, but have long since left that email inbox and registration in the past along with a whole host of awesome cars that I had the pleasure of driving, working on, and some I even found joy in selling. RWD Turbo Volvos, E36, G60 Corrado, 240z, 20v AE86, two AW11's, 510, NB Miata, even a huge Q45 because why not? The usual cheap, fun cars that could be found readily in the mid 2000's.
I haven't been active really on a form since the Volvo or MR2 days, and this is where I'd usually post a story (novel?) like this. It's long, and if it's in the wrong sub-forum, sorry about that, the GRM forum is really a foreign land to me.
Anyways, this is long, so buckle up.
I went for a long time without a fun car. Selling the last RWD Volvo to get myself into a 4.0 ZJ Grand Cherokee that I was "just going to keep for a little bit, you know, to tow my boat" (I lived in Florida at the time). 9 something years later and with a move to the PNW, I still had it. I only recently sold it, and man, what a great rig. Everyone has their horror stories about that era of Chrysler, but I never had a bit of trouble with that thing, and I beat the snot out of it, overloaded with friends, smashing through snow, bouncing along forest roads, sitting in brutal Seattle traffic, and parallel parking with the best of them downtown (what curb?). Anyways, sold it after purchasing another RWD Turbo Volvo, thinking I wanted to build a "strong enough" daily driver, with lots of space for my outdoor toys, and a hitch for a bike rack, put a bunch of cash into maintenance and some small upgrades . Turns out, I didn't really want to drive an early nineties, sort of rattly Volvo any longer. Also, parts that seemed easy to find before weren't quite as common any longer, which made it frustrating to restore to where I wanted it to be.
So I sold it, and bought into the PNW uniform...
...I'm stomping around in an older, very boring, but very reliable Forester. It's good, and is likely the best "normal car" I have ever owned. Five speed, sticks to the ground like I've never seen a car do, and can drive up onto curbs, I like it, a lot. More than I thought I would, as it's my first Subaru. It's boring, also rusty.
On the off chance I have some time on my hands to do nothing else, I am wrenching (and maybe even driving) an '85 AW11. I love it. I saved this one from a huge hole in the side of it's transmission with a JB Welded and a bolted down plate (not kidding, works great, ask me about the video). I've had two others, a long time ago, like I mentioned. I bought this one on a whim after maybe an ill timed blessing from my Wife, I think she didn't realize how quickly I can mobilize my friend's diesel pickup and a rental trailer. I'm older now, and they feel lower, louder, and harder to park than I remember, but damn if that thing isn't just like an old pal from days past. It also sings on a mountain road, goes right where I point it, and gets exactly the looks you'd expect from a bright red noise maker in a sea of boring cars (i.e. my Forester). It's an emotionally driven connection, far from practical and far from frustration free. These cars barely exist any longer, parts are prohibitively expensive, if you can find them at all. Fifteen years ago, you could find what you needed at the pick-n-pull, these days, if you snap a piece of the notoriously brittle 80's plastic somewhere in the passenger compartment, good luck, so did everyone else and now it's made of unobtanium. The engine bay barely has enough space for the engine and 80's vacuum lines and electronic boxes and solenoids and intake piping, let alone your arms for maintenance. I joked in a recent YouTube video that one of the reasons for doing a 20 Valve swap is so they are easier to work on. I wasn't kidding. But did I mention it also has flip up headlights and is shaped like a glorious door wedge?
So things change, and also stay the same. I love these cars, that's the same. But now I also love being a new Dad, that's new, and now any family trip includes a car seat, lots of accessories, and so far as I know, CPS wouldn't enjoy me putting a car seat base on the engine lid of the deuce, that's also new.
I find my time availability to enjoy the AW11 only becoming shorter and shorter as time marches on, until the kiddo can ride in the passenger seat, which is a long time.
Not to mention the inevitable, "Is this thing safe enough? Is anything safe enough? Am I going to high center the MR2 on this speed bump? Can that dude-bro in his Tacoma even see me over his hood scoop?"
So here we are, the question that all car enthusiasts face at some point if they chose to have kids and have already fallen in love with things with two seats and little else.
Do you shed the skin of times past and move onto more practical enthusiast cars? Selling the MR2 to make way for something like a WRX, Forester XT, Audi something-or-another, BMW something-or-another? Keep plodding around in the boring Forester, and build a quick, fun, practical enthusiast car that also doubles as a family hauler when called upon. Nothing wild, something reliable, easy to drive, and easy to toss the keys to my wife who doesn't want to deal with "yea it's got a lumpy idle initially so you'll need to keep the throttle up at lights, and okay sure there is this little trick to starting it, but seriously sweetie it's only 7 steps it's not too hard". Maybe with the hope I'll find another one to buy later, or some equally unique toy car when it's not required to have a baby bucket at all times?
