A Biscayne 2dr pillared coupe with manual tranny and basically no options perhaps other thanthe v8 instead of a 6 . Surprised it survived https://www.facebook.com/marketplac...place_top_picks&referral_story_type=top_picks
49,529 km (30,775 miles) and garaged its entire life definitely helps.A Biscayne 2dr pillared coupe with manual tranny and basically no options perhaps other than the v8 instead of a 6 . Surprised it survived
someone please post a pic of the vehicle. My aunt had a very plain Biscaynw.A Biscayne 2dr pillared coupe with manual tranny and basically no options perhaps other thanthe v8 instead of a 6 . Surprised it survived https://www.facebook.com/marketplac...place_top_picks&referral_story_type=top_picks
It's a 1969 modelWhat year? I cant access Facebook so I am unable to see it.
Yes, Ralph those old American cars with a 3 on the tree manual trans were very easy to master the clutch on. Much easier to drive than a Volkswagen with a 4 on the floor and their terribly temperamental clutches. The older more expensive cars in the 30’s and 40’s had so much torque that you could drive all over town in 3rd and never lug the engine, rich folks and women drivers in those days didn’t like to shift any more than they had to. With a 3 on the tree unless you came to a full stop you really only needed to shift between 2nd and 3rd during most driving, easy peasy. I’ve never personally driven a manual trans car with more than 5 speeds. But I’ve seen that there are now manual trans cars with 6 or more forward gears. That’s just too damn much unnecessary shifting for moi.My sister's first car was a '65 Biscayne in dull metallic aqua with 6 cylinder and 3-speed column shift. A family friend worked for GMAC and the Biscayne came in as a repo. My dad got it for like $250 or so in 1969. It was so stripped down that the AM radio didn't have any selector buttons. I suppose that was a step up from no radio at all. I learned to work a clutch in that car. It was much more forgiving than my dad's '50 GMC.