It found us. Honest.
A reader offered his 1984 Rabbit GTI to us. Since we had recently written a guide about the first-generation GTI—and considering we like these cars—we said yes.
The good news? It's a solid survivor with original paint and a super-rare Callaway turbocharger setup. The bad news? The engine hadn't run in over a decade, and the …
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Kinda related: A 19,000-mile 1983 Callaway GTI recently fetched $38k on BaT.
My nephew bought a non-running Mk I Scirocco back in the 90's that had a Callaway Turbo kit on it. At the time I thought he overpaid for it at $1600. He got it running and drove it for a while. It was as quick as his friends auto V8 Fox Mustang. The turbo destroyed itself one day and we just couldn't find a replacement or a re-builder for it. This was before the internet. We installed a different turbo that was suggested and it ended up being to big, as in lack of boost. He lost interest after that and the car ended up parted out. To bad as the car wasn't in that bad of condition.
We just posted another update on the car over on Classic Motorsports.
In this update, we put the GTI up on a lift to see if we bought something great, or if we found ourselves a lemon.
This thing will be: fun x fun = fun^2
Yes, we met it, and we are tired of hearing about it because we want it really bad and we can’t have it.