Speaking of the Forester, even this is a compromise, as I've already experienced limitations with the size of the passenger compartment of my Forester (basically an Impreza), and an XT would be no better. This has become much more apparent after the bazillion load/unload cycles of our baby bucket. I'm not a real tall guy, and I consider myself pretty flexible, but I'll be damned if getting that car seat into the base at the center of the back seat isn't just an opportunity for me to crunch myself up into a position that doesn't feel awesome. My Wife has a CR-V, and while not much larger, the added height makes loading the little dude in the back worlds easier. Fundamentally, I think I want/need something with a larger back seat area since this is my foreseeable future.
Do I mothball the MR2 for a not so rainy day? Staring longingly at it in the hopes that nothing else disintegrates in my hands? Simply replacing parts that are no longer available with obnoxious modifications as needed? Waiting for the day your kid is able to get dropped off to school in the coolest damn Dad-mobile on the block? Keeping it indefinitely because you'll likely never find another one that you can afford in an original 85 with a hardtop and crank windows? Even if I can't find or afford any factory replacement parts as needed? But, the payoff in a few years when he can ride in it would be huge, and even larger is the payoff where he could maybe run his first AutoX in it (holy E36 M3 I'll be old!), maybe even when it becomes his car. Thinking about time like that makes me head hurt. Thinking about my kid driving the type of car that made me fall in love with cars brings a tear to my eye. By the time this happens however, it'll be like Grandpa's old hammer (you know the story), but it would be Dad's car, and maybe that means something. Insurance is practically free, and it's getting antique plates this year so no more WA state tabs. It will literally only cost me the ground it sits on to keep it. But to keep it and tinker with it how I'd like to? That's a different story....
Or do I find some sort of compromise and slam together a stupid, grin inducing machine that also has a "back seat" in lieu of the red wedge? Convertible E36, turbo Cabrio, RX8, E39 sedan/wagon, maybe some huge four door saloon with a V8 (I've been learning about GRM's obsession with the P71, I also learned you can manual swap these?!) A compromised project car that can hold a car seat. Still fun and somewhat practical, but maybe with a significant bent towards being comfortable, maybe that's me getting old, but a strong torque curve and comfortable seats sound pretty nice to use as a commuter.
I try to think about my relationship with AW11's, with MR2's in general. Is it the car itself that I love? Is it what it stands for? Did I find any less enjoyment in my Datsun 240z when I had it? I try and think about those things now, now since decisions have to be made with respect to garage space, economic and time priorities, and usage. I don't have the time for two project cars, or the space, or the financial means, or even the time to enjoy a two seated romp in the mountains on most weekends.
This is also me being selfish. I would like an enjoyable, unique car that makes fun sounds to drive every day. To run errands in, to pick up the kiddo from daycare in, maybe for him and I to enjoy if he is into cars that do those things (yes I know that is a long way off). And of course, that isn't the MR2. It can never be the family hauler. It doesn't "do" carseats, or strollers, or camping gear, or mountain bikes, or...or....
I think a turbo boxer would make me happy. I often imagine my rust bucket with the heart of a WRX, and it makes me feel giddy. Chunndering through the snow and up forest roads like a scalded mountain goat. I get why people have these cars. They do seem to be the Leatherman of the automotive world. Want a track car? Or a high speed soft roader? Or a mini expedition rig? Or a long distance road trip car? Or a boring daily driver? Got ya covered. A mildly breathed on Forester XT or some other cool AWD wagonmeister seems like it could do all of these things.
But is it a sexy red wedge that stands out from the crowd? No. It is not. And that makes me a little sad. But, I love my Son, my Wife, our life of adventure, fun cars, and I'm beginning to realize I want to combine all of those things at once. And it makes me wonder if it's time to leave the little car, and my past, behind.
This is a long post, thanks for reading this far if you're here. If you've had to move through this decision, I'd welcome some thoughts. Maybe this is considered too personal, too philosophical for a first post, I hope it's not. It seems as if most automotive enthusiasts have to ask this type of question at some point.
I also realize I haven't ever met any of you fine folks, but as like minded individuals, I'm all ears.
Cheers,
Steve
P.S. I also want some bloody cupholders. Why is it so hard to find a cool car with cupholders?!